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Updated May 20, 2026 · 18:36
Karnataka News Updated May 20, 2026

Karnataka CM Reviews School Education, KPS Launch Set for June 1

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah reviewed the School Education Department, focusing on the Karnataka Public School (KPS) scheme launching June 1 in Shivamogga. Each KPS will accommodate 1,200 students from LKG to PUC in Kannada and English mediums. The meeting highlighted a significant improvement in SSLC and PUC results, with SSLC pass percentage reaching 94.10%, up 14.06% from last year. Officials credited the improvement to measures like parent-teacher meetings, guest teachers, and special focus programs in Kalyana Karnataka.

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah reviews School Education Department, KPS scheme to launch on June 1

Bengaluru, May 20

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Monday chaired a meeting at his home office 'Krishna' to review issues related to the Department of School Education and Literacy, with a focus on the upcoming Karnataka Public School scheme and improvement in examination results.

The Karnataka Public School (KPS) scheme will be launched in Shivamogga on June 1.

Under the scheme, each KPS will accommodate 1,200 students, offering education from LKG to PUC in both Kannada and English mediums in a single campus.

The Chief Minister directed that all 800 KPS schools be made fully ready within the next two years and asked officials to begin the tender process immediately to set up 800 schools this year.

He also directed officials to examine providing school bus facilities for KPS schools and to submit proposals for filling teacher vacancies to the Finance Department.

The meeting also noted a significant improvement in examination results.

Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC) pass percentage stood at 94.10 per cent, an increase of 14.06 per cent compared to last year, while PUC results rose to 86.48 per cent, up from 73.45 per cent last year. A total of 2,393 SSLC schools recorded 100 per cent results this year, compared to 766 last year.

Category-wise performance also improved, with SC and ST students showing an 18 per cent rise. Gains were also recorded across other categories, including Category-1 (16.6 per cent), 2A (11.5 per cent), 2B (18 per cent), 3A (8.12 per cent) and 3B (10 per cent). In Kalyana Karnataka, SSLC results improved by 2 per cent, and rural students outperformed urban students in both SSLC and II PUC examinations.

Officials said the improvement came after measures such as statewide parent-teacher meetings, appointment of guest teachers, textbook-based study plans, state-level preparatory exams, regular teacher training and special focus programmes in Kalyana Karnataka.

The meeting also reviewed a proposal to distribute free notebooks along with free textbooks to students.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Happy to see the focus on SC/ST students showing an 18% improvement. But I hope the free notebooks proposal isn't just election gimmick - our children need quality resources, not just freebies. Let's see if implementation matches intent.

Deepak U

As a parent from Kalyana Karnataka, this is a game-changer. Our region has always lagged behind, but the 2% improvement in SSLC results shows consistent effort. Guest teachers and textbook plans do work! But we need permanent teachers, not just temporary arrangements.

Sarah B

Interesting to see rural students outperforming urban ones - that's a positive trend reversal! The KPS model with both Kannada and English mediums is smart. Hope they ensure proper infrastructure, especially transport for kids in remote areas.

Nisha Z

2,393 schools with 100% results is impressive! But I worry about the speed - 800 schools in two years? Our construction standards often slip under pressure. Let's prioritize quality over quantity - one good KPS is better than ten half-baked ones.

Michael C

Good data-driven governance here. The 14% jump in SSLC pass percentage and 13% in PUC is significant. But I'm curious about learning outcomes, not just pass percentages. Are students actually learning, or just memorizing for exams? That's the real question.

T We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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