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Sonam Wangchuk |
This must be
true as it has come from no less a person than Sonam Wangchuk. But it was not
always so and the government schools were not all that bad. I went to school
when private schools in small towns were a rarity. Like in Gwalior in Madhya
Pradesh, there was only one private school that I recollect and it was close to
our house. It was Miss Hill’s School that was run by donation by an American
elderly lady. The head mistress was one Mrs. RK Hukku, a very genial lady who
was a family friend and her four daughters and a son were very dear to all of
us. Yet when it came to admitting me in school for primary education in 1943 I
was admitted in a government school.
As my mother had
schooled me at home, like she did all my older siblings, I was admitted in
Class III. It was the Sarafa School not far from our place. There were no
nurseries or pre-nurseries; even kindergartens were rare to find. I was not
sent to Class I as I was judged fit enough for Class III by the Head Master.
Because of my
father’s very modest salary as a professor in the local (at that time) degree
college he could not have afforded the somewhat elevated fees of Miss Hill’s
School. Although Mrs. Hukku very much wanted at least one of us kids in her
school yet father did not relent as the household budget would have got a big
dent. Despite that it was the grounds of
Miss Hill’s that we used to go and play with the Hukku children every evening.
My eldest brother, however, used to keep Mrs. Hukku’s paralysed eldest son in
good humour and occasionally play Mahjong with him.
Facilities in
Sarafa School were basic. In Class III we were made to sit on the floor on
hessian mats and we had only a single teacher who used to teach us all the
subjects – from arithmetic to English, Hindi, Geography, history, etc. The
teacher was a Maharshtrian Brahmin with a shaven head and a tuft of hair at the
back. Since he was a pucca Brahmin he gave us a lot of ethical instructions and
instructions on morality.
The school was
subjected to inspections almost every six months for which the headmaster and
the teachers used to prepare. From the standard of teaching to cleanliness and
availability of furniture, everything was brought within the ambit of the
inspection. This kept everybody, including the teachers and students, on their
toes as nobody knew when the inspector would make an appearance and ask some
uncomfortable questions.
As I remember it now after so many decades I
find it was a well run school and perhaps the same was the case with other
government schools where my older siblings, including my sister, were educated.
We all worked our way up to the college and then made our careers through
competitive examinations. In the college four of us distinguished ourselves. My
eldest brother made it to the IAS in 1953 and a brother qualified for Central
Services in 1955. I myself did likewise and was selected for Central Services
in 1961. My sister went on to become a lecturer and then a professor in the US,
eventually ending as professor emeritus. Another brother retired as
Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh
Tourism Development Corporation. Primary schooling was largely responsible for
our successes.
I have narrated
all this in some length only to emphasise that well-administered government
schools and colleges were as good as any. But that was the fact in those days
now considered hoary past in pre-independence India. However, as educational
expansion took place and more and more schools and colleges were opened,
especially in rural India, the standards dipped remarkably. Besides, the
government did not have the wherewithal to effectively maintain, administer and
monitor the standards in myriad institutions that came into being resulting in
a crisis in public education.
That was perhaps the reason for privatization.
The state was flooded with demand which it was unable to meet. It had to,
therefore, partially abdicate its responsibilities and throw open the sector to
the market where numerous what are known as “edu-preneurs” appeared to
establish schools and colleges to satisfy the burgeoning demand. Parents would
go for them even at the risk of damaging their financial equilibrium.
Nonetheless these schools did come to the rescue of the government. But there
was a flip side. “Netas” became corrupt and they turned the sector as a money
spinner. Hence we got schools, colleges and even universities in apartment
blocks sans teaching staff and necessary infrastructure.
While the government
institutions suffered from utter neglect it winked at most of the private
institutions that were inadequately equipped to produce properly educated human
beings. Privatised education as a movement has, therefore, largely failed in
India. And the reason is not far to seek It is all because of the greed of the
“edu-preneurs” and the political class who wanted a quick buck as returns on
their investments.
There is no
gainsaying the fact government schools have always been kind of a boon for the
poor for providing a semblance of education. Poor have no way out except of
sending their children to the schools run by public agencies. But they have to
go through their schooling in very shoddy conditions, deprived of a proper,
fulfilling education. Most of the schools suffer from neglect and want of
wherewithal to run them effectively. Sonam Wangchuk said that In order to
ameliorate the conditions and in order extend equitable education to all
sections of society the government schools should be strengthened.
Suggesting a
policy intervention in this respect Wangchuk said that children of public
representatives – MPs and MLAs – should study in government schools. While
admitting that none can be forced to send children only to government schools
but the “public representatives should use the services that they claim they
are giving to others. I can guarantee that in five years their children will
not suffer and instead everyone’s children will improve – teachers will be sent
for training and books will be improved.”
Calling the
“binary” of public and private education to be the biggest shortcoming of
education in India Wangchuk said if everybody’s children – high or low –
studied in government schools then there would be far more attention paid to
them. He also said that a lot of times it is said that nothing good could
happen to government schools. That is largely true as children of powerful and
influential do not study there. “As long as clientele are not those who can
demand greater quality, there will be no one to give it either”, said Wangchuk
articulating a truism.
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