Maktab Teacher Management in India: Attendance, Pay, and Training Records

Introduction

The maktab teacher — the muallim or muallimat — is the single most important factor in whether a maktab succeeds or fails. A gifted, committed teacher with a paper register and a bare room will produce excellent outcomes. A poorly chosen, inconsistent teacher in a beautifully equipped maktab will produce poor ones.

And yet maktab teacher management in India is one of the most underdeveloped areas of Islamic education administration. Most mosque committees hire informally, pay irregularly, keep no training records, and have no process for addressing performance problems until a crisis forces the issue. The teacher — often underpaid, under-supported, and professionally isolated — leaves after a year or two, taking their accumulated knowledge of each student’s progress with them.

This article is a practical guide to managing maktab teachers well — from the initial hire through salary management, training support, performance management, and retention.


Why Teacher Management Matters More Than Most Committees Realise

Impact AreaEffect of Good Teacher ManagementEffect of Poor Management
Teaching qualityConfident, supported teacher delivers better lessonsUnsupported teacher defaults to routine; quality declines
Student outcomesConsistent, motivated teaching produces student progressDemotivated teacher produces stagnant students
Teacher retentionFair pay and respect keeps good teachersUnderpayment and disrespect drives good teachers away
Community trustParents trust a well-managed institutionParents lose confidence when teachers change frequently
Institutional continuityConsistent teacher provides continuity of student records and relationshipsFrequent turnover means repeated loss of student knowledge

Hiring the Right Teacher: What to Look For

Non-Negotiable Qualifications

RequirementWhy
Ability to recite the Quran correctly with TajweedA teacher who cannot model correct recitation cannot produce students who recite correctly
Knowledge of basic fiqh (wudu, namaz, Ramadan minimum)Cannot teach what they do not know
Formal Islamic education — Deeniyat Level 6+, Dars-e-Nizami, or equivalentBaseline qualification for the Deeniyat or similar curriculum

Qualities to Assess at Interview

Patience and love for children. Ask the candidate to describe a difficult student they have taught. How they respond reveals their orientation.

Punctuality and reliability. Ask specifically how they handle days when they are unwell or unavailable. Do they have a substitute plan?

Communication with parents. Have they ever called a parent about a student’s progress? How did they approach it?

Commitment to continuous learning. Have they attended any teacher training or professional development? Are they willing to?

Red Flags

  • Unable to demonstrate correct recitation of selected ayahs on the spot
  • No clear explanation of how they track student Quran progress
  • Reluctance to discuss salary expectations honestly
  • No references from previous teaching experience

Setting Up the Employment Relationship Correctly

Many mosque committees hire maktab teachers with a handshake and a verbal agreement. This creates avoidable problems when disputes arise.

Minimum Agreed Terms (in Writing)

Even a simple one-page letter confirming the following prevents most disputes:

TermWhat to Specify
RoleTeacher of [level/subject] at [maktab name]
Session days and timesExact days, start and end times
Monthly salarySpecific amount in INR
Payment dateBy which date of each month salary will be paid
HolidaysMaktab holidays and notice requirements
LeaveHow absence should be communicated; any paid leave
Notice periodHow much notice either party should give to end the arrangement

This is not a formal employment contract — it is a mutual understanding recorded in writing. Both the teacher and the committee representative should sign. In practice, this simple step prevents the majority of salary disputes.


Teacher Attendance: Tracking Without Micromanaging

Teachers who feel watched and mistrusted deliver worse performance. Teacher attendance tracking should be:

  • Simple: A sign-in register or digital check-in at the start of each session
  • Transparent: Both teacher and committee can see the record
  • Respectful: The purpose is institutional record-keeping, not surveillance

What to Track

Data PointPurpose
Session dates attendedOverall attendance rate; leave calculation
Sessions missedRecord of absences for salary calculation
Substitute arrangementsWho covered absent sessions; any payment due
Late arrivalsPatterns of late arrival that may affect students

Handling Absences

Every maktab needs a protocol for absences before they happen:

  1. Teacher informs committee/administrator as early as possible when they cannot attend
  2. A substitute is identified — from the committee, a qualified parent, or a pool of vetted substitutes
  3. The absence and substitute arrangement are recorded
  4. Salary implications are clarified at the time of appointment (is one day’s absence deducted? Is it a fixed monthly salary regardless of absences?)

Salary Management: The Single Most Important Administrative Act

Pay the teacher on time, every month, without exception.

This single principle — consistently followed — does more for teacher morale, retention, and performance than any other management action. A teacher who wonders every month whether their salary will arrive on time cannot focus fully on their students.

Common Salary Problems and Their Solutions

ProblemCauseSolution
Late salaryInsufficient fee collection; no dedicated fundMaintain one month’s salary as reserve; committee contribution if fee shortfall
Partial salarySame as aboveSame as above — partial payment is almost as demoralising as late
Disputes about deductionsNo agreed termsClear written agreement from the start on leave and deduction policy
No salary increase over yearsCommittee inertiaAnnual salary review — even a modest increase maintains goodwill

The Salary Reserve Principle

The single most effective financial management practice for maktab teacher salaries: maintain a reserve equivalent to one month’s salary. When fee collection is slightly short one month, the reserve covers the gap. This reserve is replenished the following month when collection recovers.

Building this reserve from the first month’s surplus or from a one-time community donation at the maktab’s establishment prevents the most common cause of late teacher payment.


