History[edit]
The remnants of the library of
Nalanda, built in the 5th century BCE by
Gupta kings. It was rebuilt twice after invasion, first after an invasion from the
Huns in the 5th century BCE and then after an invasion from the
Gaudas in the 7th century CE but abandoned after the third invasion by
Turkic invaders in the 12th century.
Takshasila (in modern-day Pakistan) was the earliest recorded centre of higher learning in India from possibly 8th century BCE, and it is debatable whether it could be regarded a university or not in modern sense, since teachers living there may not have had official membership of particular colleges, and there did not seem to have existed purpose-built lecture halls and residential quarters in Taxila, in contrast to the later Nalanda university in eastern India.
Nalanda was the oldest university-system of education in the world in the modern sense of university. There all subjects were taught in Ariano -
páli Language.
[19]
Secular institutions cropped up along Buddhist monasteries. These institutions imparted practical education, e.g. medicine. A number of urban learning centres became increasingly visible from the period between 500 BCE to 400 CE. The important urban centres of learning were
Nalanda (in modern-day
Bihar) and
Manassa in Nagpur, among others. These institutions systematically imparted knowledge and attracted a number of foreign students to study topics such as
Buddhist Páli literature, logic,
páli grammar, etc.
Chanakya, a Brahmin teacher, was among the most famous teachers, associated with founding of
Mauryan Empire.
Sammanas and Brahmin gurus historically offered education by means of donations, rather than charging fees or the procurement of funds from students or their guardians. Later, stupas, temples also became centres of education; religious education was compulsory, but secular subjects were also taught. Students were required to be brahmacaris or celibates. The knowledge in these orders was often related to the tasks a section of the society had to perform. The priest class, the
Sammanas, were imparted knowledge of religion, philosophy, and other ancillary branches while the warrior class, the
Kshatriya, were trained in the various aspects of warfare. The business class, the
Vaishya, were taught their trade and the working class of the
Shudras was generally deprived of educational advantages.
[20]
School education[edit]
University of Calcutta, established on 1857, was the first multidisciplinary and secular Western-style institution in Asia.
The central board and most of the state boards uniformly follow the "
10+2+3" pattern of education.
[21]:3 In this pattern, study of 10 years is done in schools and 2 years in Junior colleges,
[21]:44 and then 3 years of study for a bachelor's degree.
[22] The first 10 years is further subdivided into 4 years of primary education, 6 years of High School followed by 2 years of Junior colleges.
[21]:5 This pattern originated from the recommendation of the Education Commission of 1964–66.
[23]
Administration[edit]
Education Policy is prepared by the Centre Government and State Governments at national and state levels respectively.
The National Policy on Education (NPE), 1986, has provided for environment awareness, science and technology education, and introduction of traditional elements such as
Yoga into the Indian secondary school system.
[24] A significant feature of India's secondary school system is the emphasis on inclusion of the disadvantaged sections of the society. Professionals from established institutes are often called to support in vocational training. Another feature of India's secondary school system is its emphasis on profession based vocational training to help students attain skills for finding a vocation of his/her choosing.
[25] A significant new feature has been the extension of SSA to secondary education in the form of the
Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan.
[26]
Curriculum and School Education Boards[edit]
School boards set the curriculum, conduct board level exams mostly at 10th and 12th level to award the school diplomas. Exams at the remaining levels (also called standard, grade or class, denoting the years of schooling) are conducted by the schools.
- National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT): The NCERT is the apex body located at New Delhi, Capital City of India. It makes the curriculum related matters for school education across India.[27] The NCERT provides support, guidance and technical assistance to a number of schools in India and oversees many aspects of enforcement of education policies.[28] There are other curriculum bodies governing school education system specially at state level.
- State Government Boards of Education: Most of the state governments have at least one "State board of secondary school education". However, some states like Andhra Pradesh have more than one. Also the union territories do not have a board. Chandigarh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu, and Lakshadweep and Puducherry Lakshadweep share the services with a larger state. The boards set curriculum from Grades 1 to 12 and the curriculum varies from state to state and has more local appeal with examinations conducted in regional languages in addition to English - often considered less rigorous than central curriculums such as CBSE or ICSE/ISC. Most of these conduct exams at 10th and 12th level, but some even at the 5th, 6th and 8th level.
- Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE): The CBSE sets curriculum from Grades 1 to 12 and conducts examinations at the 10th and 12th standards that are called board exams. Students studying the CBSE Curriculum take the All India Secondary School Examination (AISSE) at the end of grade 10 and All India Senior School Certificate Examination (AISSCE) at the end of grade 12. Examinations are offered in Hindi and English.
- Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE): CISCE sets curriculum from Grades 1 to 12 and conducts three examinations, namely, the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education (ICSE - Class/Grade 10); The Indian School Certificate (ISC - Class/Grade 12) and the Certificate in Vocational Education (CVE - Class/Grade 12). CISCE English level has been compared to UK's A-Levels; this board offers more choices of subjects. CBSE exams at grade 10 and 12 have often been compared with CICSE and ISC examinations. CICSE is generally considered to be more rigorous than the CBSE AISSE (grade 10) but the CBSE AISSCE and ISC examinations are almost on par with each other in most subjects with ISC including a slightly more rigorous English examination than the CBSE 12th grade examination. The CBSE and ISC are recognised internationally and most universities abroad accept the final results of CBSE and ISC exams for admissions purposes and as proof of completion of secondary school.
