This study explores the evolving role of madrassas within Pakistan’s educational landscape through a data-driven analysis of public engagement with religious education and reform discourse. Using a quantitative descriptive research design, Google Trends data from January 2020 to October 2025 were analyzed to assess relative public interest in five search terms—Madrassa, Religious education Pakistan, Islamic education system, Islamic school, and Education reform Pakistan. The analysis examined temporal and regional patterns of online engagement, linking variations to sociopolitical and educational developments. Results indicate that the term Islamic school consistently generated the highest search interest, while Madrassa maintained moderate but stable engagement with notable peaks in 2021 and 2023. Reform-oriented terms such as Education reform Pakistan and Islamic education system received comparatively low attention, reflecting limited public involvement in policy-level discussions. Regionally, traditional education terms were more prominent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, whereas reform-related interest was concentrated in urban centers like Lahore and Karachi. Overall, the findings reveal a sustained preference for traditional religious education over modernization narratives, illustrating the enduring cultural and social significance of madrassas. The study concludes that while reform efforts continue to emerge at policy and scholarly levels, public engagement remains anchored in traditional frameworks, and digital analytics tools such as Google Trends offer valuable insights for understanding societal attitudes toward education in Pakistan.
Ullah et al. (Tue,) studied this question.