Introduction
Teachers are the most important resource a maktab has — and typically the most poorly managed. Not because anyone wants to manage them poorly, but because the systems for teacher management in most Islamic schools are as informal as the systems for everything else: a verbal agreement, a cash payment at the end of the month, and an understanding that the teacher will show up.
This informality creates real problems: disputes over payments, gaps in teaching when teachers are absent without proper handover, qualification records that no one can find when the board inspector visits, and institutional knowledge that walks out the door when a teacher leaves.
This guide provides a practical framework for managing maktab teachers professionally — tracking their attendance, maintaining their records, paying them correctly, and protecting the institution from the knowledge loss that comes with turnover.
Why Teacher Management Is Usually the Weakest System in a Maktab
When maktab administrators list their operational challenges, student enrolment, fee collection, and parent communication usually come up first. Teacher management rarely appears on the list — which is itself the problem. The absence of visible crises does not mean the system is working.
The typical maktab’s teacher management system:
- Records: A mental note of who teaches which class, possibly written in the administrator’s personal diary
- Attendance: An informal understanding that teachers will inform someone if they cannot come
- Salary: Cash payment at the end of the month, amount agreed verbally, no written record
- Qualifications: Documents seen once at hiring, stored somewhere, probably not findable now
- CPD: Training attended when convenient, no records kept
This system works until something goes wrong — a dispute over payment, a complaint about a teacher, a board inspection requiring qualification evidence, or a teacher departure that leaves a class without an instructor and a stack of Hifz records that only the departing teacher understood.
The cost of informal teacher management does not appear on a balance sheet. It appears in the recurring crises that consume the administrator’s time and the quality gaps that accumulate when teacher management is left to chance.
The Four Pillars of Teacher Management
Professional teacher management in a maktab rests on four pillars. Each is straightforward to implement; together they create a reliable, dignified, and institutionally resilient approach to managing the people on whom the institution depends.
| Pillar | What It Covers | Key Outcome |
| Teacher records | Personal information, employment terms, contracts | Clarity on who works here and on what terms |
| Attendance and sessions | Who taught which sessions; absences and cover | Accountability and continuity |
| Salary and payments | Payment records, receipts, salary history | Financial clarity and legal protection |
| Qualifications and CPD | Credentials, training, development records | Board compliance and quality assurance |
Pillar 1 — Teacher Records: What to Keep and Why
Every person who teaches at a maktab — whether paid or volunteer — should have a basic record maintained by the institution. This record serves multiple purposes: it is the basis for salary management, the file produced for board inspections, and the institutional memory that survives a teacher’s departure.
Required records for every teacher:
| Record Type | What to Include | Why It Matters |
| Personal information | Full name, date of birth, contact number, address | Basic identification and contact |
| Teaching role | Classes assigned, subjects taught, session days/times | Operational clarity |
| Employment terms | Paid or volunteer; if paid: salary amount, payment frequency | Prevents payment disputes |
| Contract / letter of appointment | Written confirmation of teaching role and terms | Legal protection for both parties |
| Emergency contact | Person to contact if teacher has an emergency during a session | Pastoral and safeguarding |
| Qualification documents | Copies of certificates (Alim, Hafiz, Deeniyat Muallim, etc.) | Board compliance, quality assurance |
| POCSO acknowledgment | Signed confirmation of POCSO awareness (India) | Legal compliance |
| Start date | First date of teaching | Employment history |
The contract / letter of appointment:
Many maktabs do not issue written letters of appointment for teachers — especially volunteers. This is a significant risk. A written letter of appointment does not need to be a complex legal document. It can be a simple one-page letter stating: the teacher’s name, the role (Hifz teacher / Islamic studies teacher), the sessions they are responsible for, the remuneration (if any), and the basic expectations. Both parties sign it.
This protects the institution if a dispute arises, gives the teacher clarity on their responsibilities, and creates a record that the institution can produce for any board inspection or compliance purpose.
Pillar 2 — Attendance and Session Tracking
Teacher attendance affects student outcomes directly. A Hifz class without its regular teacher reverts to chaos or stagnation. A session cancelled without notice and no cover arranged means students either sit unsupervised or go home.
What to track:
- Sessions attended vs. sessions assigned: Each teacher has a set of assigned sessions per week. Record which sessions each teacher was present for.