- National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS): The NIOS conducts two examinations, namely, Secondary Examination and Senior Secondary Examination (All India) and also some courses in Vocational Education. National Board of education is run by Government of India's HRD Ministry to provide education in rural areas and challenged groups in open and distance education mode. A pilot project started by CBSE to provide high class affordable education, provides education up to 12th standard. Choice of subjects is highly customisable and equivalent to CBSE. Home-schooled students usually take NIOS or international curriculum examinations as they are ineligible to write CBSE or ISC exams.
- Islamic Madrasah: Their boards are controlled by local state governments, or autonomous, or affiliated with Darul Uloom Deoband or Darul Uloom Nadwtul Ulama.
- Autonomous schools: Such as Woodstock School, Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education Puducherry, Patha Bhavan and Ananda Marga Gurukula.
- International Baccalaureate (IB) and Cambridge International Examinations (CIB): These are generally private schools that have dual affiliation with one of the school education board of India as well as affiliated to the International Baccalaureate (IB) Programme and/or the Cambridge International Examinations (CIB).
- International schools, which offer 10th and 12th standard examinations under the International Baccalaureate, Cambridge Senior Secondary Examination systems or under their home nations school boards (such as run by foreign embassies or the expat communities).
- Special education: A special Integrated Education for Disabled Children (IEDC) programme was started in 1974 with a focus on primary education.[27] but which was converted into Inclusive Education at Secondary Stage[29]
Midday Meal Nutrition Scheme[edit]
The
Midday Meal Scheme is a
school meal programme of the
Government of India designed to improve the
nutritional status of school-age children nationwide,
[30] by supplying free lunches on working days for children in primary and upper primary classes in government, government aided, local body, Education Guarantee Scheme, and alternative innovative education centres,
Madarsa and
Maqtabs supported under
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, and National Child Labour Project schools run by the ministry of labour.
[31] Serving 120,000,000 children in over 1,265,000 schools and Education Guarantee Scheme centres, it is the largest such programme in the world.
[32]
Teachers education[edit]
In addition, NUEPA (National University of Educational Planning and Administration)
[33] and NCTE (National Council for Teacher Education) are responsible for the management of the education system and teacher accreditation.
[34]
Levels of schooling[edit]
Pre-Primary education[edit]
Indian Pre-Primary School children (Divine Orchids International Preschool,
Jawhar)
Anganwadi centre at Velhe, Pune district, 2019
The pre-primary stage is the foundation of children's knowledge, skills and behaviour. On completion of pre-primary education, the children are sent to the primary stage but pre-primary education in India is not a fundamental right. In rural India, pre-primary schools are rarely available in small villages. But in cities and big towns, there are many established players in the pre-primary education sector. The demand for the preschools is growing considerably in the smaller towns and cities but still only 1% of the population under age 6 is enrolled in preschool education.
- Play group (pre-nursery): At play schools, children are exposed to a lot of basic learning activities that help them to get independent faster and develop their self-help qualities like eating food themselves, dressing up, and maintaining cleanliness. The age limit for admission into pre-nursery is 2 to 3 years. Anganwadi is government funded free rural childcare & mothercare nutrition and learning program also incorporating the free Midday Meal Scheme.
- Nursery: Nursery level activities help children unfold their talents, thus enabling them to sharpen their mental and physical abilities. The age limit for admission in nursery is 3 to 4 years.
- LKG: It is also called the Junior Kindergarten (Jr. kg) stage. The age limit for admission in LKG is 4 to 5 years.
- UKG: It is also called the Senior Kindergarten (Sr. kg) stage. The age limit for admission in UKG is 5 to 6 years.
LKG and UKG stages prepare and help children emotionally, mentally, socially and physically to grasp knowledge easily in the later stages of school and college life.
[35] A systematic process of preschool education is followed in India to impart knowledge in the best possible way for better understanding of the young children. By following an easy and interesting curriculum, teachers strive hard to make the entire learning process enjoyable for the children.
Primary education[edit]
School children reading books in government primary school library, in
Goa
The primary education in India is divided into two parts, namely Lower Primary (Class I-IV) and Upper Primary (Middle school, Class V-VIII). The Indian government lays emphasis on primary education ( Class I-VIII ) also referred to as elementary education, to children aged 6 to 14 years old.
[36] Because education laws are given by the states, duration of primary school visit alters between the Indian states. The Indian government has also banned child labour in order to ensure that the children do not enter unsafe working conditions.
[36] However, both free education and the ban on child labour are difficult to enforce due to economic disparity and social conditions.
[36] 80% of all recognised schools at the elementary stage are government run or supported, making it the largest provider of education in the country.
[37]
However, due to a shortage of resources and lack of political will, this system suffers from massive gaps including high pupil to teacher ratios, shortage of infrastructure and poor levels of teacher training. Figures released by the Indian government in 2011 show that there were 5,816,673 elementary school teachers in India.
[38] As of March 2012 there were 2,127,000 secondary school teachers in India.
[39] Education has also been made free
[36] for children for 6 to 14 years of age or up to class VIII under the
Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act 2009.
