http://scroll.in/article/810149/report-on-education-policy-identifies-gaps-in-school-education-but-doesnt-tell-us-how-to-fill-them

EDUCATION MATTERS

Report on education policy identifies gaps in school education, but
doesn't explain how to fill them

The report, which is yet to be publicly released, is the first effort
in recent years to identify the extent of the problem in India's
education system.

2 hours ago
Updated an hour ago

Anjali Mody

Shifting the focus from enrollment to quality of education and
reducing the gap in learning levels between the rich and the poor are
key aspects of the long-awaited Ministry of Human Resource
Development-commissioned report for a new education policy, a copy of
which Scroll.in has seen.

The ministry has not yet made public the report by the Committee for
Evolution of the New Education Policy, which was submitted to it on
May 27.

A new education policy was one of the manifesto promises of the
Bharatiya Janata Party ahead of the 2014 general elections. The party
had said that the current education policy was outdated and there was
a need for a new education road map for the 21st century.

The committee’s report, however, puts to rest the suggestion that the
existing National Policy on Education, 1986 is obsolete. Instead, it
upholds the values and goals of this policy and tries to take them
forward.

The report states:

"It [the report] reiterates the role of education in inculcating
values, and to provide skills and competencies for the citizens, and
in enabling him to contribute to the nation’s well-being; strengthens
democracy by empowering citizens; acts as an integrative force in
society, and fosters social cohesion and national identity. One cannot
over-emphasise the role of education as the key catalyst for promoting
socio-economic mobility in building an equitable and just society."

Quality over quantity

The committee emphasises that in the last 30 years, the focus of
education in India has been on enrollment – getting children into
schools – and not on the quality of education. Enrollment has been
achieved to a reasonable degree, but there has been a steep decline in
the quality of education.

The problems with the Indian education system are in the acts of
omission and commission by those responsible for the delivery of
education – from teachers to school administrators to education
department bureaucrats and politicians – corruption and political
interference being key among them.

The committee’s focus has been on “improving the quality of education
and restoring the credibility of the education system”.

To this end, it offers a list of recommendations to fix the governance
of education. These include changes in management and monitoring of
education departments, schools and universities and in the process of
recruitment, training and posting of academic staff. It also
recommends the use of modern technology to improve education and its
management.

These recommendations reveal the enormity of the task of bringing
about change. Such a transformation can only come about if everyone –
from an aspiring school teacher to the government and the makers of
the education policy – wants this. This is a very tall order.

The committee’s recommendations, in a way, only initiate a dialogue
(that the Ministry of Human Resource Development does not seem to want
to have) on the magnitude of the problem before the nation.

Quality of teachers

The report, long and poorly structured, does attempt to offer
solutions to the enormous problems that stymie the education system in
India. The quality of teachers and the learning they impart as well as
the equality in education are some of the core issues at the
school-level.

To address the issue of the poor quality of school teachers, the
report suggests ways to make teaching a more desirable profession.
Among other things, it recommends that all states introduce a
four-year integrated undergraduate programme for Bachelor of
Arts/Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Education (along the lines of
the integrated Bachelor in Elementary Education programme in Delhi
University).

The advantage of this, the report says,“ is that the student will then
make an affirmative career choice in favour of teaching.” How this
will follow is not specified.

Though Delhi University has had its integrated Bachelor in Elementary
Education programme for 10 years, only eight all-women colleges offer
it. This suggests that young men are unlikely to opt for primary
school teaching as their first choice of profession.

Although the report talks about improving the education of teachers,
it does not adequately address the issue of quality of teaching. There
is, for example, no frank discussion on what academic standards should
be expected among those seeking to be teachers. One recommendation is
to have a minimum cut-off of 50% for admission to B.Ed courses. This
is setting the bar very low.

A cadre of educationists

The report says one of the reasons quality of education has declined
is because it has been put on a low position in the nation’s
administrative hierarchy. However, none of its recommendations will
substantially change this. Nor will they change the fact that teachers
have a much lower status than those in administrative jobs. As a
result, administrative posts in education departments are much more
coveted than teaching jobs. Under the current structure of incentives
in almost all states, career advancement for teachers means moving out
of teaching and into administrative jobs.

