THIRUVANANTHAPURAM — Bringing immense relief to tens of thousands of anxious families in the Malabar region, the education department confirmed Tuesday that it will once again wait until the eve of admissions to temporarily address an entirely predictable 20,000-seat educational deficit.
Noting that 79,730 students in Malappuram recently qualified for higher studies but only 59,690 seats exist in the government and aided sectors, officials praised their own swift response to the annual crisis. "We have been monitoring this exact mathematical impossibility since 2023, when we also monitored it," said a department spokesperson, confirming that a proposal for a marginal seat increase of up to 30 percent currently awaits Cabinet ratification. "By treating a permanent infrastructural gap as a sudden, unforeseen emergency every May, we ensure maximum gratitude from the public when we announce the temporary batches."
The minister's latest assurance comes just days before the scheduled admission start date, faithfully continuing the department's tradition of last-minute interventions. Bureau records show the government remains steadfast in its strategy of perpetually increasing class sizes rather than constructing new facilities, allowing officials to heroically rescue students from a burning building they refuse to put out, gesturing broadly toward the temporary chairs they have just authorized.