[40]
There have been several efforts to enhance quality made by the government. The District Education Revitalisation Programme (DERP) was launched in 1994 with an aim to universalise primary education in India by reforming and vitalising the existing primary education system.
[41] 85% of the DERP was funded by the central government and the remaining 15% was funded by the states.
[41] The DERP, which had opened 1.6 lakh new schools including 84,000 alternative education schools delivering alternative education to approximately 35 lakh children, was also supported by UNICEF and other international programmes.
[41] In January 2016,
Kerala became the 1st Indian state to achieve 100% primary education through its literacy programme Athulyam.
[42]
This primary education scheme has also not shown a high Gross Enrollment Ratio of 93–95% for the last three years in some states.
[41] Significant improvement in staffing and enrolment of girls has also been made as a part of this scheme.
[41] The current scheme for universalisation of Education for All is the
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan which is one of the largest education initiatives in the world. Enrollment has been enhanced, but the levels of quality remain low.
Secondary education[edit]
Secondary school girls in
Delhi.
School children in Hnahthial.
Secondary education covers children aged 14 to 18, a group comprising 8.85
crore children according to the
2001 Census of India. The final two years of secondary is often called Higher Secondary (HS), Senior Secondary, or simply the "+2" stage. The two halves of secondary education are each an important stage for which a pass certificate is needed, and thus are affiliated by central boards of education under HRD ministry, before one can pursue higher education, including college or professional courses.
UGC, NCERT, CBSE and ICSE directives state qualifying ages for candidates who wish to take board exams. Those at least 15 years old by 30 May for a given academic year are eligible to appear for Secondary board exams, and those 17 by the same date are eligible to appear for Higher Secondary certificate board exams. It further states that upon successful completion of Higher Secondary, one can apply to higher education under UGC control such as Engineering, Medical, and Business Administration.
Secondary education in India is examination-oriented and not course-based: students register for and take classes primarily to prepare for one of the centrally-administered examinations. Senior school or high school is split into 2 parts (grades 9-10 and grades 11-12) with a standardised nationwide examination at the end of grade 10 and grade 12 (usually informally referred to as "board exams"). Grade 10 examination results can be used for admission into grades 11-12 at a secondary school, pre-university program, or a vocational or technical school. Passing a grade 12 board examination leads to the granting of a secondary school completion diploma, which may be used for admission into vocational schools or universities in the country or the world. Most reputable universities in India require students to pass college-administered admissions tests in addition to passing a final secondary school examination for entry into a college or university. School grades are usually not sufficient for college admissions in India.
Most schools in India do not offer subject and scheduling flexibility due to budgeting constraints (for e.g.: most students in India are not allowed to take Chemistry and History in grades 11-12 because they are part of different "streams"). Private candidates (i.e. not studying in a school) are generally not allowed to register for and take board examinations but there are some exceptions such as NIOS.
10th (Matriculation or Secondary) Exam[edit]
Students taking the grade 10 examination usually take six subjects: English, Mathematics, Social Studies, Science, one language, and one optional subject depending on the availability of teachers at different schools. "Elective" or optional subjects often include Computer Applications, Economics, Physical Education, Commerce, and Environmental Science.
12th (Senior Secondary or Higher Secondary) Exam[edit]
Students taking the grade 12 examination usually take four or five subjects with English or the local language being compulsory. Students re-enrolling in most secondary schools after grade 10 have to make the choice of choosing a "core stream" in addition to English or the local language: Science (Mathematics/Biology, Chemistry, and Physics), Commerce (Accounts, Business Studies, and Economics), or Humanities (any three of History, Political Science, Sociology, Psychology, Geography depending on school). Students study Mathematics up to single-variable Calculus in grade 12.
Types of schools[edit]
Government schools[edit]
The majority of students study in government schools where poor and vulnerable students study for free until the age of 14. An Education Ministry data, 65.2% (113 million,) of all school students in 20 states go to government schools (c. 2017).
[43] These include schools runs by the state and local government as well as the centre government. Example of large centre government run school systems are
Kendriya Vidyalaya in urban areas,
Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, for the gifted students,
Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya for girls belonging to vulnerable SC/ST/OBC classes,
Indian Army Public Schools run by the
Indian Army for the children of soldiers.
Kendriya Vidyalaya project, was started for the employees of the central government of India, who are deployed throughout the country. The government started the
Kendriya Vidyalaya project in 1965 to provide uniform education in institutions following the same syllabus at the same pace regardless of the location to which the employee's family has been transferred.
[27]
Government aided private schools[edit]
These are usually charitable trust run schools that receive partial funding from the government. Largest system of aided schools is run by
D.A.V. College Managing Committee.
Private schools (unaided)[edit]
According to current estimate, 29% of Indian children are privately educated.
[7] With more than 50% children enrolling in private schools in urban areas, the balance has already tilted towards private schooling in cities; and, even in rural areas, nearly 20% of the children in 2004-5 were enrolled in private schools.
[44]
According to some research, private schools often provide superior results at a multiple of the unit cost of government schools. The reason being high aims and better vision.
[47][48][49] However, others have suggested that private schools fail to provide education to the poorest families, a selective being only a fifth of the schools and have in the past ignored Court orders for their regulation.
[citation needed]
In their favour, it has been pointed out that private schools cover the entire curriculum and offer extra-curricular activities such as science fairs, general knowledge, sports, music and drama.
