“While school bus drivers deserve fair pay, J&K’s private schools are failing their teachers—reducing the intellectual foundation of education to an underpaid, undignified profession.”
In the polished corridors of Kashmir’s private schools, an uncomfortable contradiction quietly defines the education economy. The individual responsible for safely driving a school bus often earns a higher monthly income than the teacher entrusted with shaping young minds inside the classroom. This comparison is not meant to diminish the work of transport staff. School bus drivers perform a critical duty, often under demanding conditions, and their fair remuneration is entirely justified. The real concern emerges when this reality is juxtaposed with the financial and professional treatment of educators—those whose work forms the intellectual foundation of the very institutions they serve. Across the private education sector in Jammu and Kashmir, teaching has gradually been stripped of its dignity as a stable profession. Despite being highly qualified, trained, and certified, teachers are frequently placed in a precarious position within institutional hierarchies. Salaries remain modest, increments are inconsistent, and job security is minimal or entirely absent in many cases. Employment is often governed more by discretion than by structured policy, leaving educators vulnerable to arbitrary decisions. This vulnerability is compounded by a regulatory environment that has struggled to keep pace with the rapid commercialization of education. While private schools regularly approach the Fee Fixation and Regulation Committee seeking fee hikes—many of which are approved with limited public disclosure—the corresponding obligation to improve staff welfare remains largely unenforced. The result is a widening gap between rising institutional revenues and stagnant teacher compensation. Over time, a paradoxical system has taken shape: schools expand infrastructure, invest in marketing, and project an image of academic excellence, while the very workforce responsible for delivering that excellence remains financially undervalued. Teachers are expected to manage growing academic responsibilities, administrative duties, and performance pressures, all while working under fragile employment conditions that offer little long-term stability. The imbalance is not confined to teachers alone. Support staff, including school bus drivers, experiences their own version of financial uncertainty. While their earnings may surpass those of teachers during active academic months, their wages are frequently reduced during extended winter breaks when schools shut down due to harsh weather. This seasonal adjustment effectively turns stable employment into conditional livelihood, where income fluctuates not on effort or responsibility, but on the academic calendar. Such practices reflect a broader operational philosophy within segments of private schooling system—one that prioritizes cost flexibility for management while externalizing economic insecurity onto employees. The burden of financial adjustment is consistently borne by those at the lower tiers of the institutional structure, whether in classrooms or behind the wheel. Adding to this structural imbalance is the inconsistent role of oversight institutions and public authorities.
“While private schools expand their campuses and marketing budgets to project an image of prestige, the frontline workers delivering that value—teachers and support staff—bear the burden of financial insecurity. From heavy workloads and fragile contracts for educators to seasonal wage cuts for bus drivers during winter vacations, institutional cost flexibility is achieved by externalizing economic risk onto the lowest structural tiers, unchecked by inconsistent regulatory oversight.”
On one hand, official statements frequently caution against the “commercialization of education,” expressing concern over escalating fees and private profiteering. On the other, the same administrative ecosystem is often visibly present at private school events as chief guests and dignitaries, lending symbolic legitimacy to institutions whose internal labor practices remain largely unregulated. This dual posture—public critique paired with private endorsement—creates an environment where accountability is diluted. Ceremonial recognition substitutes for regulatory enforcement, and performative concern overshadows systemic correction. In such a setting, exploitative structures persist not in secrecy, but in plain sight. What is particularly striking is that viable alternatives already exist within the country. Several states and union territories have implemented stronger frameworks governing private school operations, including standardized teacher service conditions, transparent fee regulation, and clearer accountability mechanisms. These interventions demonstrate that meaningful reform is not only possible but already operational in comparable contexts. For Jammu and Kashmir, the challenge is therefore not conceptual but administrative. Strengthening enforcement mechanisms, establishing clear service rules for educators, ensuring transparency in fee utilization, and insulating education governance from symbolic patronage could collectively reshape the current landscape. Such reforms would not dismantle private education but would align it more closely with its stated purpose. Ultimately, education cannot function sustainably as a purely commercial enterprise. It relies on the stability, motivation, and dignity of those who deliver it. When those individuals are undervalued, the consequences extend far beyond institutional balance sheets—they affect the quality of learning itself. Until that imbalance is addressed, the contradiction will remain stark: a system where those entrusted with transporting children are often valued more consistently than those responsible for transforming them. And in that contradiction lies a deeper question about what society truly prioritizes when it speaks of education.

