In alignment with the vision of Atma-vishwas for Atmanirbhar Bharat, School EdTech company LEAD has launched India’s first Student Confidence Index, a study that assesses confidence levels of school-going students across regions, cities, demographics, and various other parameters.
Developed in collaboration with the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (LMRF, SMLS), LEAD’s Index reveals several powerful insights into student confidence. While India stands at a confidence level of 75 on a scale of 100, 36% of students have indicated top-bracket confidence levels (81-100).
LEAD’s Student Confidence Index assesses the five 21st-century confidence-building attributes critical for students to succeed in life: Conceptual Understanding, Critical Thinking, Communication, Collaboration, and Exposure to opportunities and platforms.
Other key insights:
A 25-point gap between Hyderabad, with an index score of 87, and Ambala with an index score of 62 suggests that students in India’s metros continue to be more confident than their peers in non-metros. Also, students in metros have a clear advantage over their peers in non-metros in the five core attributes that build confidence, according to the finding.
% of students for whom the attribute is a strength (student self-rating of 4 or 5) |
||
Attribute |
Metro |
Non-metro* |
Conceptual Understanding |
61 |
42 |
Critical Thinking |
61 |
42 |
Communication |
63 |
46 |
Collaboration |
53 |
44 |
Exposure |
57 |
41 |
West India tops the Student Confidence Index at a regional level at 81, while South and East India hover near the national average. Except for Chennai and Mumbai, where girls slightly outperformed boys, boys and girls appear to be more or less equally confident across metros and non-metros, according to the report.
Interestingly, LEAD students have outperformed their peers in non-metros across all confidence-building attributes.
Commenting on the Index, LEAD Co-founder and CEO Sumeet Mehta said,
“For India to be Atmanirbhar, our students need to have atma vishwas. But there was no way of knowing the confidence level of students of our country. LEAD’s Student Confidence Index, developed in partnership with the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (LMRF, SMLS), fills this gap. This is an annual survey and will help us monitor the confidence level of our students and help us make focused interventions through our education programs.”
Dr. Rahul S, Assistant Professor, LMRF, SMLS, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, added,
“We are delighted to partner with LEAD in developing India’s first Student Confidence Index. The tool for building this Confidence Index followed a rigorous research process by the LMRF team at TISS. The validity and reliability of the tool in measuring confidence, leading to academic performance have been scientifically established. The research and exposure we had with the LEAD schools and students primarily convinced us about the potential to bring about a meaningful change in academic achievements, and essentially the life and career of the students.”
India’s first Student Confidence Index surveyed 2800+ students across classes 6–10 in 6 metros, 6 non-metros, and 3 Tier 2/3 cities. The study was administered by market research and survey company Borderless Access.