Telangana survey shows caste still shapes education opportunities

Telangana survey shows caste still shapes education opportunities

Telangana survey shows caste still shapes education opportunities

Survey reveals deep gaps between privileged and marginalised communities

Telangana’s Hidden Divide: A Brahmin Kid’s English Dream vs. a Kolam Child’s Struggle

Hyderabad—Imagine two kids in Telangana: one, a Brahmin boy gliding through English-medium gates; the other, a Kolam girl from the hills, lucky to finish primary school. The state’s 2024 SEEEPC Survey lays bare this gut-wrenching gap, analyzing 3.55 crore lives across 242 castes. Independent experts crunched it in 2025—revealing caste as education’s cruel gatekeeper.

Statewide, 36.3% of under-30s hold diplomas or degrees. General Castes (OC) soar to 59%; Scheduled Tribes (ST) limp at 28.4%. SCs hit 34.4%, BCs near average at 36.5%. Among 56 big castes (90% population), OC Brahmins, Komatis, Velamas clock 37% higher ed—double the norm. ST Kolams? A heartbreaking 4.4%. SC Beda, ST Gond, BC-D Mali hover low too.

Meet Lakshmi, 22, a Kolam from Adilabad. “School was 5 km away; no bus, no English,” she sighs, weaving baskets for pennies. Her dropout rate? 5.4%—five times OC Brahmins’ 1.1% (state avg 2.2%). Gonds drop out thrice Lambadis’ rate—blame remote hamlets, poverty, culture.

Private schools amplify inequality. 19.3% statewide attended non-govt; OCs 30%, Brahmins 38.3%. SCs? 9.6%. STs 7.8%, Kolams 1.1%. Govt schools trap 49% SC kids, 44% STs—OCs just 32%. Jains dodge at 9.7%.

English-medium? 47% youth overall. Brahmins 72.4%; Kolams 10.7%—nearly sevenfold gap. Goldsmiths/Padmasalis near 75%; Mudiraj/Valmiki under 30%. Same BC bucket, worlds apart.

Intermediate (Class 12) bottlenecks SCs (57% stop), STs (53%), BCs (54%)—OCs 44%, pushing further. Illiteracy nips 4.1% kids; Kolams 9.3%, Perikas 2.3%.

Women bear the brunt. 65.5% statewide below Class 10; Kolam women 82.9%, Brahmin 36.2%. Girl marriages peak at BC-A Gangiredlavaru (8.1%), dip at OC Kapu (2.1%).

Reddys, rural landowners (62%), match BC Christians/Goldsmiths in higher ed—unlike urban Komatis (30% rural). It’s not just money; it’s networks, expectations.

For families like Raju’s, a Mudiraj fisherman, it’s survival. “English opens IT jobs; we fish ponds,” he says, kids in govt school. Survey screams reform: targeted scholarships, tribal hostels, English for all. But data’s a wake-up—caste chains dreams. Break them, or watch generations sink.

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