iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Education
 

Education In India From 1526 To Now

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Naraginti Reddy

Historically, Indian education has been elitist. Traditional Hindu education was tailored to the needs of Brahman boys who were taught to read and write by a Brahman teacher . During Mughal rule (1526-1858), Muslim education was similarly elitist, although its orientation reflected economic factors rather than those of caste background. Under British company and crown rule (1757-1947), official education policies reinforced the preexisting elitist tendencies of South Asian education. By tying entrance and advancement in government service to academic education, colonial rule contributed to the legacy of an education system geared to preserving the position and prerogatives of the more privileged. Education served as a "gatekeeper," permitting an avenue of upward mobility to those few able to muster sufficient resources.

Even the efforts of the nationalistic Indian National Congress faltered in the face of the entrenched interests defending the existing system of education . Early in the 1900s, the Congress called for national education, placing an emphasis on technical and vocational training. In 1920 the Congress initiated a boycott of government-aided and government-controlled schools; it founded several "national" schools and colleges, but to little avail. The rewards of British-style education were so great that the boycott was largely ignored, and the Congress schools temporarily disappeared.

Postprimary education has traditionally catered to the interests of the higher and upwardly mobile castes. Despite substantial increases in the spread of middle schools and high schools' growth in enrollment, secondary schooling is necessary for those bent on social status and mobility through acquisition of an office job.

In the nineteenth century, postprimary students were disproportionately Brahmans; their traditional concern with learning gave them an advantage under British education policies. By the early twentieth century, several powerful cultivator castes had realized the advantages of education as a passport to political power and had organized to acquire formal learning. "Backward" castes (usually economically disadvantaged Shudras) who had acquired some wealth took advantage of their status to secure educational privilege. In the mid-1980s, the vast majority of students making it through middle school to high school continued to be from high-level castes and middle- to upper-class families living in urban areas ( Varna, Caste, and Other Divisions). A region's three or four most powerful castes typically dominated the school system. In addition, the widespread role of private education and the payment of fees even at government-run schools discriminated against the poor.

The goals of the 1986 National Policy on Education demanded vastly increased enrollment. In order to have attained universal elementary education in 1995, the 1981 enrollment level of 72.7 million would have had to increase to 160 million in 1995. Although the seventh plan suggested the adoption of new education methods to meet these goals, such as the promotion of television and correspondence courses (often referred to as "distance learning") and open school systems, the actual extended coverage of children was not very great. Many critics of India's education policy argue that total school enrollment is not actually a goal of the government considering the extent of society's vested interest in child labor. In this context, education can be seen as a tool that one social class uses to prevent the rise of another. Middle-class Indians frequently distinguish between the children of the poor as "hands," or children who must be taught to work, and their own children as "minds," or children who must be taught to learn. The upgraded curriculum with increased requirements in English and in the sciences appears to be causing difficulties for many children. Although all the states have recognized that curriculum reform is needed, no comprehensive plan to link curricular changes with new ways of teaching, learning, teacher training, and examination methods has been implemented.

The government instituted an important program for improving physical facilities through a phased drive in all primary schools in the country called Operation Blackboard. Under Operation Blackboard, Rs1 billion was allocated--but not spent--in 1987 to pay for basic amenities for village schools, such as toys and games, classroom materials, blackboards, and maps. This financial allotment averaged Rs2,200 for each government-run primary school. Additional goals of Operation Blackboard included construction of classrooms that would be usable in all weather, and an additional teacher, preferably a woman, in all single-teacher schools.
The non-formal education system implemented in 1979 was the major government effort to educate dropouts and other unenrolled children. Special emphasis was given to the nonformal education system in the nine states regarded by the government as having deficient education systems: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Jammu and Kashmir, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal. A large number of children who resided in these states could not attend formal schools because they were employed, either with or without wages. Seventy-five percent of the country's children who were not enrolled in school resided in these states in the 1980s.

The 1986 National Policy on Education gave new impetus to the nonformal education system. Revised and expanded programs focused on involving voluntary organizations and training talented and dedicated young men and women in local communities as instructors. The results of a late 1980s integrated pilot project for nonformal and adult education for women and girls in the Lucknow district of Uttar Pradesh provide important data for analyzing recent implementation trends and initial results of both the nonformal education system and adult education in India. Under this project, 300 centers were opened in rural parts of the district with the approval of the Department of Education, the central government, and the state government of Uttar Pradesh with financial and advisory support from the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Because of the shortage of women teachers in rural areas of Uttar Pradesh, in the pilot project nonformal education for girls aged six to fourteen was integrated with the adult education program for women aged fifteen to thirty-five, so that the same staff and infrastructure could be used. Most of the families of the project participants were in subsistence farming or engaged as farmhands, clerical workers, and petty merchants. Often the brothers of female participants attended a formal school situated about one or two kilometers from their homes. Most of the 300 instructors for the 300 centers were young women between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five. Each center averaged twenty-five women and twenty girl participants. The physical facilities of the centers varied from village to village. Classes might be held on the balcony of a brick house, within a temple, in a room of a mud-walled house, or under open thatch-roof structures. Besides focusing on the acquisition of literacy skills, the project increased participant motivation by also offering instruction in household work, such as sewing, knitting, and preserving food. In 1987 a UNESCO mission to evaluate progress in this project in the areas of functional literacy, vocational skills, and civic awareness observed that randomly chosen participants in both nonformal and adult education classes effectively demonstrated their reading and writing skills at appropriate levels. As a result of many such local programs, literacy rates improved between 1981 and 1991. Male literacy increased from 56.5 percent in 1981 to 64.2 percent in 1991 while women's literacy rate increased from 29.9 percent in 1981 to 39.2 percent in 1991.

