Skip to main content

Towards Quality Education TOI Edit 180112

Emphasis on universal schooling is fine,but the discourse must now shift to quality

Three reports in three months paint a grim picture of school education in India.First,a leading corporate published the Quality Education Survey on high-end schools in metropolitan cities,which found them lacking on quality parameters and indicted them for excessive reliance on rote learning.Second,the OECDs Programme for International Student Assessment ranked Indian higher secondary students only better than those from Kyrgyzstan among 74 participating countries.And third,Prathams Annual Status of Education Report (ASER),2011,assessing schools in rural India,found declining attendance,over-reliance on private tuitions and declining reading and mathematical abilities of children in the six to 14 years age category.
Taken together,the three reports make it amply clear that despite a welcome high enrolment rate around 96.7% at the primary and upper primary levels,the quality of school learning is simply not up to the mark.Most government schools lack basic infrastructure such as blackboards and textbooks.Teaching standards are poor,with high teacher absenteeism.It is little wonder then that only 48.2% of class V students surveyed under ASER were able to read class IIlevel texts,among other depressing statistics.
Unless school education is rescued from this quagmire of mediocrity,all talk about developing a skilled human resource pool and realising the countrys demographic dividend will be without substance.In this regard,the Right To Education (RTE) Act,with its objective of providing free and compulsory education to all primary schoolchildren,misses the quality issue.Two years after the RTEs introduction,government schools have continued to wallow in pathetic conditions.Meanwhile,by imposing strict parameters on private schools,the RTE has squeezed the few entrepreneurs engaged in this field,disincentivising further investment.
There is no denying that in the quest for universal education the public sector must take the lead.Private schools can only play a supporting role,and that too needs to be incentivised.Issues of quality can only be addressed by raising the standards of public schools.This can be done by ensuring they have enough resources and introducing better pedagogy as well as oversight of teaching staff,so that pay and promotions are linked to performance.Its an administrative rather than legislative issue.The human resources ministry as well as education departments of states cant duck their responsibility.

http://www1.lite.epaper.timesofindia.com/mobile.aspx?article=yes&pageid=20&edlabel=CAP&mydateHid=18-01-2012&pubname=&edname=&articleid=Ar02004&format=&publabel=TOI&max=true 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Quality education still elusive (The Hindu Edit)

The key finding in a recent study that even top schools in major cities in India suffer from the entrenched tendency to impart rote learning may have some shock value to those who believe that private educational institutions place greater emphasis on quality and holistic education. However, for those closely observing the school education scenario, it is a re-affirmation of a bitter truth: schools in our country are, by and large, quite far from seeing education as a process of learning with understanding, acquiring knowledge through self-discovery and conceptualisation; rather, education remains a mere transmission of information in a rigid classroom atmosphere, where the emphasis is on memorisation and the objective is to rush through a pre-determined syllabus and prepare children for examinations. While on the scholastic side the WIPRO-Educational Initiatives 'Quality Education Study,' which covered 89 schools, shows a fall in learning standards among students in classes 4,...

Rooting For Home Essay by Mark Tully

In humans, as in plants, roots grow deeper if left to grow in one place, untransplanted MARK TULLY Magazine| Jan 12, 2009 T homas Hardy, who wrote some of the best known English novels, one of which was called The Return of the Native , said, "I am convinced that it is better for a writer to know a little bit of the world remarkably well than to know a great part of the world remarkably little." The bit of the world Hardy knew remarkably well was his native place, the county of Dorset in the west of England. It was a very small bit of the world, and a remote rural bit at that, which did not keep up with the fast-moving times of the last quarter of the 19th century. Hardy's novels reveal the profound influence of his native place but he was not a country bumpkin. One biographer of Hardy has said, "The two contrasting modes of feeling—for his native soil and for his cultural mecca (London)—entwine, sometimes fusing, sometimes pulling asunder, always with varying ...

How much you will charge to laugh?

Sonal Kalra, HT City, DDun My deepest sympathies to the family and friends of those who are always `dead' serious I give you three seconds to recall the last time you laughed out loud. One...two...three, done. All those who remembered the last `LOL' they'd casually typed while chatting on Facebook can take turns to slap each other. And the others, who at least tried to recall their real laughter but could not, listen to me. Kya, problem kya hai? Do people, who have to bear you every day of their lives, not deserve to sometimes see the twinkle in your eyes or the teeth that you claim to religiously brush every morning? Kya aapke toothpaste mein namak hai? Then what is the matter, people? Yesterday I observed this man at a friend's get-together. He was there to attend a party, but his face bore an expression as if the host had put a gun to his head and dragged him there. Someone told a joke, everyone laughed, even those who had heard it before. But this one's e...