The Problem:, Every year, lakhs of Indian students move into residential coaching hostels for 11th and 12th grade to prepare for JEE and NEET. In these hostels, students are often cut off from their normal lives (no smartphones, strict routines) and push themselves to study 14+ hours a day. The problem is that the system only tracks one metric: Mock Test Scores. There is absolutely zero tracking of a students basic well-being, like how many hours they are actually sleeping or their daily stress levels., Why it happens:, Because there are hundreds of kids in a single hostel, wardens and teachers cannot monitor everyone individually. A student can be sleeping for just 3 hours a night and quietly suffering from severe burnout, but parents and teachers will only realize there is a problem after the student completely breaks down, falls sick, or fails a major test. By the time the adults notice, the damage is already done., Scale and Impact:, This is a massive crisis in coaching hubs across the country. We treat students like machines, waiting for them to break before trying to fix them. This "invisible burnout" leads to high dropout rates, severe depression, and a loss of confidence in extremely smart kids., Conclusion:, We need a proactive way to monitor basic student health and sleep in these hyper-competitive environments. Parents shouldnt be in the dark about their childs physical and mental state, and interventions should happen before a student hits a breaking point, not after.