Rising Costs Shut Out Marginalised Students

1 min read

RAWALPINDI. Access to higher education shrinks amidst soaring merit thresholds

Thousands of students across the Rawalpindi Division have been denied admission to leading government colleges despite having passed their matriculation examinations with first, second, or third division, due to increasingly high merit thresholds.

At the same time, the cost of academic essentials for first-year students, including subject textbooks, notebooks, registers, practical notebooks, and general stationery, has risen sharply. Uniform prices have also soared, making even the purchase of a prospectus unaffordable for many underprivileged students.

A large number of students unable to get admission to prominent public colleges have turned to private institutions, where admission fees have also seen a significant hike. The cost of textbooks for first-year students in the General Arts, Commerce, and Science streams now ranges between Rs1,000 and Rs2,500, while practical notebooks are being sold for as much as Rs4,000 to Rs6,000.

Government schools have introduced a separate charge for the dupatta (scarf) as part of the girls’ uniform. Admission fees in government schools now range from Rs10,000 to Rs15,000, while private colleges are charging between Rs15,000 and Rs30,000, exclusive of the costs of textbooks, uniforms, school bags, and shoes.

The overall expense of enrolling a child in the first year — including admission, books, stationery, and uniform — is currently between Rs35,000 and Rs50,000, placing immense financial pressure on parents.

Each college operates with its own uniform requirements, fee structure, and academic system, further complicating the situation and compounding the burden on families. With the continual rise in the cost of educational materials and fees, access to college education is gradually slipping out of reach for the lower and middle-income classes.

As a direct consequence, it is estimated that 60% of students who passed matriculation this year may be unable to continue into college education, with girls being disproportionately affected. Increasingly, students are opting for private technical colleges offering diploma programmes as an alternative pathway.

Leaders of the Professors and Lecturers Association, including Professor Iqbal and Basharat Raja, have strongly condemned the situation. They argue that following the privatisation of schools, colleges are now being positioned for a similar fate – a move they believe is contributing to the systematic dismantling of the public education system.

News published in the Express Tribune on 9th August 2025

Previous Story

Minor Boy Saved After Weeks in Captivity

Next Story

Man Sentenced To Two Years In Prison For Marrying Underage Girl

Latest from Blog

Sindh Rates Poorly in Household Survey

KARACHI: A recently conducted government-commissioned survey has revealed that Punjab has better education and health facilities compared to other provinces, while Sindh and Balochistan remain the most underdeveloped province in this regard. These figures come from the Household Integrated Economic Survey 2024-25, conducted by the federal institution, the Pakistan Bureau…

Teen Shot Dead in Police Chase

PESHAWAR: A 16-year-old boy was fatally shot when police opened fire on a vehicle that failed to stop at a checkpoint in Hayatabad’s Industrial Road area, triggering outrage among locals and prompting a road blockade protest by the victim’s family. According to police and family accounts, the incident occurred when…

‘AI Deepfakes Fuel Child Sexual Abuse Content’

• Unicef says children’s photos are being manipulated and sexualised through AI tools • In some countries, as many as one in 25 children reported having their images turned into sexual deepfakes ISLAMABAD: Unicef has said it is increasingly alarmed by reports of a rapid rise in the volume of…

Children Betrayed

JUST when we thought Pakistan had made meaningful progress and the debate on child marriage was nearly settled, a spanner has been thrown into the spokes of reform. Four years after the Federal Shariat Court’s ruling in 2021 that setting a minimum marriage age is not in contradiction with Islam,…
Go toTop