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Showing posts with label Education Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education Technology. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2026

CBSE Is Listening: Can Payment Gateway Awareness Reach More Students?

 Sometimes the next improvement in a digital journey is not a technology upgrade. It is a well-timed clarification.

Published 04 June 2026

By Nayakanti Prashant
3rd Gen Banker & Citizen Lobbyist – Bengaluru
Advocating Digital Transactions Day (April 11)

A nudge from the respective Banks, i.e., Bank of Baroda, Indian Bank, Canara Bank, State Bank of India, via their social media handles will be awesome.

No code changes, no changes in any portal, just an update on their social media handles.  



Disclaimer: This article is based solely on publicly available information, official CBSE communications, publicly available media reports, and observations from the ongoing CBSE 2026 post-result services process.

The purpose of this article is to encourage discussion on digital transactions, digital awareness, and citizen-facing digital journeys.


Over the past few days, I have been closely observing the ongoing CBSE verification and re-evaluation process.

Like many digital journeys, the story has evolved in real time.

There have been updates about concurrent users, successful submissions, platform refinements, session-timeout extensions, cybersecurity monitoring, and continuous communication through official channels.

Amidst all these developments, one particular update caught my attention.

On June 3, CBSE issued a clarification regarding payments on the verification and re-evaluation portal.

The message was simple.

Students do not need an account with SBI, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, or Indian Bank to complete their payments through the portal.

This clarification was necessary, as majority of the students were not sure as to what to do, when the Bank’s names popped up on clicking the Payment button.

The available payment options continue to include:

  • UPI
  • Net Banking
  • Credit Cards
  • Debit Cards

through the designated payment gateways.

At one level, this clarification may appear straightforward.

At another level, it highlights an interesting digital-transactions learning.


When Payment Methods Are Familiar but Payment Gateways Are Not

Most citizens are familiar with payment methods.

They know:

  • which bank they use,
  • which UPI application they prefer,
  • whether they have a debit card,
  • whether they have access to net banking.

In everyday life, that is usually enough.

However, fewer people think about payment gateways.

In fact, most successful digital transactions happen without the user ever needing to understand what a payment gateway is.

That is a sign of good design.

The technology remains invisible.

The payment simply works.

But occasionally, a moment arrives when the name of a gateway becomes visible to the user.

And that is where questions naturally emerge.


A Student's Question Is Often Simpler Than a Banker's Question

A banker may think about:

  • issuing banks,
  • acquiring banks,
  • payment gateways,
  • processors,
  • settlement systems.

A student is usually asking a much simpler question:

"Will my payment work?"

A parent may be asking:

"I do not have an account with this bank. Can I still make the payment?"

These are reasonable questions.

In fact, they are exactly the kind of questions that emerge when millions of citizens interact with digital systems.

The objective of a digital transaction journey is not merely to process payments.

It is to create confidence.

That is why the CBSE clarification deserves recognition.

The board did not simply say that the portal was functioning.

It addressed a question that many students and parents may have had.

And that matters.


A Small Clarification Can Remove a Large Doubt

One of the lessons from digital payments over the last decade is that awareness is often as important as infrastructure.

India has built remarkable payment infrastructure.

UPI is now part of everyday life.

Digital banking has become mainstream.

Card payments have become routine.

Yet every successful transaction still depends on one important ingredient:

User confidence.

Sometimes confidence comes from technology.

Sometimes confidence comes from communication.

The CBSE clarification falls into the second category.

It reassures students and parents that they can continue using familiar payment methods even if the gateway carries the name of a particular bank.

That reassurance can make a difference.


The Opportunity Ahead

This brings me to a simple observation.

CBSE has already issued the clarification.

The payment infrastructure already exists.

The gateways are operational.

The payment methods are available.

The process is underway.

The remaining opportunity may simply be amplification.

Imagine a parent in a small town opening the CBSE re-evaluation portal late in the evening. The screen displays a payment gateway carrying the name of a well-known bank. The parent's first thought may not be about payment gateways or acquiring banks. It may simply be:

"I do not have an account with this bank. Will my payment still work?"

That question is not a technology problem.

It is an awareness opportunity.

This is where the social media handles of State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, and Indian Bank can play a meaningful supporting role. No new technology needs to be built. No payment rails need to be upgraded. No major project approvals are required.

A simple post stating that students can continue to pay through UPI, debit cards, credit cards, and net banking even if they do not maintain an account with the gateway bank could help the clarification reach a wider audience.

During a time-bound student service window, such amplification may provide additional confidence to students and parents who are navigating the process for the first time.

Sometimes the most valuable contribution is not a new feature.

Sometimes it is helping an important message travel a little further.

Something as simple as:

"Students using the CBSE verification and re-evaluation portal can make payments using UPI, net banking, debit cards, and credit cards. An account with our bank is not required to use the payment gateway."

could answer questions for students and parents who may never come across the original CBSE clarification.


A Digital Transactions Day Learning

As someone who advocates Digital Transactions Day (April 11), I often find that the most valuable lessons come from real-world journeys rather than conference rooms.

The ongoing CBSE verification and re-evaluation process is one such journey.

This week's learning is not about a new payment product.

It is not about a new payment rail.

It is not about a new banking innovation.

It is about communication.

It is about helping users understand what they are seeing.

It is about reducing uncertainty.

And it is about ensuring that digital transactions feel accessible to everyone, including first-time users.

Sometimes the next improvement in a digital journey is not a technology upgrade.

It is a well-timed clarification.

And sometimes, a simple amplification can help that clarification reach many more people.

CBSE has provided the clarification.

Perhaps one or more participating banks may now help carry that message a little further.


References


Nayakanti Prashant
3rd Gen Banker & Citizen Lobbyist – Bengaluru
Advocating Digital Transactions Day (April 11)

 

The Joy of Digital Transactions - Nayakanti Prashant
Author’s Blogs

https://prashantrandomthoughts.blogspot.com
https://prashantnepayments.blogspot.com
https://innovationinbanking.blogspot.com

 

 



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