Meghalaya’s education system lies in ruins under political patronage
Editor,
The latest national education rankings exposing Meghalaya as the worst-performing state in school education is not merely a statistical embarrassment — it is a devastating indictment of years of political negligence, cronyism, and hollow governance. A state boasting over 55,000 teachers, more than 14,500 schools, and endless speeches on “youth empowerment” has now officially descended to the bottom of India’s educational ladder. The figures are not just alarming; they are humiliating.
What makes this collapse even more disgraceful is that it was entirely avoidable.
There was a time when education in Meghalaya commanded respect. Teachers were respected for their competence, discipline, and commitment — not evaluated through the poisonous lens of tribal versus non-tribal identity or political allegiance. A teacher was simply a teacher. But that culture steadily deteriorated as meritocracy gave way to favouritism, patronage, and politically sponsored appointments. Today’s crisis is not accidental; it is manufactured.
The so-called “education hub” of the North East now stands exposed as a system in decay — with 206 schools having zero students and over 2,200 schools surviving on single-digit enrolment. Thousands of students continue dropping out every year while governments celebrate cosmetic infrastructure projects and publicity campaigns. What kind of governance presides over empty schools, collapsing learning standards, and unemployable youth while simultaneously boasting about economic miracles and billion-dollar dreams?
The answer lies in the political culture that has overtaken the sector. When recruitment and appointments become tools for rewarding loyalty instead of identifying merit, decline becomes inevitable. Allegations surrounding politically connected education scandals and questionable appointment practices have only deepened public distrust. Cronyism has eaten into the very foundation of the education system. Deserving candidates are sidelined while mediocrity is institutionalised through influence networks and political blessings.
And yet, those in power continue speaking the language of “growth” and “development” as though statistics can erase reality.
The real tragedy is not only that Meghalaya has slipped to the last rank, but that there appears to be no visible urgency, accountability, or moral courage within the political establishment to confront the disaster honestly. Instead of introspection, there is denial. Instead of structural reform, there are speeches. Instead of educational transformation, there is administrative complacency.
A government that cannot secure the future of its children has little moral authority to speak about prosperity. No economy grows sustainably on the ruins of a broken education system. No society progresses by replacing competence with connections. And no amount of public relations can conceal the fact that Meghalaya’s educational collapse is ultimately the result of years of political interference, institutional decay, and leadership failure.
The report card is now before the nation. And it is damning.
Yours etc.
A concerned citizen