[50] The pupil teacher ratios are much better in private schools (1:31 to 1:37 for government schools) and more teachers in private schools are female.
[citation needed] There is some disagreement over which system has better educated teachers. According to the latest DISE survey, the percentage of untrained teachers (para-teachers) is 54.91% in private, compared to 44.88% in government schools and only 2.32% teachers in unaided schools receive in-service training compared to 43.44% for government schools. The competition in the school market is intense, yet most schools make profit.
[50] However, the number of private schools in India is still low - the share of private institutions is 7% (with upper primary being 21% secondary 32% -
source: fortress team research). Even the poorest often go to private schools despite the fact that government schools are free. A study found that 65% school-children in Hyderabad's slums attend private schools.
[49]
National schools[edit]
International schools[edit]
As of January 2015, the International Schools Consultancy (ISC)
[56] listed India as having 410 international schools.
[57] ISC defines an 'international school' in the following terms "ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre-school, primary or secondary students, wholly or partly in English outside an English-speaking country, or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages, offers an English-medium curriculum other than the country’s national curriculum and is international in its orientation."
[57] This definition is used by publications including
The Economist.
[58]
Home-schooling[edit]
Home-schooling in India is
legal, though it is the less explored option, and often debated by educators. The Indian Government's stance on the issue is that parents are free to teach their children at home, if they wish to and have the means. The then HRD Minister Kapil Sibal has stated that despite the RTE Act of 2009, if someone decides not to send his/her children to school, the government would not interfere.
[59]
Higher education[edit]
Students may opt for vocational education or university education.
Vocational education[edit]
India's All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE) reported, in 2013, that there are more than 4,599 vocational institutions that offer degrees, diploma and post-diploma in architecture, engineering, hotel management, infrastructure, pharmacy, technology, town services and others. There were 17.4 lakh students enrolled in these schools.
[60] Total annual intake capacity for technical diplomas and degrees exceeded 34 lakh in 2012.
[citation needed]
According to the University Grants Commission (UGC) total enrolment in Science, Medicine, Agriculture and Engineering crossed 65 lakh in 2010. The number of women choosing engineering has more than doubled since 2001.
[citation needed]
Tertiary education[edit]
After passing the
Higher Secondary Examination (the Standard 12 examination), students may enrol in general degree programmes such as
bachelor's degree (
graduation) in arts, commerce or science, or professional degree programme such as engineering, medicine, pharmacy, and law
graduates.
[61] India's higher education system is the third largest in the world, after
China and the United States.
[62] The main governing body at the tertiary level is the
University Grants Commission (India) (UGC), which enforces its standards, advises the government, and helps co-ordinate between the centre and the state up to Post graduation and
Doctorate (Ph.D).
[63] Accreditation for higher learning is overseen by 12 autonomous institutions established by the
University Grants Commission.
[64]
As of 2012, India has 152
[65] central universities, 316 state universities, and 191 private universities. Other institutions include 33,623
[66] colleges, including 1,800 exclusive women's colleges, functioning under these universities and institutions,
[63] and 12,748 Institutions offering Diploma Courses. The emphasis in the tertiary level of education lies on science and technology.
[67] Indian educational institutions by 2004 consisted of a large number of technology institutes.
[68] Distance learning is also a feature of the Indian higher education system.
[68] The Government has launched
Rashtriya Uchchattar Shiksha Abhiyan to provide strategic funding to State higher and technical institutions. A total of 316 state public universities and 13,024 colleges will be covered under it.
[69]
Besides top rated universities which provide highly competitive world class education to their pupils, India is also home to many universities which have been founded with the sole objective of making easy money. Regulatory authorities like UGC and AICTE have been trying very hard to extirpate the menace of private universities which are running courses without any affiliation or recognition. Indian Government has failed to check on these education shops, which are run by big businessmen & politicians. Many private colleges and universities do not fulfil the required criterion by the Government and central bodies (UGC, AICTE, MCI, BCI etc.) and take students for a ride. For example, many institutions in India continue to run unaccredited courses as there is no legislation strong enough to ensure legal action against them. Quality assurance mechanisms have failed to stop misrepresentations and malpractices in higher education. At the same time regulatory bodies have been accused of corruption, specifically in the case of deemed-universities.
[71] In this context of lack of solid quality assurance mechanism, institutions need to step-up and set higher standards of self-regulation.
[72]
Our university system is, in many parts, in a state of disrepair...In almost half the districts in the country, higher education enrollments are abysmally low, almost two-third of our universities and 90 % of our colleges are rated as below average on quality parameters... I am concerned that in many states university appointments, including that of vice-chancellors, have been politicised and have become subject to caste and communal considerations, there are complaints of favouritism and corruption.
The Government of India is aware of the plight of higher education sector and has been trying to bring reforms, however, 15 bills are still awaiting discussion and approval in the Parliament.
[74] One of the most talked about bill is Foreign Universities Bill, which is supposed to facilitate entry of foreign universities to establish campuses in India. The bill is still under discussion and even if it gets passed, its feasibility and effectiveness is questionable as it misses the context, diversity and segment of international foreign institutions interested in India.
[75] One of the approaches to make internationalisation of Indian higher education effective is to develop a coherent and comprehensive policy which aims at infusing excellence, bringing institutional diversity and aids in capacity building.
