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Dummy Schools & Students in India

by Sanjenbam Jugeshwor Singh
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Dummy Schools & Students in India

Dummy schools are board-affiliated schools that officially enrol students preparing for competitive entrance exams like the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), Joint Entrance Examination (JEE), and other competitive exams in senior secondary classes. They function in contrast to traditional schools, which require the regular attendance of students in class. Dummy schools, although not legal in India, complete all the official formalities set by boards on behalf of students to make them eligible to appear in the board exams. For this, they charge a hefty amount of money. Often, these schools work in collusion with the NEET and JEE coaching institutes, but parents can also reach out to them directly to enrol their students in such schools.
The CBSE, the country’s largest education board with 28,000 affiliated schools, has found two-thirds of a sample of schools it inspected infested with “dummy students”. Dummy students are Class XI and XII pupils who spend the entire two-year session attending coaching institutes while remaining enrolled in a school, which fabricates their attendance so they can sit their higher secondary board exams. Educationists have blamed the racket on the advent of national-level entrance tests across streams and disciplines, which have jacked up the demand for coaching while devaluing board marks. Of the 34 schools the CBSE inspected across multiple states on December 21 last year, 23 were found to have dummy students on their rolls, sources said. They said the board had been tipped off about some of the schools it inspected while the rest were picked at random, and therefore the results cannot be directly extrapolated across all CBSE schools. The principal of a private school in Delhi who was part of the inspection team for a particular school said the institution had only 60 students each in Classes IX and X, but the number skyrocketed to 500 each in Classes XI and XII. Yet, the inspection team found attendance to be zero in Class XI and about 50 in Class XII, she said.
The CBSE has issued show cause notices to the 23 schools. According to the CBSE’s rules, a student needs at least 75 per cent attendance to take the board exams. The principal who took part in the said dummy students get admitted to coaching institutes to prepare for the various competitive exams. The coaching institutes convince the parents that they would take care of the higher secondary syllabus, too. While the CUET is mandatory for admission to general courses at the central universities, the NEET is the sole entrance exam for medical and dental college seats. The JEE is the doorway to the most prestigious engineering colleges. Education activist Prince Gajendra Babu said: “Earlier, students secured college admission (particularly in the general courses) based on their board results. Now, at the coaching centres, children are trained merely to crack examinations. Learning has become a casualty,” he said.
Additionally, the rising suicide cases in India’s coaching capital, Kota, Rajasthan, have raised further concerns associated with dummy schools. Every year, when the results season is around the corner, many cases of suicide are reported primarily from Kota, with the cases increasing every year. Last year, in 2023, nearly 29 aspirants took their lives, and this year, so far, 9 suicide cases have been reported from Kota. A recent survey conducted after the NEET 2024 revised result reveals that Kota, the coaching hub of India, is losing its sheen due to increased suicide cases and decreasing performance, and the new talk of the town is an outlier district in Sikar, Rajasthan. Ahmedabad and Namakkal (non-coaching cities) have also produced remarkable results. But Sikar has astonished everyone by outperforming Kota twice in a row with 7.48% of students, i.e., a total of 30,204 students securing 650+ marks this year. The gravity of the current situation leads us to an important question: Are dummy schools a culprit in this ongoing scenario, or are they a boon for students? Let’s analyse this in detail, starting from the basics—what dummy schools are and how they can impact students’ careers and personalities in both positive and negative ways—so you can analyse and decide whether it is a culprit or a blessing for lakhs of students enrolled in such a system.
Why are Dummy Schools So Popular Among NEET and JEE Aspirants?
Dummy schools are no new schools of sensation for JEE and NEET aspirants; they have been operating in India for more than a decade now. As the seats are limited in top medical and engineering colleges, there is cutthroat competition among the aspirants, and this has fuelled the demand for dummy schools in India. As the aspirants want to focus wholeheartedly on these exams, they look for ways to avoid going to regular school to save time. In such a scenario, these schools are their only options. They serve as rescuers and time savers by lowering academic pressure and letting the students focus laser-sharp on competitive exams. These dummy schools facilitate the 75% attendance requirement that is mandatory for a student to sit in the board exam. Once enrolled in the dummy schools, students just have to appear for the final exams; the rest of the formalities, like attendance, project marks, practical’s, etc., are taken care of by these schools. Thus giving the students ample time to focus on the entrance exams. Students who enrol themselves in dummy schools are mostly those who move to other cities like Kota, etc., to join full-time residential coaching classes. Due to the lack of good and proper coaching facilities in their hometown, students are compelled to leave their city and temporarily migrate to a place that offers quality controlled and ‘distraction-free’ preparation for engineering and medical entrance examinations. The only way to fill the gap between their coaching classes and regular schooling is by enrolling in Dummy Schools.
Regular vs. Dummy School: Which Is Better?
As the competition is increasing drastically each year with only a limited no. of seats in the top engineering and medical colleges, the pressure to perform better by giving your best is mounting on students. On the one hand, the psychological impact of competition culture is proven to be fatal as it comes with costs like degraded mental and physical health, stress, anxiety, underdevelopment of social skills and emotional intelligence, parental pressure, a bleak future (in case of failure), double fee payment, etc., and that too without the surety of success.
On the other hand, a study conducted by the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi shows that students who took coaching classes performed better than those who did not. The study also revealed that coaching helped the aspirants improve their speed and accuracy, which are important for these exams. As it is difficult to evade the competition, a more balanced approach, in this case, would be to attend regular schooling, take online coaching classes side by side, and drop a year if required after the 12th. It will steam off the pressure of delivering the best result in one attempt and give you the time needed for overall development.
When in class 11, give your maximum focus to NEET or JEE; when in class 12, take selective off to prepare for these exams. If possible, talk to your principal about your goals and coaching so that you can have better cooperation. Opt for weekend batches so that the pressure of handling both regular and online classes can be managed effectively. Holistic development is essential for a child to become a better person and citizen of a country, so the importance of regular schooling shouldn’t be underestimated.
(Writer can be reached at:[email protected])

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