Background

The school sits in one of Mumbai's most academically competitive neighbourhoods, a short walk from Marine Lines station. It has a distinguished alumni list, a strong board exam track record, and parents who are, by any standard, deeply invested in their children's futures. Applications for Std 1 admission have a waiting list. The principal has been in education for 31 years.

In May 2023, the principal attended an education leadership forum in Pune where a counsellor from a Nashik school described a problem she had heard described many times: students arriving in Std 11 who had chosen their stream based on parental expectation or peer pressure rather than any informed understanding of their own aptitude and interest. The counsellor called it "the Std 11 reckoning" — the first six months of the new stream, when the mismatch between who a student is and what they are being asked to study becomes viscerally apparent.

The principal returned to Mumbai and asked her in-house career counsellor — a competent, overworked woman managing approximately 640 students across Std 8 to 12 — a direct question: "How many of our Std 11 students, right now, wish they had chosen a different stream?"

An informal survey of the current Std 11 batch of 180 students returned an uncomfortable answer: 47% said they were "not confident" or "quite uncertain" that they had chosen correctly. 21% said they actively wished they were in a different stream.

The problem was not unique to this school. But the principal decided it was solvable, and she wanted to measure the solution.

The Challenge

Stream selection in India's secondary school system is one of the highest-stakes decisions a 15-year-old will make — and it is almost universally made with inadequate information. The standard inputs for the decision are: board exam marks, parental occupation and preference, peer group choices, and a vague sense of which subjects feel "easier." None of these are good predictors of sustained engagement or eventual career satisfaction.

The institutional challenge at this school was threefold. First, the single in-house counsellor did not have the capacity to conduct meaningful one-on-one career exploration sessions with 640 students. Second, parents — many of them professionals with strong opinions about what constituted a "good" stream — were a significant influence on student decisions, often overriding their children's inclinations. Third, there was no baseline data. The school had never systematically measured stream satisfaction or regret, which meant improvement could not be tracked.

The principal set a specific goal: by the end of the 2024 academic year, the percentage of incoming Std 11 students expressing uncertainty about their stream choice should fall below 20%. The starting point — based on the informal survey — was approximately 53%.

The Intervention

Dheya's institutional programme was deployed in two phases across the 2023–24 academic year, covering all 310 students in Std 9 and Std 10.

Phase 1: Student Assessment (September–November 2023)

All 310 students completed the RAPD psychometric assessment and a structured interest inventory over four dedicated class periods. Assessments were administered digitally in school computer labs, with paper alternatives for students who preferred them. Each student received an individual report: a four-page summary of their RAPD profile, their top interest clusters, and a preliminary list of five to eight career directions that research suggests are a strong match for their combination of personality, aptitude, and interest.

Reports were not shared with parents without student consent — a design choice the school's counsellor had specifically requested, having seen previous instances where assessment data was used by parents to override student preferences rather than support informed conversation.

Individual debrief sessions (20 minutes each) were conducted by Dheya counsellors working on-site three days per week. The in-house counsellor was present at all sessions as a co-facilitator — a deliberate capacity-building approach.

Phase 2: Counsellor Training and Parent Workshops (January–March 2024)

The school's in-house counsellor participated in a 3-day residential training module at Dheya's training centre, covering psychometric interpretation, career pathway mapping for post-school options, and facilitation of student-parent career conversations.

Four parent workshops were conducted — two per standard, one on a weekday evening and one on a Saturday morning, to maximise attendance across different parent schedules. The workshops covered three specific topics: how to read RAPD data, the difference between aptitude-based stream selection and subject-preference-based selection, and the statistical relationship between career-stream alignment at Std 11 and career satisfaction at age 30 (drawn from published longitudinal research).

Attendance across the four workshops was 68% of the parent body — unusually high for an evening academic programme. Post-workshop surveys showed that 79% of attending parents said the session had changed at least one assumption they held about their child's career options.

A critical design element: the workshops did not tell parents what to decide. They provided a framework for having a different kind of conversation with their child — one grounded in data rather than family precedent or social expectation.

Stream Selection Process (April 2024)

When Std 10 students completed their board exams and moved into stream selection, they had access to three inputs they had not had in previous years: their individual RAPD report, their interest cluster mapping, and a 45-minute counsellor debrief session. Students were also encouraged — but not required — to share their reports with parents as a starting point for family conversations.

The in-house counsellor reported a notable change in the texture of conversations during the April stream selection window: "Last year, students would come in and say 'my parents want me to take Science, what do I do?' This year, they came in with their report and said 'I scored high on Analytical and I love biology but I'm not sure whether that means Science or Bio-based Commerce.' That's a completely different conversation."

The Outcome

At the end of July 2024, a structured survey was administered to the full incoming Std 11 cohort of 186 students (six students had transferred schools). The survey replicated the language of the 2023 informal benchmark as closely as possible.

Results:

  • Students expressing "not confident" or "quite uncertain" about their stream choice: 18% (down from 53% — a reduction of 66%)
  • Students actively wishing they had chosen a different stream: 8% (down from 21%)
  • Students who said their RAPD report "significantly influenced" their stream decision: 61%
  • Students who said a parent conversation referencing the RAPD report was "helpful" in making their decision: 54%

Against the principal's target of sub-20% stream uncertainty, the result was a 62% reduction in stream regret at the point of Std 11 entry — achieved one year ahead of the initial projection.

The in-house counsellor's own capability had also measurably improved. Post-programme, she reported feeling "confident" in using psychometric data as a counselling tool (up from "somewhat confident" at baseline) and had independently designed a follow-up session structure for Std 11 students at the 3-month mark.

The school renewed its institutional partnership for the 2024–25 academic year, expanding the programme to include Std 8 as an early exploration cohort.

Lessons from This Case

Baseline measurement is the prerequisite for institutional improvement. The principal's decision to survey current Std 11 students before designing the intervention established accountability from the outset. Schools that deploy career programmes without baselines cannot demonstrate impact — and often cannot sustain commitment when budgets are under pressure.

Parent engagement requires reframing, not instruction. Parents do not attend school workshops to be told they are wrong. The workshop design focused on giving parents new information and a new conversational vocabulary — not on correcting their instincts. The 79% mindset shift rate reflects this approach.

Counsellor capacity building must be embedded, not bolted on. The in-house counsellor was a co-facilitator throughout the programme, not a passive observer. Her capability development was a programme outcome, not a side effect. This ensured the intervention would have lasting effect beyond the contract period.

Data creates agency, not just clarity. The most significant change the school observed was not in the quality of stream choices per se — it was in the quality of the decision-making process. Students arrived at selection with evidence about themselves. That shift from passive to active changed the dynamic with parents, with counsellors, and with the students' own sense of ownership over their choices.