Understanding India's health care and education systems contributes to the larger understanding of this complex nation's diverse society. General trends and averages concerning social conditions on a national level may not adequately describe how human activity is expressed spatially and temporally in specific areas. The great variations in local environmental and social conditions require that national and state or union territory programs aimed at improving the quality of life not adhere too strictly to any one standard plan. Local climate, topography, and drainage patterns all need to be considered in terms of how they relate to local forms of land use and ethnic and linguistic groupings. Increasing urbanization in India also complicates efforts at monitoring local conditions. Only with the full support and understanding of India's many rural and urban residents will new ways of focusing India's immense human resources toward the goals of developing and conserving renewable natural resources, limiting population growth, providing increased health care, and achieving education for all be successful.

Indian atlases useful for gaining a basic understanding of India's physical, political, and cultural geography include A Social and Economic Atlas of India edited by S. Muthiah and the River Basin Atlas of India prepared by the Central Board for the Prevention and Control of Water Pollution. V.S. Katiyar's The Indian Monsoon and Its Frontiers provides a good description and analysis of one of the major facets of South Asian climatology. A standard work on postpartition Indian boundaries in terms of their political status is John Robert Victor Prescott's Map of Mainland Asia by Treaty . A Historical Atlas of South Asia edited by Joseph E. Schwartzberg, is another extremely useful resource.
Official information on India's demography can be found in the Census of India 1991, Final Population Totals . These results also provide useful data on literacy levels in India. Additional insight into the contemporary field of Indian population policy is given in G. Narayana and J.F. Kantner's Doing the Needful: The Dilemma of India's Population Policy . Concise official data on health care are listed in the Ministry of Planning's annual Statistical Abstract . An informed outsider's view of the health situation in India is presented in Roger Jeffery's The Politics of Health in India .

Contemporary official education plans and goals are outlined in J.C. Aggarwal's National Policy on Education: Agenda for India 2001 . A more critical account of India's education system has been compiled by UNESCO's Asia-Pacific Program of Education for All and published in National Studies: India . Detailed field results of a recent UNESCO project to provide nonformal and adult education for women and girls can be found in Simultaneous Education for Women and Girls: Report of a Project . Myron Weiner's The Child and State in India has useful analysis of education policy.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

N.Amareswaran, a Research Scholar under the guidance of Prof. B.Ramachandra Reddy in Sri Venkateswara University, tirupati, India. e-mail:amareswaran@yahoo.co.in
Article Tags: education [See Dictionary], india [See Dictionary], children [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on October 03, 2007 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Who Made the First Weather Machine?
Submitted by: Simranjeet Singh'

No doubt about it, Wilhelm Reich was the first person to ever create an actual working weather machine...

An Overview of Computer Numerical Control Routing – CNC Routing
Submitted by: Lawrence Reaves

CNC Routing (Computer Numerical Control) is where a computer-controlled, routing mill is used for intricate or large volume production runs where a high standard of replicated product is required...

10 Easy Ways to Practice English Every Day
Submitted by: Susan Thomason

There is an old expression that says “practice makes perfect” If you want to perfect a skill of any kind it requires lots of practice and the best way to practice a new language, especially outside of your ESL classes, is to use it as often as possible...

Science Experiment and How it Can Be Appreciated
Submitted by: Malcolm. Chris

The subject of Science can be more fully grasped if learned experientially Experiential learning has a much longer staying power in the minds of the learner...

Science For Kids That Are Made Fun and Enjoyable
Submitted by: Malcolm. Chris

Science is a difficult subject to be studied if you will look at it closely Everything in this life, in this world, in this solar system, in this galaxy and in this universe has an element of Science to it...

Science Kit and the Benefits You Can Derived From It
Submitted by: Malcolm. Chris

Science kits are surprisingly bargained in bookstores and shops especially now that the internet and e- resources are very much available for cheaper and even no costs at all...

Science Kits and Its Benefits to the Users
Submitted by: Malcolm. Chris

Textbooks and reading materials about Science abound bookstore shelves and libraries However, these resources are not very much preferred by school kids because they find that reading about Science in textbooks is dull though these reading resources are informative as they are...

How to do Simple Calculations in Your Head - Addition
Submitted by: K. Parsons

Let’s face it Math is not everyone’s favorite subject...

How to Choose a Good English Dictionary
Submitted by: Susan Thomason

Having a good English dictionary is important if you want to learn the language well In fact, it is probably the most valuable tool you have while taking your ESL classes...

Brainwaves and Brain Evolution System
Submitted by: A. Majid

The electrical activity emanating from the brain creates frequencies are called brainwaves Brainwave frequencies are measured in Hertz (Hz), meaning cycles per second...

The Top Reasons For Learning a New Language
Submitted by: Sean Goudelocks

Do you want to know more about learning a new language Although the feat can be a bit challenging, it can easily be done with the right tools and your strong determination in tow...

Learn a New Language: Mistakes to Avoid
Submitted by: Sean Goudelocks

Learning a new language can be a challenging, fun and rewarding experience all at the same time Not only will it give you a chance to gain further insight into a different culture, but it will also be a valuable tool in expanding your horizons as you travel, study or even work abroad...

How to Learn New Language
Submitted by: Sean Goudelocks

There are a number of ways to learn new language Depending on personal learning style, you will be able to take grasp of a foreign language in no time...

Learning a Foreign Language For More Job Opportunities
Submitted by: Sean Goudelocks

As globalization is starting to take its hold on the world, it is becoming a necessity for people to be able to understand different languages...

Important Reminders if You Want to Learn a Foreign Language
Submitted by: Sean Goudelocks

Learning a foreign language nowadays is not just about taking on a new skill or hobby, it’s starting to become a valuable skill to have as the world is slowly transitioning into a global environment...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy