Karnataka's Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC) results have registered a sharp jump this year, with the overall pass percentage rising to 94.1% from the earlier combined benchmark of 80%—a significant increase of 14 percentage points.
The Belagavi division, which comprises nine educational districts of Kittur Karnataka, recorded its highest-ever pass percentage at 95.7%, with all districts showing improvement.
Caution from Educationists
While the surge points to a positive shift in student outcomes, educationists caution against drawing sweeping conclusions from the headline figure without deeper analysis. They argue that such a steep rise within a single academic cycle requires scrutiny to determine whether it reflects genuine learning gains, improved academic support systems, streamlined supplementary processes, reduced absenteeism, more liberal evaluation, or changes in examination difficulty. Without such analysis, they warn, the pass percentage alone could overstate the system's actual performance.
Division-wise Data
Data from the Belagavi division offers additional insight. Of the 2,43,248 students who appeared for the examination, 48,272 (19.8%) scored between 33% and 49%, while a substantial 80.1% secured 50% and above, indicating that the majority of students performed well beyond the minimum passing threshold. Only 5.9% of candidates scored below 33%.
Grade-wise Performance
Performance at the higher end also appears strong. As many as 20,588 students (8.4%) scored between 90% and 100% (A+ grade), while 38,134 (15.6%) secured 80–89% (A). In the middle ranges, 41,044 students (16.8%) scored 70–79% (B+), 41,495 (17%) scored 60–69% (B), and 39,196 (16.1%) fell in the 50–59% bracket (C+).
Impact of Passing Marks Reduction
Officials maintain that the recent reduction in minimum passing marks to 33 has had only a marginal impact on the overall outcome. Additional commissioner for school education and literacy Ishwar Ullagaddi said, "The results reflect a coordinated and well-planned academic effort rather than any single policy change."
Subject-wise Concerns
However, subject-wise performance remains a concern, with higher failure rates reported in mathematics, English and Kannada. Educationists stress that the next phase of evaluation must move beyond aggregate pass percentages. They have called for granular analysis covering subject-wise failure trends, performance disparities among SC, ST, minority and CWSN students, gender gaps, variations across government, aided and private institutions, and rural–urban divides. Without such detailed metrics, they caution, policy responses risk remaining incomplete and overly dependent on headline numbers.



