ASER stands for Annual Status of Education Report. It is a nationwide household survey that measures children’s schooling status and basic learning levels, especially in rural India.
ASER is conducted by Pratham Foundation. Unlike government datasets such as UDISE+, which focus mainly on school-level administrative data, ASER tests children directly at the household level for basic reading and arithmetic skills.
ASER 2024 is important because it shows how far India has recovered from the learning losses caused by Covid-19 school closures.
Coverage
ASER 2024 covered rural India and retained its basic household survey model. It reached over 6.49 lakh children across 17,997 villages in 605 rural districts. It covered children in the 3–16 age group, and tested the reading and arithmetic skills of over 5 lakh children in the 5–16 age group.
The survey assesses whether children can perform basic tasks such as reading letters, words, simple paragraphs, Std II-level text, recognising numbers and doing basic arithmetic.
This makes ASER useful because it focuses on actual learning, not only enrolment or infrastructure.
Key Findings
ASER 2024 shows a clear recovery in foundational learning after the Covid-related decline seen in 2022.
In reading, government schools showed strong improvement. For Std III children in government schools, the share able to read at least Std II-level text increased from 16.3% in 2022 to 23.4% in 2024. This is higher than the pre-Covid figure of 20.9% in 2018.
For Std V children in government schools, the share able to read Std II-level text recovered from 38.5% in 2022 to 44.8% in 2024, slightly above the 2018 level of 44.2%. Private schools also improved, but their recovery was more limited, rising from 56.8% in 2022 to 59.3% in 2024.
This means learning recovery is visible, especially in government schools. But the absolute levels remain a concern because many children in Std III and Std V are still unable to read text expected from much lower grades.
Arithmetic and Foundational Learning
ASER also tests basic arithmetic, such as number recognition, subtraction and division. The broader message from ASER 2024 is that foundational learning has improved compared to 2022, but India still has a large learning deficit.
The concern is not only whether children are enrolled in school, but whether they are actually learning basic skills at the right age.
This is directly linked to Foundational Literacy and Numeracy, or FLN, which is a major focus of the National Education Policy 2020 and the NIPUN Bharat Mission.
Digital Access
ASER 2024 also included digital access, usage and skills among older children. This is important because digital education expanded after Covid, but access remains uneven.
The survey looked at digital exposure among children in the 14–16 age group, including access to smartphones and basic digital skills.
This matters because digital access is now linked with learning, exam preparation, online services and future employability. But if access is unequal, it can widen educational inequality.
Importance
ASER 2024 is important because it shifts the focus from schooling to learning.
India has made major progress in enrolment, school infrastructure, mid-day meals and access. But ASER repeatedly shows that enrolment does not automatically mean learning.
The report is useful because it highlights:
• Recovery after Covid learning loss
• Continuing weakness in reading and arithmetic
• Difference between enrolment and learning
• Need for strong FLN implementation
• Importance of household-level learning assessment
• Digital divide among rural children
ASER also complements government data. UDISE+ tells us how many schools, teachers and students exist. ASER tells us whether children can actually read and calculate.
Concerns
The biggest concern is that learning levels are still low despite improvement.
If a child reaches Std V but cannot comfortably read Std II-level text, it means the school system is promoting children without ensuring basic learning. This later affects comprehension, mathematics, science, employability and confidence.
Another concern is inequality. Children from poorer households, rural areas, first-generation learners and weaker school systems often face greater learning gaps.
Digital access is also uneven. A child may have access to a smartphone at home, but that does not always mean independent educational use, stable internet or meaningful digital learning.
Key concerns include:
• Low foundational reading ability
• Weak basic arithmetic
• Grade-level learning gaps
• Rural and socio-economic inequality
• Uneven digital access
• Need for teacher support and remedial learning
• Risk of focusing only on enrolment and infrastructure
Relevance for India
ASER 2024 is directly relevant for India’s school education policy because it tests the core promise of education: whether children are learning.
It supports the need for strong implementation of:
• NEP 2020
• NIPUN Bharat Mission
• Foundational Literacy and Numeracy goals
• Samagra Shiksha
• Teacher training
• Remedial education
• Community-based learning support
• Better learning assessments
The lesson from ASER 2024 is clear: India has recovered from some Covid learning losses, but foundational learning remains the real challenge.
Conclusion
ASER 2024 shows improvement in rural children’s learning levels after the Covid decline, especially in government schools. But the report also reminds us that enrolment is not enough. India’s priority must be foundational literacy, numeracy, teacher support and learning-focused school governance.