[76]
Technical education[edit]
[86] The UGC has inter-university centres at a number of locations throughout India to promote common research, e.g. the Nuclear Science Centre at the
Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi.
[87] Besides there are some British established colleges such as Harcourt Butler Technological Institute situated in Kanpur and King George Medical University situated in Lucknow which are important centre of higher education.
In addition to above institutes, efforts towards the enhancement of technical education are supplemented by a number of recognised Professional Engineering Societies such as:
- Institution of Engineers (India)
- Institution of Civil Engineers (India)
- Institution of Mechanical Engineers (India)
- Institution of Chemical Engineering (India)
- Institution of Electronics and Tele-Communication Engineers (India)
- Indian Institute of Metals
- Institution of Industrial Engineers (India)
- Institute of Town Planners (India)
- Indian Institute of Architects
that conduct Engineering/Technical Examinations at different levels (Degree and diploma) for working professionals desirous of improving their technical qualifications.
The number of graduates coming out of technical colleges increased to over 7 lakh in 2011 from 5.5 lakh in FY 2010.
[88][89] However, according to one study, 75% of technical graduates and more than 85% of general graduates lack the skills needed in India's most demanding and high-growth global industries such as Information Technology.
[90] These high-tech global information technologies companies directly or indirectly employ about 23 lakh people, less than 1% of India's labour pool.
[91] India offers one of the largest pool of technically skilled graduates in the world. Given the sheer numbers of students seeking education in engineering, science and mathematics, India faces daunting challenges in scaling up capacity while maintaining quality.
[92][93]
Open and distance learning[edit]
At the school level,
National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) provides opportunities for continuing education to those who missed completing school education. 14 lakh students are enrolled at the secondary and higher secondary level through open and distance learning.
[citation needed] In 2012 Various state governments also introduced "STATE OPEN SCHOOL" to provide distance education.
[94]
At higher education level,
Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) co-ordinates distance learning. It has a cumulative enrolment of about 15 lakh, serviced through 53 regional centres and 1,400 study centres with 25,000 counselors. The Distance Education Council (DEC), an authority of IGNOU is co-co-ordinating 13 State Open Universities and 119 institutions of correspondence courses in conventional universities. While distance education institutions have expanded at a very rapid rate, but most of these institutions need an up gradation in their standards and performance. There is a large proliferation of courses covered by distance mode without adequate infrastructure, both human and physical. There is a strong need to correct these imbalances.
[95]
Quality[edit]
Literacy[edit]
According to the Census of 2011, "every person above the age of 7 years who can read and write with understanding in any language is said to be literate". According to this criterion, the 2011 survey holds the National Literacy Rate to be 74.04%.
[96] The youth literacy rate, measured within the age group of 15 to 24, is 81.1% (84.4% among males and 74.4% among females),
[97] while 86% of boys and 72% of girls are literate in the 10-19 age group.
[98]
Within the Indian states,
Kerala has the highest literacy rate of 93.91% whereas
Bihar averaged 61.8% literacy.
[96] The 2001 statistics indicated that the total number of 'absolute non-literates' in the country was 304 million.
[96] Gender gap in literacy rate is high, for example in
Rajasthan, the state with the lowest female literacy rate in India,
[99] average female literacy rate is 52.66% and average male literacy rate is 80.51%, making a gender gap of 27.85%.
[100]
Attainment[edit]
As of 2011, enrolment rates are 58% for pre-primary, 93% for primary, 69% for secondary, and 25% for tertiary education.
[101]
Despite the high overall enrolment rate for primary education among rural children of age 10, half could not read at a basic level, over 60% were unable to do division, and half dropped out by the age of 14.
[102]
In 2009, two states in India,
Tamil Nadu and
Himachal Pradesh, participated in the international
PISA exams which is administered once every three years to 15-year-old's. Both states ranked at the bottom of the table, beating out only
Kyrgyzstan in score, and falling 200 points (two standard deviations) below the average for
OECD countries.
[103] While in the immediate aftermath there was a short-lived controversy over the quality of primary education in India, ultimately India decided to not participate in PISA for 2012,
[104] and again not to for 2015.
[105]
While the quality of free, public education is in crisis, a majority of the urban poor have turned to
private schools. In some urban cities, it is estimated as high as two-thirds of all students attend private institutions,
[106] many of which charge a modest US$2 per month.
Public school workforce[edit]
Officially, the pupil to teacher ratio within the public school system for primary education is 35:1.
[107] However, teacher absenteeism in India is exorbitant, with 25% never showing up for work.
[108] The World Bank estimates the cost in salaries alone paid to such teachers who have never attended work is US $2 billion per year.
[109]
A study on teachers by Kremer etc. found out that 25% of private sector teachers and 40% of public sector medical workers were absent during the survey. Among teachers who were paid to teach, absence rates ranged from 14.6% in
Maharashtra to 41.9% in
Jharkhand. Only 1 in nearly 3,000 public school head teachers had ever dismissed a teacher for repeated absence.
[110] The same study found "only about half were teaching, during unannounced visits to a nationally representative sample of government primary schools in India."
