For decades the report card has done one job: convert a term of learning into a number. It’s efficient, familiar — and increasingly out of step with what families and regulators actually want from a school.
Marks measure recall, not the child
A single score flattens a student into a rank. It can’t show that a child is a strong collaborator but an anxious test-taker, or that they’ve mastered fractions but quietly lost the thread in grammar. The information that would actually help a parent — or a teacher planning intervention — is exactly what a marks-only card throws away.
What holistic reporting includes
A report that reflects the whole child pulls together signals the school already generates every day.
- Topic-by-topic mastery, colour-coded from strong to gap.
- Attendance, participation and proficiency trends over time.
- A psychometric profile — how a child learns, not just what they scored.
Why leadership should care
Holistic reporting isn’t only pedagogy — it’s positioning. In a market where parents compare schools on “care” as much as results, a transparent, multi-dimensional report is one of the clearest signals that an institution sees each student as more than a number. It also aligns neatly with the NEP’s push toward continuous, 360-degree assessment.
Holistic Progress Reports
Roll academics, attendance, participation and psychometrics into one parent-ready report — auto-generated from everyday activity, with no marking or data entry, and shareable to a parent’s phone in a tap.
Explore Holistic Progress Reports →The report card isn’t going away. But the schools that lead will be the ones whose reports tell the whole story — automatically, and in a language parents recognise.