This confusion on how the hierarchies of education work are reflected
in the report’s calls for setting up an All India Education Service
(as the National Education Policy did in 1986). The report seems to
envisage a catch-all central service that will be in charge of
education management and also work as teaching cadre, policymakers and
education researchers. “Persons from the cadre would progressively man
the higher-level policy posts at the state and the Centre; they will
be, like other AIS officers, deployed in teaching or managerial
positions…” the report says.

The report, however, does not say whether this will be a cadre of
trained teachers acting as managers and policymakers, or a cadre of
generalists, like in the other all-India service, who will also be
teachers.

Elsewhere in the report, there are recommendations for creating a
state-level cadre of principals, to fill vacancies in positions of
headmasters and principals. These cadre, the report says, should be
drawn from teachers with five years’ experience or more. The report
also calls for a separate cadre of teacher-trainers for the District
Institute of Education and Training.

It is anyone’s guess whether these different services and cadre will
exist in parallel, or will be interlinked, or how they will work
together.


No roadmap

Also, while the report identifies quality of education as its focus,
it does not really define what it means by quality.

The report, for instance, says that norms for learning outcomes should
be enshrined in the Right to Education Act and this, it believes, will
improve quality. It hopes that by improving the quality of teachers,
monitoring their performance, and linking their appraisals and
promotions to these “learning outcomes”, things will improve
significantly.

In reality, measurable learning outcomes may ensure a minimal level of
education – now sorely lacking – but minimal is not the same thing as
quality. This will not in itself close the massive educational gap
between the rich and poor, which is one of the concerns of the
committee.

The confusion over how this gap should be bridged is writ large in the report.

The committee, for instance, recommends a curriculum that reflects the
particular needs of tribal communities.

However, it does not suggest changes in pedagogy to have more
inclusive classrooms in general. Current classrooms and testing
systems are by and large not designed for children who are first-time
learners or from communities with traditionally low access to
education. The solution that the committee offers is additional
“academic support” outside the classroom in critical years – primary
school, Class 11 and in early technical education. This
recommendation, well-meaning though it is, appears to be calling for
tuition, so that children from disadvantaged backgrounds can compete
with those who can afford to pay for private coaching. The committee
seems to be saying that there are no systemic solutions to bridge the
gap.

The committee’s approach reinforces this problem.

The committee places a heavy emphasis on developing an Early Childhood
Education Programme. This is important, because the absence of
affordable and quality pre-schools leaves the underprivileged severely
disadvantaged. It also calls for a well-thought-out curriculum,
development of learning materials and training of pre-school teachers,
which is excellent. However, it completely ignores the proven
limitations of the existing Anganwadis (which are grossly understaffed
and primarily focused on nutrition and health rather than on early
learning) through which pre-school education can be made available to
the majority of India’s poor children. If children are treated
inequitably at this crucial stage of their development, they will most
definitely need “academic support” in addition to regular schooling a
few years later.

Mind the gaps

The report’s chief failing is it does not join the dots.

This is also the case with its excoriation of the National Council of
Educational Research and Training for not evolving curriculum and
pedagogy that promotes independent thinking rather than rote learning.
The report says that to change this, “NCERT will have to undertake
preparation of a new curriculum framework, through redesign [of] its
text books in a manner that teachers become motivators, facilitators
and co-investigators and encourage self-and-peer-learning through
project assignments.”

Redesigning textbooks to revamp the curriculum framework is doing
things back to front – unless the intention is simply to produce new
books without a publicly discussed curriculum framework.

The NCERT textbooks of 2005 were designed to achieve just the goals
the committee wants.The report's critique of the NCERT ignores the
real problem of the lack of coordination between text book production,
teacher training and, very importantly, the examining board. The NCERT
can produce the best textbooks in the world, but if teacher training
does not evolve alongside and the examination board demands rote
learning, then rote learning is what you will get. The report has
recommended that the examination board test concepts and knowledge
rather than encourage rote learning. Having done that, why would they
be in a rush to change reasonably good textbooks?

The report, with all its problems, is the first effort in recent years
to accept the extent of the problem in the education system and so
offers a huge opportunity for a thorough discussion on issues and
their solutions. The question we are then left with is why the Human
Resource Development Ministry is so reluctant to formally make this
report public and open for discussion.

Apart from the ideological sub-text that people will undoubtedly
examine the report for, one reason for the secrecy could be that the
report lays open the full horror that is the Indian education system
and shows us just how hard it is to fix. As the report says, education
is a process and not an event. It cannot be showcased. And the current
Ministry of Human Resource Development is dedicated to the idea of
events.
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