The problem
with our education system
The Right to Education (RTE) Act seeks
to demolish the class-centric exclusivity of private schools. It promises
better education for slum kids and students from underprivileged backgrounds.
Even the Supreme Court has certified the
constitutionality of the Act. The jury is still out on who would benefit more
or suffer more — the students from the disadvantaged background or the kids
from better off families, whether the 25 percent reservation idea would run
into scandals after a period or whether it is more political grandstanding than
real concern for the poor.
But the RTE Act is nowhere close to
addressing the genuine problems of the education sector. Its basic flaw lies
with the presumption that education is better in private schools. A few quality
private schools do not represent all private schools. In fact, most of these
are money-making enterprises aimed at fleecing parents. It is also not true
that all government schools provide sub-standard education.
Egalitarianism is okay, but the RTE Act
is nowhere close to addressing the genuine problems of the education sector. If
we are looking at the RTE from the perspective of quality education, then it
does not provide any solution. There are too many problems with our education
sector, starting from poor infrastructure in schools to poor teacher-student
ratio to lackadaisical school managements to abysmally low quality teachers.
The RTE Act is designed to address the broader issue of inequality in society,
well, it makes a nice point, though not a very convincing one.
A Navi Mumbaikar’s kid studies in a
private school in Navi Mumbai which has branches in Mumbai. The school
management in a span of eight months has thrown out five teachers of his son’s
class. Thus, there’s a new teacher to handle the class every month-and-a-half.
Every teacher takes time to get familiar with the students and starts studies
afresh, in her own way. Sometimes, the new teachers are not qualified for the
job; they are in because they are available for cheap. That the quality of
teaching is bad is obvious.
The principal is difficult to meet and
there’s a risk of the student getting victimised by the teachers and the
management once a complaint is lodged. The Parent-Teacher Association is of
little help since it is disinterested. Shifting his son to another school is
also not a good idea since most other private schools are as bad and the good
one have few seats to accommodate new students. The entrance test is tough —
sometimes five hundred applicants for a single seat — and ‘influence’ is an
important factor.
So he has to suffer watching his son
getting bad education. Meanwhile, the school keeps increasing the fees under
different pretexts. His story could be that of thousands of other parents.
The problems with the system as evident
from the friend’s story is threefold: first, there is a shortage of quality
teachers; second, there are no options for the students who want to shift
schools; and three, the power with the schools to harass students and parent.
Magnify this. It could be the story of the education system across the country.
In villages and small towns, the situation is worse.
The country does not discuss these
problems much. The political class will have its own calculations in changing
the education system but the real effort should come from civil society groups
working in this sector.
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