In a bid to tackle chronic staffing shortages disrupting classrooms, Bangladesh’s education ministry is tapping experienced retired teachers for non-government institutions.
Facing acute teacher shortages that threaten the continuity of classroom learning across thousands of private educational institutions, the Bangladesh government has decided to allow experienced and physically fit retired teachers to fill temporary positions in non-government schools and colleges.
The Secondary and Higher Education Division issued a directive in early April 2026 instructing deputy commissioners (DCs) and Upazila Nirbahi Officers (UNOs) to create upazila-level pools of retired teachers. These educators, selected for their expertise and physical capability, will be appointed on a temporary basis by school managing committees or governing bodies on the advice of local UNOs. Their honorariums will be paid from the institutions’ own internal funds, not government coffers.
This initiative comes amid revelations by Education Minister ANM Ehsanul Hoque Milon that approximately 60,295 teaching positions remain vacant in MPO-listed (government grant-receiving) private secondary schools and colleges. Official data indicates around 34,129 private educational institutions in the country employ nearly 600,000 teachers, yet systemic delays have left many classrooms understaffed.
Addressing a Mounting Teacher Crisis
Bangladesh’s secondary education sector, dominated by private institutions (over 93 per cent of secondary schools), has long struggled with staffing gaps. Recent NTRCA recruitment drives have proven inadequate. In one instance, the authority recommended only 11,713 candidates against 67,208 vacant posts, leaving over 55,000 positions unfilled across schools, madrasas, and technical institutions.
Experts point to several factors: rapid expansion of private schools to meet growing student enrolment (over 8 million secondary students), retirements, and an insufficient number of qualified new entrants. UNESCO data highlights that Bangladesh has one of the lowest proportions of qualified secondary teachers in South Asia, with only about 55 per cent meeting minimum standards. Subject-specific shortages are particularly severe in English and mathematics.
The teacher shortage exacerbates existing challenges, including high student-teacher ratios in many rural and semi-urban areas, contributing to learning gaps, higher dropout rates, and reliance on private coaching. National assessments have shown alarming deficiencies in foundational skills, with many students lagging in core competencies despite years of schooling.
By re-engaging retired teachers – many with decades of classroom experience – the government aims to provide immediate relief and maintain educational continuity while longer-term reforms are pursued.
How the Retired Teachers Pool Will Work
According to the ministry’s letter dated April 9, 2026, district administrations must compile lists of willing retired teachers who are physically fit and capable of teaching. Appointments will be temporary, focused on ensuring “uninterrupted classroom teaching” and leveraging the “experience and expertise” of veteran educators.
School management will handle appointments with UNO oversight, providing a localized, flexible mechanism. The Directorate General of Secondary and Higher Education (DSHE) will monitor implementation, ensuring institutions allocate necessary funds from their essential expenditure heads.
This approach avoids straining the national budget while utilizing a readily available talent pool. Retired teachers often possess strong subject knowledge and pedagogical skills honed over years, potentially offering mentoring to younger staff.
However, success will depend on effective screening for fitness and expertise, fair remuneration to attract quality candidates, and mechanisms to integrate them smoothly without disrupting school dynamics.
Challenges in the NTRCA Recruitment System
The move underscores deep-rooted issues with the Non-Government Teachers’ Registration and Certification Authority (NTRCA), the primary body for recruiting teachers in private institutions. Delays in recommendations, legal challenges, quota disputes, and allegations of irregularities have plagued the process.
Recent reforms, including automated systems for head teacher recruitment, aim to enhance transparency and reduce corruption. Yet, backlogs persist, with thousands of certified candidates awaiting placement and institutions operating with skeleton staff. Court interventions and protests by job seekers have further highlighted systemic frustrations.
Broader context includes pending retirement benefits for thousands of private teachers and employees, requiring substantial government funding (estimates run into thousands of crores of taka). These financial pressures complicate efforts to attract and retain new talent.
Broader Implications for Education Quality
Education experts and stakeholders in Bangladesh say that while the retired teachers initiative offers a pragmatic short-term solution, it does not mean that comprehensive reforms in the education sector can wait any longer. These reforms include accelerating NTRCA processes, improving teacher training, addressing qualification gaps, and enhancing incentives for postings in underserved areas.
The policy arrives as Bangladesh grapples with post-pandemic learning losses, curriculum changes, and ambitions for a more skilled workforce. Quality education is critical for the country’s demographic dividend, with millions of young people entering the job market.
Positive reactions have emerged from some school administrators facing immediate crises, viewing experienced retirees as stabilisers. Concerns include potential generational gaps, varying adaptability to new curricula or technology, and ensuring the measure does not delay permanent recruitments.
Educationists urge pairing this with investments in pre-service training, continuous professional development, and better working conditions to build a robust, sustainable teaching force.
As implementation rolls out at the upazila level, the education ministry will likely monitor outcomes closely. Success could pave the way for similar innovative approaches, while failure might intensify calls for systemic overhaul.
This policy reflects a pragmatic acknowledgment of ground realities in Bangladesh’s education landscape: urgent action is needed to keep classrooms functioning and students learning, even as deeper structural fixes are pursued. With experienced hands returning to the blackboard, thousands of students may soon benefit from continuity and expertise that was at risk of being lost.
Image: ADB