[110]
Higher education[edit]
As per Report of the Higher education in India, Issues Related to Expansion, Inclusiveness, Quality and Finance,
[111] the access to higher education measured in term of gross enrolment ratio increased from 0.7% in 1950/51 to 1.4% in 1960–61. By 2006/7 the GER increased to about 11%. Notably, by 2012, it had crossed 20% (as mentioned in an earlier section).
According to a survey by All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) released by the ministry of human resource development, Tamil Nadu which has the highest Gross Enrollment Ratio (GER) in higher education in the country has registered an increase of 2.6% to take GER to 46.9 per cent in 2016-17.
[112]
Vocational education[edit]
An optimistic estimate from 2008 was that only one in five job-seekers in India ever had any sort of
vocational training.
[113] However it's expected to grow as the CBSE has brought changes in its education system which emphasises inclusion of certain number and types of vocational subjects in classes 9th and 11th. Although it's not mandatory for schools to go for it but a good number of schools have voluntarily accepted the suggestion and incorporated the change in their curriculum.
Facilities[edit]
As per 2016 Annual Survey of Education Report (ASER), 3.5% schools in India had no toilet facility while only 68.7% schools had usable toilet facility. 75.5% of the schools surveyed had library in 2016, a decrease from 78.1% in 2014. Percentage of schools with separate girls toilet have increased from 32.9% in 2010 to 61.9%in 2016.
[114] 74.1% schools had drinking water facility and 64.5% of the schools had playground.
[115]
Curriculum issues[edit]
Modern education in India is often criticised for being based on
rote learning rather than problem solving.
New Indian Express says that Indian Education system seems to be producing zombies since in most of the schools students seemed to be spending majority of their time in preparing for competitive exams rather than learning or playing.
[116] BusinessWeek criticises the Indian curriculum, saying it revolves around rote learning
[117] and
ExpressIndia suggests that students are focused on cramming.
[118] Preschool for Child Rights states that almost 99% of pre-schools do not have any curriculum at all.
[119] Also creativity is not encouraged or is considered as a form of entertainment in most institutions.
[120]
Rural education[edit]
A primary school in a village in Madhya Pradesh
Indian school children in Mizoram
Following independence, India viewed education as an effective tool for bringing social change through community development.
[121] The administrative control was effectively initiated in the 1950s, when, in 1952, the government grouped villages under a Community Development Block—an authority under national programme which could control education in up to 100 villages.
[121] A Block Development Officer oversaw a geographical area of 150 square miles (390 km
2) which could contain a population of as many as 70,000 people.
[121]
Setty and Ross elaborate on the role of such programmes, themselves divided further into individual-based, community based, or the Individual-cum-community-based, in which microscopic levels of development are overseen at village level by an appointed worker:
The community development programmes comprise agriculture, animal husbandry, cooperation, rural industries, rural engineering (consisting of minor irrigation, roads, buildings), health and sanitation including family welfare, family planning, women welfare, child care and nutrition, education including adult education, social education and literacy, youth welfare and community organisation. In each of these areas of development there are several programmes, schemes and activities which are additive, expanding and tapering off covering the total community, some segments, or specific target populations such as small and marginal farmers, artisans, women and in general people below the poverty line.
[121]
Despite some setbacks the rural education programmes continued throughout the 1950s, with support from private institutions.
[122] A sizeable network of rural education had been established by the time the
Gandhigram Rural Institute was established and 5,200 Community Development Blocks were established in India.
[123] Nursery schools, elementary schools, secondary school, and schools for adult education for women were set up.
[123]
The government continued to view rural education as an agenda that could be relatively free from bureaucratic backlog and general stagnation.
[123] However, in some cases lack of financing balanced the gains made by rural education institutes of India.
[124] Some ideas failed to find acceptability among India's poor and investments made by the government sometimes yielded little results.
[124] Today, government rural schools remain poorly funded and understaffed. Several foundations, such as the
Rural Development Foundation (Hyderabad), actively build high-quality rural schools, but the number of students served is small.
Education in rural India is valued differently from in an urban setting, with lower rates of completion. An imbalanced
sex ratio exists within schools with 18% of males earning a high school diploma compared with only 10% of females. The estimated number of children who have never attended school in India is near 100 million which reflects the low completion levels.
[citation needed] This is the largest concentration in the world of youth who haven't enrolled in school.
[125][126][127][128]
Women's education[edit]
London Mission Bengali Girls' School, Calcutta (
LMS, 1869, p.12)
[129]
Maharanis College for Women, Mysore, India.
Women have a much lower literacy rate than men. Far fewer girls are enrolled in the schools, and many of them drop out.
[130] In the patriarchal setting of the Indian family, girls have lower status and fewer privileges than boys.
[131] Conservative cultural attitudes prevent some girls from attending school.
[132] Furthermore, educated high class women are less likely than uneducated low class women to enter the workforce They opt to stay at home due to the traditional, cultural and religious norms.
[133]
The number of literate women among the female population of India was between 2–6% from the British Raj onwards to the formation of the Republic of India in 1947.
[134] Concerted efforts led to improvement from 15.3% in 1961 to 28.5% in 1981.
[134] By 2001 literacy for women had exceeded 50% of the overall female population, though these statistics were still very low compared to world standards and even male literacy within India.
[135] Recently the Indian government has launched
Saakshar Bharat Mission for Female Literacy. This mission aims to bring down female illiteracy by half of its present level.