Training Records and Professional Development

Most Indian maktabs keep no formal records of teacher training. This creates problems when:

  • The teacher moves on and the committee cannot demonstrate what training the position requires
  • The teacher wants to attend a training event and the committee has no history of supporting such activities
  • A new national board requirement for affiliated maktabs includes teacher training certification

What to Record

Record TypeWhat to Capture
Initial qualificationDeeniyat level completed / Dars-e-Nizami / other qualification; institution; year
Board training attendedDeeniyat / MTB / Samastha training events; date; location; outcome
Other professional developmentAny workshops, seminars, or online courses
Tajweed certificationIf separately assessed

A simple one-page teacher profile per teacher, updated annually, is sufficient. This document should be stored by the mosque committee, not only by the teacher.

Supporting Teacher Development

A mosque committee that actively supports teacher training — paying the cost of attendance, providing transport, adjusting the timetable to allow participation — retains better teachers and gets better outcomes. The investment is modest; the return is significant.


Managing Teacher Performance Issues

Performance problems in maktab teaching manifest in predictable patterns:

IssueSignsApproach
Consistent latenessSessions starting late; students waitingPrivate conversation; clarify expectations; record
Poor student progressStudents not advancing in Quran; complaints from parentsObserve a session; offer support; additional training
Inconsistent attendanceFrequent absences; no consistent substituteClarify policy; increase reserve teacher pool
Parent complaintsMultiple parents raising concernsInvestigate fairly; hear both sides; mediate
Classroom behaviour issuesStudents disruptive; teacher losing controlTraining and support first; escalate if persistent

The Principle of Private Correction

All performance issues should be raised privately, with the assumption of good faith, before any escalation. A teacher corrected with dignity and support typically improves. A teacher corrected publicly or punitively becomes defensive and often leaves.

Islamic tradition is explicit on this: correct privately, praise publicly.


Teacher Retention: Why Good Teachers Leave and How to Keep Them

Good maktab teachers leave primarily for three reasons:

Underpayment. Maktab teaching salaries are low across the sector. A teacher who receives a better offer — even modestly better — will typically take it. Annual salary reviews and genuine recognition of good service are the primary retention tools.

Disrespect or lack of appreciation. The muallim’s role is deeply honourable in Islamic tradition. A committee that treats the teacher as a hired hand rather than a valued educator will lose good teachers to communities that understand the teacher’s worth.

Professional isolation. Teachers who work alone, without peer connection, training opportunities, or institutional support, experience burnout. Connecting teachers to training events, peer networks, and professional communities extends their commitment.

Retention Checklist for Mosque Committees


Multi-Teacher Maktabs: Coordination and Role Clarity

Larger maktabs with two or more teachers need explicit coordination structures:

Coordination NeedSolution
Which teacher is responsible for which students/classesWritten role allocation; reviewed at start of each year
Substitute coverage when one teacher is absentEach teacher knows their colleague’s students sufficiently to cover
Consistent Quran tracking across teachersSame system, same terminology, same register format
Communication with parentsClear agreement on which teacher communicates about which students
Salary parity and transparencyCommittee ensures both teachers know the salary structure and any differences are explicitly justified

Conclusion

The quality of a maktab is inseparable from the quality of its teacher — and the quality of the teacher is significantly shaped by how they are managed. Paying on time, respecting their expertise, supporting their development, and addressing problems privately and constructively are not complicated management principles. They are basic Islamic principles of fair dealing and dignity applied to the employment context. Maktabs that get this right keep good teachers, serve their students well, and build community trust over years and decades.

Ilmify supports teacher management alongside student management — tracking teacher attendance, recording professional development, and maintaining the Quran progress records that stay with the institution even when a teacher moves on. Explore Ilmify →

Frequently Asked Questions

In Indian law, this depends on the specific arrangement. Most maktab teachers are treated as informal contractors rather than formal employees, meaning formal employment law protections (EPF, gratuity, etc.) may not apply. Committees should take local legal advice if they wish to formalise the arrangement beyond a written mutual understanding.

Benchmarks vary significantly by location: ₹3,000–₹5,000/month in small towns and rural areas; ₹6,000–₹10,000/month in mid-size cities; ₹8,000–₹15,000/month in major metros. These are session-based part-time salaries (typically 1–2 hours per day, 5–6 days per week). Full-time teaching positions command higher rates.

Frame record-keeping as part of the teaching role, not an optional administrative add-on. Explain concretely what is lost without records (inability to track student progress, examination registration problems, no backup if the teacher is absent). Offer to simplify the record-keeping to the absolute minimum. If resistance continues, escalate to a committee conversation about what the role requires.

A long-serving teacher deserves respect and a private, honest conversation — acknowledging their service while clearly describing the concerns. Offer support: training, reduced load if fatigue is a factor, peer observation. If the conversation is handled with dignity and the response is positive, improvement is possible. If not, the committee has a difficult but necessary decision to make about the institution’s primary obligation to its students.

Yes — occasional, announced observation of sessions by a committee member is normal institutional governance. The teacher should know this is standard practice from the start, framed as quality support rather than surveillance. Unannounced observation is generally counterproductive and damages trust.

Avatar photo
Author

Rahman

Educational expert at Ilmify, dedicated to modernizing Islamic institution management through smart technology and holistic Tarbiyah.