Saturday, 15 October 2022

What is wrong with Education ? Situation after 12 years of RTE implementation in Odisha.

 

What is wrong with Education? Situation after 12 Years of RTE Implementation in Odisha

By Anil Pradhan

The Right to Education(RTE)Act is being implemented from 1st April 2010 and as per the  Act all schools should be RTE complaint within the period of 5 years of it implementation that is by March 30th 2015. However, 12 years have passed, and only 20% of schools in India comply with the RTE norms in terms of infrastructure.

As per the Act, all schools to comply with the Pupil Teacher Ratio(PTR)norms: all primary schools should be at least 2 teachers and Upper primary schools should be at least 3.  The PTR for primary classes is 30:1 and 35:1 for Upper Primary Classes.  The prescribed PTR is vital for improving the learning of children in schools. However, there is no government information available relating to the percentage of schools complying with PTR norms at present. Instead,the government is sharing state-level information relating to overall PTR status, which is irrelevant and absurd.

There was a lot of struggle by the civil society organisations for bringing legislation to make elementary education a fundamental right. It took 52years afterindependence to bring legislation into the Indian parliament and another 7 years to bring this RTE Act to implement the constitutional commitment. Researchers strongly argued in favour of making elementary education a fundamental right citing the example of other countries. How other countries have been able to curb child labour through this legislation. We also hope that this legislation will bring changes in the field of education, at least it will strengthen the public education system and the rate of spread of private schools will be reduced. After seeing the data relating to the different aspects of the RTE compliance after 12 years, it is quite disheartening to note that there is no major change on the ground. As per the U-DISE 2016-17, only 6.6% of schools in Odisha were complying with RTE parameters. The data relating to RTE compliance is not available after 2016-17. Similarly, as per 2018-19 DISE data, there were still 1745 single teachers schools.  There were 188 schools without a building and 1866 schools had single classrooms.      Instead of implementing the RTE Act in letter and spirit,the Odisha government is doing some peripheral activities such as Mo School and 5T school transformation for its vote bank politics which will not help to strengthen the education system as a whole rather it will help to increase inequality in providing education to its citizens.  The welfare state has a responsibility to provide free and quality education to all children without any discrimination. Unfortunately, in India the state is discriminating against its citizens by creating different layers of schools, making unequal provisions for each category of schools.  It will have serious consequences on the future of our society. The situation is the same here in Odisha. “Mo Schools” programme is helping schools , where infrastructure is reasonably good in condition and has an alumnae base. But schools located in interior pockets and in tribal areas have no alumnae, and there is no provision to cover them. These schools are facing the threat of school closure at present. Similarly, under the 5T school transformation programme, the Government is creating all kinds of facilities in selected schools. Only good infrastructure facilities will not help in improving learning among the children. Required number of teachers having dedication and motivation is most essential. At present, nobody is there in the system to encourage young teachers who are starting their careers. Even though they have the spirit to do something, the system is so autocratic and oppressive that they have been de-motivated quickly and doing their teaching job in a  stereotypical fashion.

Government is the opening set up hostels in tribal areas for primary class children and children are being admitted there from class -1. There are no clear cut guidelines for the admission of children. As a result, children from villages having primary schools are also getting admitted into hostels. Scientifically children from an early age should not be separated from their parents. A child has to get love affection; care from the parents and society. If we are distancing them from family and their village we are depriving them of the experience of everything relating to their family and society. It has a larger implication in society. It has an impact on reducing enrollment in village schools too. 

Odisha has an Multi Lingual Education(MLE) policy and a programme. Under this programme, theGovernment is developing learning materials in the languages of tribal children. But the programme is limited to around 1500 schools where around 14000 schools have 80% of children from tribal communities. On another hand the ST/SC Development department is running a programme called ANWESHA in which children of tribal communities are studying in English medium schools in towns and the government has set up hostels for them at its own cost. This is contradictory to the philosophy of the MLE programme.

The government of Odisha should have a proper mechanism to evaluate and research the impact of the above-mentioned programmes. But there is no research and evaluation on the same. Therefore, there is little opportunity to know the impact of these programmes. But the way it is being implemented will definitely have a disastrous impact on society and children.

The government never had an action plan to comply withRTE norms and as a result of which the state public education system is in a deplorable situation in Odisha. People have lost faith in government schools and those who can afford them send their children to private schools. As a result, private schools number has been increasing at an increasing rate and enrollment in government schools has been decreasing every year.  The number of private schools in Odisha in 2020-21 is 8085, increased from 4350 private schools in the year 2010-11.Instead of analysing the causes of low enrollment in government schools, the Government has been trying to close down schools in the name of school closure and consolidation violating RTE norms.

If this situation continues to prevail in Odisha millions of children from the  underprivileged community who are solely dependent on the public education system will be deprived in Odisha.The enrollment in Government schools is continuously declining while enrollment of children of scheduled tribes is increasing in Government schools. The people’s representatives from different political parties, and intelligentsia should come forward to protest the undemocratic and unrealistic steps of the government to save the public education system.

