"It is a tool used for education planning and administration and help us target a plan of action for effective implementation of programmes," School Education Secretary Vrinda Sarup told reporters here.
The atlas prepared with active collaboration with UNICEF and released by HRD Minister Smriti Irani in Chhatisgarh yesterday, is a visual representation of the vulnerabilities impinging education of girls.
"The atlas provides comparative analysis of individual gender-related indicators over three years and that enables a visual assessment of the change and an understanding of whether some intervention introduced in a geography at a particular point of time has worked or not," a statement said.
The performance status of individual indicators can be visualised at the state and district level, differentiated by colour coding.
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For example, the level of vulnerability of districts and blocks in Chhattisgarh or western Gujarat or Rajasthan can be measured with the digital atlas.
The atlas is placed on the HRD Ministry website and available and ready to be used by states, districts, block education administrators or any other interested group including NGOs, ministry officials said.
The map has been prepared with data collated from the Unified District Information System for Education Data, Census 2011 and District-level Health Survey.
While India has achieved high enrolment for girls at primary and upper primary levels, enrolment, however, remains low at the secondary level.
At the upper primary level, the representation of girls in total enrolment is 48.66 per cent and at the secondary level at 47.29 per cent.