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The Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan Post Graduate Teacher recruitment examination, commonly referred to as the KVS PGT examination, is an entrance examination associated with the recruitment of teaching faculty for senior secondary classes in schools run by the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan. The examination falls within the broader category of teaching recruitment tests in India, and is generally undertaken by candidates who hold a postgraduate qualification in a relevant subject along with a teacher education qualification. This editorial draft has been prepared as a starting point for human editors and is intentionally cautious in its statements; it does not assert dates, cycle frequencies, fee structures, eligibility cut-offs, vacancy figures, syllabus particulars, or selection ratios, since these elements vary across recruitment cycles and must be verified against primary sources before publication. Editors are encouraged to treat this draft as a scaffold, populating each section with current, sourced information from official notifications and reputed secondary coverage. The aim of the present document is to provide a neutral framework, identify topical areas commonly covered in articles on Indian teaching entrance examinations, and flag verification requirements so that the final IndiaWiki article meets the encyclopaedia's standards for accuracy, neutrality, and verifiability.
The Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan is an autonomous body under the Government of India that administers a network of central schools across the country, primarily catering to children of transferable central government employees and certain other categories. Recruitment of teaching staff at various levels — including for senior secondary classes — has historically been carried out through structured selection processes that combine written examinations, demonstrations, and interviews. The PGT category specifically pertains to teachers engaged for higher classes, where subject specialisation at the postgraduate level is ordinarily required. Editors should note that recruitment notifications, eligibility conditions, and procedural details have been revised from time to time by the competent authority, and that the conducting agency for the written examination has not always remained the same across cycles. Accordingly, the historical evolution of the examination — including any transitions between in-house conduct and outsourcing to national testing agencies — should be researched carefully and supported with primary references. Background information may also include the broader policy context, such as the role of central government schools in school education and the place of structured recruitment examinations within the public service hiring framework in India.
Recruitment examinations for teaching positions in centrally administered school systems are a matter of public interest because they govern entry into stable public service roles and influence the quality of instruction available to a large student population. The KVS PGT examination, by virtue of being associated with a national network of schools, attracts candidates from across India and from a wide range of subject backgrounds, including the sciences, humanities, languages, and commerce. For aspirants pursuing careers in school teaching at the senior secondary level, examinations of this kind represent one of several pathways into government service. The examination is also significant from a policy perspective, as the design of its syllabus, weightages, and selection components reflects prevailing thinking about what knowledge and competencies a senior secondary teacher should possess. Editors preparing the final article may wish to situate the examination within the larger ecosystem of teacher recruitment in India, drawing comparisons, where appropriate and verifiable, with other central and state-level teacher recruitment processes, while taking care to avoid speculative claims about relative difficulty, prestige, or candidate volumes.
The following checklist outlines areas that articles on Indian teaching recruitment examinations typically cover. Each item should be independently verified against an official notification, government order, or reliable secondary source before being included in the final article.
Editors should be particularly cautious with numerical claims such as vacancy counts, candidate numbers, cut-off marks, and pass percentages, as these are cycle-specific and frequently misreported in coaching-oriented secondary sources.
For the published IndiaWiki entry, editors may consider the following section ordering as a working template, subject to adjustment based on available sourcing:
This structure mirrors the conventions used in mature articles on other Indian competitive examinations and supports both reader navigation and ongoing editorial maintenance.
This draft has deliberately avoided supplying specific dates, statistics, or procedural details that would require verification against primary sources. Editors taking this draft forward should consult the official notifications issued by the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan, any associated communications from designated examination agencies, and reputable news reportage. Care should be taken not to rely solely on coaching websites, social media posts, or aggregated portals, which often present outdated or paraphrased information without adequate sourcing. Where claims about cut-offs, vacancy numbers, or selection ratios are encountered, editors should attempt to trace them to a primary document and cite that document directly. Tone should remain neutral; promotional language about preparation strategies, coaching institutes, or unofficial study material is not appropriate for an encyclopaedic entry. Editors should also be mindful of recency: examination policies are updated periodically, and older details should be retained only with clear contextual framing. Finally, any biographical information about officials, candidates, or commentators should be excluded unless directly relevant and properly sourced, in keeping with the encyclopaedia's policies on verifiability and the treatment of living persons.
To be supplied by editors during the review process. Suggested categories of sources include: official notifications and recruitment advertisements issued by the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan; communications from any examination conducting agency engaged for the relevant cycle; government gazette entries, where applicable; coverage in established Indian newspapers and news magazines; and policy documents issued by the Ministry of Education, Government of India. Each statement of fact in the final article should carry an inline citation to one or more such sources, and bare URLs should be replaced with fully formatted references before publication.