Friday, 4 March 2022

 Anil   Pradhan, Innovating Education for Weaker Sections in Odisha  

 

Anil Pradhan, son of Late Muralidhar Pradhan and Chili Pradhan, has come from a family of farmers,  and born on 09/07/1969 at Raibahal, Post. Raniakata, Via. Raj Kishore Nagar-759126, Angul, Odisha, India.

 

                                                                                                           

 1. Experiences

1992 to 1995

- Joined  as  a Programme Associate in Agragamee, Kashipur , Rayagada

-  Coordinated   different projects such as District Resource Unit ,  Innovative and

 Experimental Education programme supported by the MHRD, Government of

 India.

- Worked as one of the Senior Programme Managers in Agragamee.

 

 1996- till date

ü  Joined Sikshasandhan as the Member-Secretary(Chief Functionary)

ü  Organised state level and national level consultation on education for social

change to work out  strategies for Sikshasandhan. 

ü  Developed Training packages  and conducted training programmes for teachers, pre-school instructors, functionaries of voluntary organizations, senior functionaries of the Government of Orissa

ü  Provided support services to voluntary organizations on training, local specific curriculum development, and teaching learning materials development.

ü  Coordinated educational projects supported by Actionaid, Catholic Relief Services,Welthungerhilfe,OXFAM India, Terre Des Hommes-Germany, CRY , Care India, SDTT  and Swiss-aid.

ü  Coordinated an evaluation study of secondary schools managed by the

Schedule Tribes  and  Schedule Castes  Development  Department, Government of Orissa in 2000

ü  Was part of the research team,which executed an International Labour Organisation sponsored  study on Bondo Highlanders of Orissa.     

ü  Developed and implemented an innovative education programme for children of tribal communities in Orissa during 1999-2008 with the support of Welthungerhilfe.

ü  Coordinated a consortium consisting of  grassroots voluntary organizations working in the field of education in tribal areas of Orissa.

ü  Convener, Odisha Siksha Adhikar Abhijan, a network of voluntary organizations working in the field of  Education in Odisha.

ü  Convener, Odisha RTE Forum(state level alliance of NGOs, networks work in the field of education and child rights)

 

2. Achievements

ü  Developed a model education programme for children of tribal communities  which can be replicated elsewhere after minor modification in view of the local situation. More than 10,000 children benefited from the programme.

ü  His effort has been contributed  to influence Government of Odisha for mother tongue based education in Orissa for children of tribal communities. 

ü  Under his leadership a library has been set up consisting of valuable  collections of Odia autobiographies, biographies, local histories and books on Orissa. Besides, Mr.Pradhan has set up 200 library in 200 government schools.

ü  Coordinating publication of Sikshasandhan.More than 150 books on education, autobiographies , biographies  and books for children have been published so far.

ü  A bi-monthly magazine Sikha has been published under his leadership since 1996 which records news, views , experiences of the teachers, innovations  on education. 

ü  Sikshasandhan became an well-known organization under his leadership.

ü  He has been establish contact  with educationists, institutions and universities within the country and abroad.

ü  He organised the civil society  organistaions to form a state wide network  Odisha RTE Forum, a forum of NGOs,Funding agencies,teachers’union, and educationist to create pressure on government to implement Rights of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act 2009 and bring about desired policy changes.     

            

 3. Membership                               

ü  Member, .Orissa Gabeshana Chakra- An intellectual forum in Orissa

ü  Founder Member and Trustee  of RUPANTAR- a resource centre for translation registered  under Trust Act

ü  Founder Member of Nishant Foundation, a trust for promoting literary activities in the state

ü  Founder Member of Centre for South Asian Studies, a trust for promoting

ü  research on South Asian Countries    

ü  Founder Member, SANJOJANA- a state level network for Natural Resource Management

 

4. Books/Articles  Published

ü  Co-translator  of the book Siksha Bichara(Oriya translation of the book “On Education by V.Sukhomlinsky) published by  Sikshasandhan, Bhubaneswar, 2003.

 

ü  Translation of excerpts from Oriya autobiographies into English  have been included in an anthology(From  Bondage to Freedom)   published by RUPANTAR.,2006

 

ü  Translation of an excerpt from Oriya women’s writing into English  has been included in the book Early Women’ writing of Orissa published by Sage, New Delhi.

 

ü  Co-Editor, Anubhabamala-II and III (Diary of Mr. Sarat Chandra Moharana, an eminent educationist and Gandhian)

 

ü  In Their Own Voices:Stories, Momories, Impressions of Tribal s in Orissa, a book edited by him was published in 2010.

 

ü  A  long write-up  included in Food Steps: Community Initiatives for Food Security  which was  published by Welthungerhilfe, Germany in 2008.

 

ü  Number of Articles published in News Papers and Magazines relating to education and development.

 

 

Country Visited:

Switzerland, Sweden, Philippines Nepal and Bangladesh