- Absences and reasons: Record each absence with reason (illness, family emergency, other). No-shows (absence without notification) should be noted separately from notified absences.
- Cover arrangements: When a teacher is absent, who covered? This matters both for payment (cover teachers may be paid) and for quality (who actually taught the students that day).
- Punctuality: For institutions where punctuality is a persistent issue, a brief punctuality record (arrived on time / late) can provide evidence for necessary conversations.
The weekly session record:
A simple weekly grid — teachers in rows, sessions in columns, marked present (P), absent notified (AN), or absent no-show (ANS) — provides a complete attendance record. In a digital system, this is generated automatically from session records.
Teacher absence procedure:
Every maktab should have a clear procedure for teacher absences:
- Teacher notifies the head teacher or administrator at least 4 hours before the session (or as early as possible)
- Administrator identifies cover: another teacher, the imam, a qualified volunteer
- Cover teacher is briefed on what to teach (or continues from the paper register / digital record)
- Absence recorded in the system
- If a teacher misses 3+ consecutive sessions without notification, the administrator contacts them to check welfare and discuss
Pillar 3 — Salary and Payment Management
For paid teachers — even part-time teachers receiving modest monthly payments — a formal salary record is essential. This is not bureaucracy for its own sake; it protects both the institution and the teacher.
What to record for every salary payment:
- Teacher name
- Pay period (e.g., “April 2026”)
- Gross amount
- Any deductions (unusual in maktab context but possible)
- Net amount paid
- Payment method (cash / bank transfer / UPI)
- Date of payment
- Reference number (for bank transfers) or receipt number (for cash)
- Teacher acknowledgment (signature for cash; bank confirmation for transfer)
The salary register:
Maintain a simple salary register — a spreadsheet or a dedicated module in your management system — that records every payment to every teacher. This register is the evidence that:
- The institution has paid what it committed to pay
- The teacher has received what they expected
- There is no dispute about payment history
In the event of a disagreement about payment (“I was not paid for March”), the salary register resolves it immediately. Without a register, disputes become one party’s word against another’s.
Salary advance policy:
Many maktab teachers occasionally request salary advances — particularly during Ramadan, at Eid, or at times of personal financial difficulty. An advance policy should be explicit: whether advances are permitted, the maximum advance amount, how repayment is structured (deducted from future salary), and whether an advance requires committee approval. Record every advance as formally as any regular salary payment.
The payment table example:
| Month | Teacher | Agreed Amount | Paid Amount | Date Paid | Method | Teacher Acknowledgment |
| Apr 2026 | Moulana Ashraf | ₹10,000 | ₹10,000 | 01/05/26 | UPI | Confirmed via WhatsApp receipt |
| Apr 2026 | Ustadha Fatima | ₹8,000 | ₹8,000 | 01/05/26 | Cash | Signed register |
| Apr 2026 | Hafiz Imran (volunteer) | — | — | — | — | — |
Pillar 4 — Qualification and CPD Records
Teacher qualifications matter for three reasons: board affiliation compliance (most Islamic boards specify minimum teacher qualifications for affiliated institutions), quality assurance (a Deeniyat Muallim-trained teacher brings specific pedagogical preparation), and institutional reputation (parents choosing a maktab care about who is teaching their children).
Qualification documents to keep on file:
- Alim/Alimah degree certificate (if applicable)
- Hafiz certificate (for Hifz teachers)
- Deeniyat Muallim Diploma or equivalent (strongly recommended for all maktab teachers)
- Samastha Thadreeb certificate (for Kerala institutions)
- Any university or college certificates in Islamic studies
- Any secular teaching qualifications (B.Ed., D.El.Ed. — increasingly common for integrated programme teachers)
CPD (Continuing Professional Development) records:
Most maktab teachers receive minimal formal training beyond their initial qualification. Yet teacher quality is the single most important determinant of student outcomes. Recording CPD — even informal CPD — creates accountability for ongoing development.
CPD to record:
- Board-organised teacher training sessions (Deeniyat teacher refreshers, Samastha Thadreeb sessions)
- External workshops or seminars attended
- Online courses completed
- Peer observation and feedback sessions within the institution
Even a simple annual log per teacher — “attended Deeniyat zonal teacher training, March 2026; completed online Tajweed course, June 2026″ — creates an institutional record of professional development.
