On 18 March 2026, as Karnataka’s Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC) examinations commenced across the state, a video of a Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) bus conductor went massively viral on social media for all the right reasons. In the clip, the conductor is heard instructing his driver: “Stop wherever Grade 10 students ask for a lift… they have board exams from the 18th. Even if we get late, it’s okay.
Let’s help them.” He even urged other buses on the route to follow the same. The gesture struck a chord with thousands of anxious students, relieved parents, and exhausted teachers across the country. It came on the same day that both KSRTC and the Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) rolled out an official free travel scheme for SSLC students.
Nearly nine lakh students have registered for the board exams this year, including over 8.12 lakh fresh candidates, 62,845 repeaters, and 27,189 private students. Karnataka’s education authorities backed this with a raft of student-friendly measures, from free bus rides to a revised passing threshold, ensuring that getting to the exam hall is one less thing for a teenager to worry about.
A Conductor’s Words That Moved a Nation
The viral clip, first shared on X (formerly Twitter) on 17 March with the caption “This shows the true heart of Karnataka State,” was picked up by TV9 Kannada and several national publications within hours. The conductor whose name has not been formally identified in media reports was filmed aboard a KSRTC bus the day before the exams began. His appeal was simple and spontaneous, but it cut through the noise of exam anxiety like few official notices could.
Going beyond the routine, BMTC also took additional operational measures, including running extra bus trips on routes with high student demand and allowing request stops near examination centres when needed. Education Minister Madhu Bangarappa, in a formal press briefing, announced that free travel would be provided to SSLC and PUC students on KSRTC and BMTC buses to and from examination centres, alongside strict vigilance to prevent question paper leaks and the spread of misinformation on social media. He added that accounts spreading false claims or attempting to sell leaked papers online would face legal action, a reminder that while kindness was on full display outside the exam hall, there was zero tolerance for dishonesty within the system.
A System Designed to Give Students Every Chance
The warm response to the conductor’s video did not emerge in a vacuum. In a key update this year, the Karnataka School Examination and Assessment Board (KSEAB) revised the minimum passing criteria, lowering it from 35% to 33% overall aggregate marks, a move welcomed by student welfare groups as a recognition of the unequal pressures faced by learners across the state.
Karnataka’s three-exam structure, Exam 1 running from 18 March to 2 April, Exam 2 from 18 to 25 May and a potential third sitting gives students multiple opportunities to improve their scores without waiting a full academic year. Similar free transport arrangements are also being explored for private bus services in coastal and Malnad regions, ensuring that students in more remote areas are not left behind. Taken together, these measures signal a meaningful shift: a state that is slowly beginning to understand that access, to a bus seat, to a second chance, to a human being who waves you aboard, is as important as the examination itself.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
There is a particular kind of courage in small acts. The unnamed conductor on that KSRTC bus did not file a petition or hold a press conference. He simply opened a door, literally and figuratively and told a group of nervous fifteen-year-olds that the world was willing to slow down for them. In a country where Class 10 board results can determine the trajectory of a family’s hopes for a generation, that is not a small thing.
Karnataka’s broader effort, free buses, lowered pass marks, multiple exam attempts reflects a growing institutional empathy that The Logical Indian has long championed. But empathy cannot be legislated alone; it must be lived. It is lived in the moment a driver brakes at an unmarked stop because a child in a school uniform is running to catch a bus. It is lived when a society collectively decides that no student should miss their future because of a missed ride.
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A bus conductor in Karnataka told his driver:
— Aparajite (@amshilparaghu) March 17, 2026
“Stop wherever Grade 10 students ask for a lift… they have board exams from the 18th.”
“Even if we get late, it’s okay. Let’s help them.”
He even urged other buses to follow the same.
This shows the true heart of Karnataka State… pic.twitter.com/XhpvN2rX1Z












