Walk into the government lower primary school at Kunda village in Tirthahalli taluk and you will find one empty classroom after another, with rows of unoccupied benches. The teacher’s chair is also unoccupied. A few minutes later, a woman emerges from the kitchen. Silence all around.This school has one student, one teacher, and one midday meal worker. On the day The Hindu visited, both teacher and student were absent. Jeevan, a class 5 pupil with physical disabilities, attends classes irregularly. His teacher, S. Kumar, divides his time between this school and another government institution at Nantur, a neighbouring village.In a village comprising over 110 families, parents have shifted their children to private schools in Kammaradi and Tirthahalli which offer transport and English-medium instruction. This has resulted in the steady depletion of students in Kunda’s rolls. School officials predict closure in the next academic year unless enrolment is miraculously revived.In the same boatThis is not a situation unique to Kunda; the story repeats itself across the region. The lower primary school at Shivalli in Nalur panchayat of Tirthahalli taluk enrolled only one student last year. This year, it has shut its doors because no students came. Several more rural schools stare at a similar fate.At Tengar in Honnethalu gram panchayat, the government higher primary school’s strength has dwindled to two class 3 students, served only by a guest teacher. The school at Nantur, which had four students last year, gained two new admissions but remains without regular faculty.Sadiq Ahmed, Cluster Resource Person, acknowledged the precarious position of schools like the one at Kunda. “The school survives for one student,” he said, adding, “Closure is inevitable next year unless admissions materialise. Meanwhile, the teacher is securing the documents and certificates the boy needs to claim his monthly disability allowance.”Malnad challengesIn the Malnad region, scattered settlements and long distances between homes and schools have always posed challenges. During monsoon, children face significant difficulties commuting. This reality has pushed parents toward private institutions offering transport — a decisive advantage rural government schools struggle to match. In the last two years, eight government schools have been closed in Tirthahalli taluk due to no admissions.In Honnethal, a school that went against all odds
Malnad government schools struggle to stay afloat as student numbers dwindle
Malnad government schools face closure as dwindling student enrollment drives families towards private institutions, threatening rural education.
Malnad rural schools lose students to private competitors; Kunda has one enrolled student, eight schools have shut in Tirthahalli taluk. Honnethal reversed decline from 19 to 134 students through alumni fundraising and transport—showing how institutional recovery requires community mobilization.