Managing Volunteer vs. Paid Teachers Differently
Many maktabs mix paid and volunteer teachers. The management approach for each differs in important ways.
| Aspect | Paid Teachers | Volunteer Teachers |
| Written agreement | Formal letter of appointment essential | Brief letter of appreciation/role confirmation recommended |
| Attendance accountability | High — salary linked to sessions | Moderate — volunteer goodwill must be respected |
| Salary records | Full payment records required | Not applicable; record recognition/expenses if any |
| POCSO compliance | Mandatory | Mandatory |
| Qualification verification | Essential | Essential |
| CPD expectations | Reasonable to expect | Encourage; cannot require |
| Notice period | Specify in appointment letter | Courtesy notice requested; cannot be enforced |
The volunteer’s contribution: Volunteers are often the backbone of smaller maktabs. Their commitment cannot be taken for granted, and the management approach must acknowledge that they are giving their time freely. The record-keeping requirements (qualification documents, POCSO acknowledgment) are the same — but the tone and approach must reflect gratitude and respect rather than obligation.
Teacher Departures: Protecting Institutional Knowledge
When a teacher leaves — whether paid or volunteer — the institution is at risk of losing the institutional knowledge they carry. This risk is minimised when teacher management has been done well.
What should be in the system before any teacher leaves:
- Complete student Hifz and progress records (should be in the digital system, not the teacher’s personal notebook)
- Class register and attendance records
- Any notes about individual students’ special circumstances or learning needs
- Contact list for parents in their class (in the institutional system, not only in the teacher’s phone)
The handover process:
Any planned teacher departure should include a structured handover:
- Update all student records in the management system to their current state
- Brief the incoming teacher on each student’s position in Quran, any retention challenges, and any pastoral notes
- Introduce the incoming teacher to the class students before the departing teacher leaves if possible
- Inform parents of the teacher change through the parent portal (not just a WhatsApp message)
When a teacher departs unexpectedly: The management system holds all the records. The new teacher can log in, see every student’s current Sabak position, Dhor schedule, and attendance history, and continue from where the previous teacher stopped. Without a management system, this is impossible. With one, it takes one session to brief the new teacher.
POCSO Compliance for Maktab Teachers in India
India’s Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act 2012 requires anyone working with children to report child sexual abuse. This obligation applies to maktab teachers, volunteers, and any adult who has contact with children in an educational setting.
What maktab administrators must do:
- Make all teaching staff aware of POCSO before they begin teaching. This does not require formal training (though that is valuable) — a clear briefing on the mandatory reporting obligation is the minimum.
- Maintain a POCSO acknowledgment record for each teacher — a signed note confirming they have been briefed on the mandatory reporting obligation.
- Display the mandatory notice — POCSO requires that educational institutions display information about the Act and contact details for reporting.
- Know the reporting contacts — the local Special Juvenile Police Unit (SJPU) or nearest police station.
Recording POCSO compliance:
Add POCSO acknowledgment to each teacher’s record at appointment. Annual renewal of the acknowledgment is good practice. If a teacher is unaware of or resistant to POCSO requirements, this is a significant risk that should be addressed before they teach.
Teacher Management in a Digital System
A management system’s teacher module should cover the four pillars described in this guide:
| Feature | What It Does |
| Teacher profile | Stores personal information, role, and employment terms |
| Qualification records | Stores and links qualification documents; tracks expiry |
| Session attendance | Records teacher attendance by session; flags absences |
| Salary register | Records payments with date, method, and acknowledgment |
| CPD records | Logs training attended and development activities |
| POCSO acknowledgment | Records date of briefing and teacher acknowledgment |
| Class assignment | Links each teacher to their assigned classes and students |
| Handover records | Records when a class is transferred to a new teacher |
With these features in place, the teacher management burden reduces to approximately 15–20 minutes per teacher per month — primarily recording the monthly salary payment and reviewing any attendance flags.
Conclusion
Managing maktab teachers well is not bureaucracy — it is respect. A teacher who has a written agreement, whose salary is paid reliably and recorded clearly, whose qualifications are valued and whose professional development is supported, is a teacher who stays. Retention of good teachers is the highest-leverage action any maktab can take to improve educational outcomes.
The framework in this guide — four pillars, each with specific records and processes — is achievable for any institution regardless of size. It takes approximately two hours to set up properly for an existing team, and 30 minutes per teacher to maintain each month. The protection it provides against disputes, departures, and compliance failures is worth many times the investment.
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