
The Bureaucratic Gauntlet of High-Stakes Exams
From Karnataka to São Paulo, millions of students face deadlines, documentation hurdles, and the weight of state machinery as they seek a place in higher education.
In a modest home in Bengaluru South district, a young woman named Kavya stares at a computer screen. The portal for Karnataka’s Common Entrance Test counselling is open, but she cannot complete her option entry. The reason is not a lack of marks or ambition, but a missing piece of paper: a caste certificate compliant with the state’s new internal reservation system. She applied for it nearly a month ago, yet the tehsildar’s office has not issued the document. Without its revenue document number, the system refuses to let her proceed. She is one of more than 11,000 Scheduled Caste students in the same predicament, their futures suspended in a digital queue that will close on 8 July.
The bottleneck is a bureaucratic tangle born of policy timing. When applications opened, the state had not yet decided to implement internal reservation for CET seats, so students submitted old certificates. After the government’s decision, the Karnataka Examinations Authority directed all SC aspirants to obtain fresh certificates under Categories A, B, and C. The authority has written to the Revenue Department urging speed, and sent SMS reminders to students, but the tehsildar offices have not kept pace. Viewed from within the state’s administrative machinery, the delay reveals the friction between a political commitment to sub-categorisation and the ground-level capacity to deliver the paperwork that makes it real.
Half a world away, in Brazil, a different kind of deadline fell on the same Friday. Registration closed for the Prova Nacional Docente, the national teaching exam known as the “Enem of teachers”, with a fee of 85 reais and a test date in September. The Ministry of Education reported that 2,031 states and municipalities had signed up to use the exam’s results in hiring, a 30 per cent increase on the previous year. Meanwhile, the main Enem exam for secondary school leavers confirmed 5.05 million registered candidates, a figure boosted by the automatic enrolment of public-school students and a modest financial incentive for those who sit both days. The scale is vast: an estimated 10,000 schools will host the tests, and officials expect four in five public-school graduates to take the exam in the very building where they studied.
These parallel episodes are not merely administrative updates. They are snapshots of a global season in which high-stakes testing functions as a sorting mechanism for social mobility, and where the machinery of the state can either lubricate or obstruct that process. In Russia, the education oversight body Rosobrnadzor announced that 36.4 per cent of students who took the basic-level maths exam earned the top grade of “5”, while the share failing to clear the minimum threshold was 3.7 per cent. The figures, along with a reported rise in perfect scores in history and literature, feed a narrative of improving outcomes, though analysts in Moscow note that such data are often read as much for their political signal as for their pedagogical meaning. In Indonesia, the Ministry of Higher Education moved to correct a widely circulated claim that 60,000 admitted students had withdrawn, explaining that the number conflated unfilled capacity with those who simply did not re-register—a clarification that underscores how easily aggregate statistics can distort the lived experience of applicants.
Away from the official portals and press releases, a consumer court in Chandigarh delivered a reminder that the promise of education can be counterfeited. A 21-year-old woman paid 12.35 lakh rupees to a visa consultancy that provided her with an offer letter and a letter of acceptance from a Canadian college. When delays mounted, she contacted the institution directly and received a written reply: no admission record existed in her name. The commission ordered a full refund with interest, but the documents themselves—the fake letterhead, the forged signatures—remain a quiet testament to the vulnerability that accompanies aspiration. In Bengaluru, Kavya still waits for her certificate, the cursor blinking on an incomplete form.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Brazil's exam machinery is running at full throttle: over five million Enem 2026 registrants mark a high since 2022, while the National Teacher Exam closes registration with thousands of aspiring educators. The figures tell a story of a collective rush for certification, seen as the gateway to university and a stable public-sector job.
Behind the exam rhetoric lies a reality of exclusion: over eleven thousand Scheduled Caste students risk losing their chance at college counselling due to bureaucratic delays in issuing certificates. Meanwhile, scams by agencies promising fake study visas proliferate, leaving families to nurse financial wounds.
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