Sita Anantha Raman outlines the progress of women's education in India:
Since 1947 the Indian government has tried to provide incentives for girls' school attendance through programmes for midday meals, free books, and uniforms. This welfare thrust raised primary enrollment between 1951 and 1981. In 1986 the National Policy on Education decided to restructure education in tune with the social framework of each state, and with larger national goals. It emphasised that education was necessary for democracy, and central to the improvement of women's condition. The new policy aimed at social change through revised texts, curricula, increased funding for schools, expansion in the numbers of schools, and policy improvements. Emphasis was placed on expanding girls' occupational centres and primary education; secondary and higher education; and rural and urban institutions. The report tried to connect problems like low school attendance with poverty, and the dependence on girls for housework and sibling day care. The National Literacy Mission also worked through female tutors in villages. Although the minimum marriage age is now eighteen for girls, many continue to be married much earlier. Therefore, at the secondary level, female drop-out rates are high.
[136]
Sita Anantha Raman also mentions that while the educated Indian women workforce maintains professionalism, the men outnumber them in most fields and, in some cases, receive higher income for the same positions.
[136]
The education of women in India plays a significant role in improving livings standards in the country
[citation needed]. A higher female literacy rate improves the quality of life both at home and outside the home, by encouraging and promoting education of children, especially female children, and in reducing the infant mortality rate
[citation needed]. Several studies have shown that a lower level of women literacy rates results in higher levels of fertility and infant mortality, poorer nutrition, lower earning potential and the lack of an ability to make decisions within a household.
[137][citation needed] Women's lower educational levels is also shown to adversely affect the health and living conditions of children
[citation needed]. A survey that was conducted in India showed results which support the fact that infant mortality rate was inversely related to female literacy rate and educational level.
[138] The survey also suggests a correlation between education and economic growth.
In India, there is a large disparity between female literacy rates in different states.
[139] State of Kerala has the highest female literacy rate of 91.98% while
Rajasthan has the lowest female literacy rate of 52.66.
[140][141] This correlates to the health levels of states, Kerala has average life expectancy at birth of 74.9 while Rajasthan's average life expectancy at birth is 67.7 years.
[142]
In India, higher education is defined as the education of an age group between 18 and 24, and is largely funded by the government. Despite women making up 24–50% of higher education enrolment, there is still a gender imbalance within higher education. Only one third of science students and 7% of engineering students, are women. In comparison, however, over half the students studying Education are women.
[143]
Accreditation[edit]
In January 2010, the Government of India decided to withdraw
Deemed university status from as many as 44 institutions. The Government claimed in its affidavit that academic considerations were not being kept in mind by the management of these institutions and that "they were being run as family fiefdoms".
[144]
In February 2009, the University Grant Commission found 39 fake institutions operating in India.
[145]
Employer training[edit]
Only 10% of manufacturers in India offer in-service training to their employees, compared with over 90% in China.
[146]
Teacher Careers[edit]
In the Indian education system, a teacher's success is loosely defined. It is either based on a student's success or based on the years of teaching experience, both of which do not necessarily correlate to a teacher's skill set or competencies. The management of an institution could thereby be forced to promote teachers based on the grade level they teach or their seniority, both of which are often not an indicator of a good teacher.
[147] This means that either a primary school teacher is promoted to a higher grade, or a teacher is promoted to take up other roles within the institution such as Head of Department, coordinator, Vice Principal or Principal. However, the skills and competencies that are required for each of them vary and a great teacher may not be a great manager. Since teachers do not see their own growth and success in their own hands, they often do not take up any professional development. Thus, there is a need to identify a framework to help a teacher chart a career path based on his/her own competency and help him/her understand his/her own development.
[148]
Coaching[edit]
Increased competition to get admission in reputed colleges has given rise to private coaching institutes in India. They prepare students for engineering, medical, MBA, SAT, GRE, banking jobs' entrance tests. There are also coaching institutes that teach subjects like English for employment in India and abroad.
Private coaching institutes are of two types: offline coaching and online coaching. There are many online coaching centres and apps available in the market and their usage is growing, especially in tier 2 metro cities.
[149]
A 2013 survey by
ASSOCHAM predicted the size of private coaching industry to grow to $40 billion, or Rs 2.39 lakh crore by 2015.
[150]
Kota in Rajasthan is the called the capital of engineering and medical colleges' entrance's coaching sector.
[150] In Punjab, English language is taught by coaching institutes for foreign visa aspirants to get the right IELTS score for their applications.
[151] Mukherjee Nagar and
Old Rajinder Nagar in Delhi are considered the hub for UPSC
Civil Services Examination coaching.
[152] To compete in these exams, Center and some state governments also provide free coaching to students, especially to students from minority communities.
[153]
Coaching classes have been blamed for the neglect of school education by students.
[154] Educationists such as
Anandakrishnan have criticised the increasing importance being given to coaching classes as they put students under mental stress and the coaching fees add to the financial burden on parents. These educationists opine that if a good schooling system is put in place, children should not need additional coaching to take any competitive examination.
[155]
Corruption in education[edit]
Corruption in Indian education system has been eroding the quality of education and has been creating long-term negative consequences for the society. Educational corruption in India is considered as one of the major contributors to domestic black money.
