Face recognition-based biometric attendance system soon: Bengal Education Minister
Kolkata, June 30
A face recognition-based biometric attendance system will be introduced in every government school in West Bengal in phases, said state School Education Minister Dipak Barman on Tuesday.
He also assured that he would take a quick decision on the long-pending teacher recruitment process in state-run schools.
Speaking at a programme of the BJP's teachers' cell at the National Library, he said that the education department has already begun work on this.
At the same time, his message to the members of the teachers' organisation was that if there is a difference of opinion on any government decision, it should be discussed at the party's organisational level rather than published on social media or in the press.
The School Education Minister said, "Face recognition-based biometric attendance system will be introduced in every school in the state in a short time."
Although the effective date has not yet been decided, he said the government is determined to introduce this system.
"We will provide biometric face recognition machines in every school. After that, there are plans for further changes to the education system. It is not possible to say everything right now," he said.
Regarding the recruitment of teachers, the School Education Minister said that the government is keeping an eye on the SLST of 2016, the Group-C and Group-D exams of 2025, and there is no need for repeated meetings, phone calls, e-mails, or long messages about this.
He claimed that the education department will take a decision after considering the High Court verdict, legal aspects and the government's humanitarian position.
"We are aware of all the issues. Appropriate steps will be taken very soon after considering all aspects," he said.
Addressing job seekers, he said the government has already granted a five-year age relaxation for applying for teaching jobs. Therefore, urging them to prepare for the new exam, he said, "Our government will not sell jobs. Not a single job will be sold. No one will try to buy a job, and we will not let anyone fall for that temptation."
The issue of long-standing dissatisfaction among teachers regarding transfers also came up in his speech.
The Education Minister said that a transparent and specific process is being prepared for transfers. Once that system is implemented, every teacher will have the opportunity to apply. However, he also requested that the new government be given some time to complete the process.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Biometric attendance is long overdue! Teachers in some government schools treat it like a part-time job. But I worry about privacy in rural areas—many kids don't have proper records or even clean faces for recognition cameras. Hope the implementation is practical. Also, the minister's point about not airing grievances on social media—that's rich coming from a politician! 😂
The real issue here is the 2016 SLST mess—thousands of qualified teachers have been waiting for years while schools remain understaffed. Face recognition won't fix the lack of teachers in classrooms. The minister says "no job will be sold," but the previous administration's recruitment scam has already destroyed trust. Actions, not words, please.
Technology in education is welcome, but this feels like a distraction from the real crisis. Bengal's government schools lack basic infrastructure, proper textbooks, and even drinking water. Face recognition machines will cost crores that could be better spent on smart classrooms or teacher training. 🤷♀️ Also, the teacher transfer policy change sounds good if it's truly transparent—no more political interference!
Minister Barman's "no job for sale" statement is the most important takeaway. After the SSC scam that ruined thousands of young lives, we need absolute transparency. Face recognition is fine for attendance but let's be honest—teachers who want to skip will find a way. The real fix is better teacher evaluation and incentives for quality teaching.
As someone from the US watching Indian politics, this initiative seems like a classic case of choosing tech solutions over systemic ones. Face recognition without addressing
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.