“While the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) was established as a national quality-control benchmark to ensure teacher competence, its implementation in Jammu and Kashmir faces unique challenges due to regional legacies and complex administrative structures.”
Jammu and Kashmir’s decision to be the last region in the country to enforce the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) guidelines has reopened a long-simmering debate on teacher standards, service security and the pace of reform. Education Minister Sakina Itoo on Wednesday said the Union Territory would not implement the TET order immediately; a day after the School Education Department issued a formal directive designating the Jammu and Kashmir State Board of School Education as the nodal agency to conduct the examination. Her remarks that many teachers have dedicated decades of service and their concerns will be taken into account reflect the political and administrative sensitivity of the issue. But they also underline a deeper tension: how to reconcile the need for uniform national standards with the ground realities of a region emerging from prolonged instability. The TET, mandated under the Right to Education framework, was introduced across India to ensure minimum professional standards for teachers at the elementary level. In principle, it is a quality-control mechanism, an attempt to guarantee that every child, regardless of geography, is taught by a qualified and competent educator. In practice, however, its rollout has been uneven, particularly in regions with legacy appointments and complex service structures. Jammu and Kashmir’s education system has its own history. For decades, recruitment patterns, contractual appointments and localised policies shaped the teaching workforce. Many educators entered service at a time when TET was not a statutory requirement. To impose the test retrospectively, without adequate safeguards, would understandably generate anxiety. Teachers who have spent 15 or 20 years in classrooms may view a fresh eligibility test not as reform but as an indictment of their service. Yet, postponement cannot become permanent resistance. Education quality indicators in J&K, like in many parts of the country, show uneven learning outcomes. Foundational literacy and numeracy remain concerns.
“While delaying the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) in Jammu and Kashmir may serve immediate political interests, education policy must prioritize long-term standards over short-term pressure. By focusing on transparency and stakeholder consultation, the government can transform this transition into a way to boost professional credibility. Ultimately, successful reform requires a careful balance between national compliance and the morale of the local workforce.”
If TET is to serve its intended purpose — improving classroom standards — it must be implemented thoughtfully but firmly. The government’s challenge is therefore twofold. First, it must reassure in-service teachers that TET will not be used as a punitive instrument. Transitional provisions, training modules and multiple opportunities to qualify can ease apprehensions. Second, it must signal that future recruitment will be strictly merit-based and aligned with national norms. Reform delayed indefinitely risks isolating J&K from broader educational benchmarks. There is also an administrative question. By designating the State Board of School Education as the nodal agency, the School Education Department has taken the first institutional step. What remains unclear is the timeline, the structure of exemptions if any and the roadmap for capacity-building. The minister’s assertion that J&K will be the “last region” to conduct TET may be politically pragmatic. But education policy cannot be guided solely by immediacy or pressure. The larger objective must remain clear: raising standards without undermining morale. If handled with consultation and clarity, the TET transition could become an opportunity — not merely to comply with national guidelines, but to strengthen the credibility of the teaching profession in Jammu and Kashmir. Reform, after all, is not about speed alone; it is about balance, fairness and long-term vision.


