📄 Abstract
The present study provides a rigorous longitudinal investigation into the trends and patterns of general educational development across major Indian states, with a major focus on Karnataka from 2000 to 2023. By blending qualitative learning outcomes from ASER datasets with quantitative attainment metrics from the National Family Health Survey (NFHS), the analysis evaluates the effectiveness of state-led educational interventions across three distinct macroeconomic phases: the fiscal consolidation of the FRBM Act Era (Phase I), the rights-based expansionary period of the RTE Act (Phase II), and the post-2015 era of structural devolution and pandemic-induced disruptions (Phase III). The findings reveal a significant "quantity-quality paradox" in Karnatakas developmental backdrop; while the state has successfully achieved a top-five national ranking in quantitative metricssuch as the percentage of women and men with ten or more years of schoolingit has simultaneously dealt with chronic stagnation in foundational learning competencies. Despite experiencing a healthy corrected per capita economic growth of 9.89% during Phase II, Karnatakas relative ranking in foundational literacy and numeracy has remained entrenched in the bottom tier of the national hierarchy. The study concludes that the state's educational framework is highly efficient in maintaining enrollment and ensuring quantitative completion but remains pedagogically fragile, necessitating a radical shift from input-centric policies to quality-driven pedagogical reforms to safeguard human capital in the post-pandemic era
📚 How to Cite:
Hemantha M, Dr. S. B. Nari , TRENDS AND PATTERNS IN GENERAL EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN INDIAN STATES WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO KARNATAKA , Volume 14 , Issue 5, May 2026, International Journal of Indian Economic Light(JIEL) ,