What a TC from a remote school in Kannur looked like in 1950s?

# News Desk
Transfer Certificate from 1950s | By special arrangement
Transfer Certificate from 1950s | By special arrangement

At some point in life, every student has had to collect a Transfer Certificate (TC) from school — that essential document marking the end of one chapter and beginning of another. Today, it arrives neatly printed, digitally stored, and sometimes even emailed. But imagine what a TC looked like 75 years ago, in the 1950s, when education in Kerala was far simpler.

Back then, students typically studied up to the 10th standard in their local schools. Those wishing to pursue higher studies — then known as “Pre-degree” — needed a TC to move on. One such TC, issued to Kesavan Nambiar after completing his VI th standard at a Board School in Cherukunnu, Kannur, is now winning hearts for its simplicity. Far from today’s computer-generated documents, this certificate was hand written in English on a small piece of paper — barely a quarter of an A4 sheet. The paper itself appears slightly worn and torn at the edges.

Despite its tiny size, the certificate carries everything. The student’s name, standard he completed, name of school, year of passing, and even a medical test report are all carefully handwritten. Also, the head master’s signature is present.

What surprises people most is not what the TC contains, but how little space it needed. In that small slip of paper, the entire academic identity of a student was given. No logos, no QR codes — just neat handwriting.

Compared to today’s digital certificates, the purpose remains exactly the same. A Transfer Certificate still marks transition, closure, and progress. The only difference is technology. What once fit in your shirt pocket now lives in databases.

Yet, there is something charming about that fragile piece of paper from the 1950s. It reminds us of a time when education was documented with ink and care, when simplicity was enough, and when even the smallest certificate carried the weight of a student’s dreams.