Shortage Of Schoolbooks Distresses Students, Parents

1 min read

KARACHI: The academic year in schools across Sindh started in April but despite the passage of around two months, there is a persistent shortage of textbooks for classes one to matric as hardly any class’s complete course pack is available in the market.

A visit to the Urdu Bazaar has shown that there is a particular shortage of mathematics, English, biology, Urdu and Islamic studies books at most stores while even other books are in short supply.

Parents along with their children could be seen waiting in lines at major bookshops with the hope to get the course books but the salesmen told them that either one or another book was not in the stock. Therefore, they were asked to come again after a few days.

A sole distributer there told Dawn that right now, there was no complete course pack available for class one to matric as textbooks were not being printed in sufficient numbers.

A parent, whose son is a class two student, said the school where his son studied used both the Sindh Textbook Board (STBB) and Oxford University Press books. “But every year I face this issue that the complete course pack is not available. And it’s causing a lot of trouble. There are long queues of people at Urdu Bazar and I have to wait there in heat only to find out that one or the other book is still not available.”

He also explained that the private book publishers with the aim of “generating sales volume” either change books or some chapters in them in order to ensure that used books could not become useful again for other students next year.

He believed that this tactic of publishers also contributing to the shortage to new books in the market.

Madiha Ali, mother of Mohammad Rohaan, who studies in class eight, explained how long they had to wait to get the course books and that despite the wait they had to arrange used books as new ones were not available.

“We had been trying for the last week of April but couldn’t get the course pack. Many books were not available. Somehow we found second-hand books at a store and purchased those,” she said.

Another parent asked that if the provincial government was not able deliver books on time, which happens almost every year, then why it started academic year in this time of the year and announced distribution of books.

When contacted, Atif Vighio, a spokesperson for the Sindh education department, said that the STBB had issued total 2.1 million books thus far. However, the total market demand of books is 4.5m, he added.

About why there is the shortage of books, he said that the primary reason behind it was power loadshedding which affected printing.

Published in Dawn, June 1st, 2025

Previous Story

Bajaur Teacher Sacked For Torturing Student

Next Story

School In Lower Dir Short Of Classrooms, Teachers

Latest from Blog

Govt Declares Water Emergency in Gwadar

QUETTA/GWADAR: The Balochistan government has declared a water emergency in Gwadar and suspended all taxes related to water supply to resolve the issue of serious water shortage the coastal district. A decision to this effect was taken after a massive protest demonstration was staged by residents of Gwadar. The water…

Woman Held From School After Failed Kidnap Bid

SARGODHA: A woman was arrested from a school for allegedly trying to kidnap two students and spraying poisonous gas on the children and teachers present in the school. According to the complaint filed by Sheikhanwala Primary School, in Bhakkar’s Darya Khan tehsil, headmistress Sundas Zahra alleged that a woman, later…

FBISE To Share Its Software With Other Boards

ISLAMABAD: Secretary of the Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Training Nadeem Mahbub asked the Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (FBISE) to share its software system with all the provincial Boards and to arrange training sessions for teachers to strengthen assessment practices and capacity at the provincial level.…

Pakistan Deeper Into Hunger Crisis, Warns GHI

ISLAMABAD: Climate shocks, soaring food prices, and chronic underinvestment in nutrition and health have pushed Pakistan deeper into a hunger crisis, the Global Hunger Index (GHI) 2025 warns, placing the country among those still facing “serious” levels of hunger despite more than two decades of national and global pledges to…

Sindh Faces Alarming Rise in Unsafe Abortions

KARACHI: Sindh faces a mounting women’s health crisis, with an estimated 400,000 to 500,000 abortions taking place annually — many of them unsafe, unregulated, and life-threatening. This alarming figure, combined with widespread malnutrition and anemia, is placing countless women at risk, medical experts warn. Speaking to The Express Tribune, Dr Mehwish…
Go toTop