To discover the root cause of the high dropout rate in Pakur, our team collaborated with school authorities in the district to collect data that showed that a high percentage of dropout students in the district may be at risk of engaging in exploitative child labour. Perception data collected from the community conveyed that a high prevalence of child labour to support their impoverished families could be a potential reason for the high dropout rate: our baseline studies suggested that approximately 43 per cent of girls and 54 per cent of boys in Pakur were at risk of child labour. The predominant types of work that children in the region engage in are high-risk industries such as industries engaged in beedi making, agricultural labour, and factories. Another reason for the high dropout rate is that many children migrate seasonally with their families to West Bengal, to work in agricultural fields during the sowing and harvesting seasons. Thus, they face extended gaps in their education annually that makes it difficult for them to return and resume studying at age-appropriate grade levels, and they fall behind their peers in school.