[156]
Grade inflation[edit]
Grade inflation has become an issue in Indian secondary education. In
CBSE, a 95 percent aggregate is 21 times as prevalent today as it was in 2004, and a 90 percent close to nine times as prevalent. In the
ISC Board, a 95 percent is almost twice as prevalent today as it was in 2012. CBSE called a meeting of all 40 school boards early in 2017 to urge them to discontinue “artificial spiking of marks”. CBSE decided to lead by example and promised not to inflate its results. But although the 2017 results have seen a small correction, the board has clearly not discarded the practice completely. Almost 6.5 percent of mathematics examinees in 2017 scored 95 or more — 10 times higher than in 2004 — and almost 6 percent of physics examinees scored 95 or more, 35 times more than in 2004.
[157][158]
Initiatives[edit]
Central government involvement[edit]
Elementary School in Chittoor. This school is part of the 'Paathshaala' project. The school currently educates 70 students.
Following India's independence, a number of rules were formulated for the backward Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes of India. In 1960, a list identifying 405 Scheduled Castes and 225 Scheduled Tribes was published by the central government.
[159] An amendment was made to the list in 1975, which identified 841 Scheduled Castes and 510 Scheduled Tribes.
[159] The total percentage of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes combined was found to be 22.5% with the Scheduled Castes accounting for 17% and the Scheduled Tribes accounting for the remaining 7.5%.
[159] Following the report many Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes increasingly referred to themselves as
Dalit, a
Marathi language terminology used by
B R Ambedkar which literally means "oppressed".
[159]
The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are provided for in many of India's educational programmes.
[160] Special reservations are also provided for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in India, e.g. a reservation of 15% in
Kendriya Vidyalaya for Scheduled Castes and another reservation of 7.5% in
Kendriya Vidyalaya for Scheduled Tribes.
[160] Similar reservations are held by the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in many schemes and educational facilities in India.
[160] The remote and far-flung regions of North-East India are provided for under the Non-Lapsible Central pool of Resources (NLCPR) since 1998–1999.
[161] The NLCPR aims to provide funds for infrastructure development in these remote areas.
[161]
Women from remote, underdeveloped areas or from weaker social groups in
Andhra Pradesh,
Assam,
Bihar,
Jharkhand,
Karnataka,
Kerala,
Gujarat,
Uttar Pradesh, and
Uttarakhand, fall under the
Mahila Samakhya Scheme, initiated in 1989.
[162] Apart from provisions for education this programme also aims to raise awareness by holding meetings and seminars at rural levels.
[162] The government allowed
₹34 crore (US$4.8 million) during 2007–08 to carry out this scheme over 83 districts including more than 21,000 villages.
[162]
Currently there are 68
Bal Bhavans and 10
Bal Kendra affiliated to the
National Bal Bhavan.
[163] The scheme involves educational and social activities and recognising children with a marked talent for a particular educational stream.
[163] A number of programmes and activities are held under this scheme, which also involves cultural exchanges and participation in several international forums.
[163]
India's minorities, especially the ones considered 'educationally backward' by the government, are provided for in the 1992 amendment of the Indian National Policy on Education (NPE).
[164] The government initiated the Scheme of Area Intensive Programme for Educationally Backward Minorities and Scheme of Financial Assistance or Modernisation of Madarsa Education as part of its revised Programme of Action (1992).
[164] Both these schemes were started nationwide by 1994.
[164] In 2004 the Indian parliament passed an act which enabled minority education establishments to seek university affiliations if they passed the required norms.
[164]
Ministry of Human Resource and Development, Government of India in collaboration with Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology has also launched a National Scholarship Portal to provide students of India access to National and State Level Scholarships provided by various government authorities. As a Mission Mode Project under the National e-Governance Plan (NeGP), the online service enlists more than 50 scholarship programs every year including the renowned Ministry of Minority Affairs (MOMA) Scholarships for Post-Matric and Pre-Matric studies. In the academic year 2017-18 the MOMA Scholarships facilitated the studies of 116,452 students with scholarships worth ₹316.57 crores.
[165] The National Scholarship continues to enlist scholarship programs managed by AICTE (All India Council for Technical Education), UGC (University Grants Commission) and respective state governments.
Legislative framework[edit]
The State shall endeavour to provide, within a period of ten years from the commencement of this Constitution, for free and compulsory education for all children until they complete the age of fourteen years.
[166]
This article was a
directive principle of state policy within India, effectively meaning that it was within a set of rules that were meant to be followed in spirit and the government could not be held to court if the actual letter was not followed.
[167] However, the enforcement of this directive principle became a matter of debate since this principle held obvious emotive and practical value, and was legally the only directive principle within the Indian constitution to have a time limit.
[167]
Following initiatives by the
Supreme Court of India during the 1990s the 93rd amendment bill suggested three separate amendments to the Indian constitution:
[168]
The constitution of India was amended to include a new article, 21A, which read:
The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years in a such manner as the State may, by law, determine.
[169]
Article 45 was proposed to be substituted by the article which read:
Provision for early childhood care and education to children below the age of six years: The State shall endeavour to provide early childhood care and education for all children until they complete the age of sixteen years.
[169]
Another article, 51A, was to additionally have the clause:
...a parent or guardian [shall] provide opportunities for education to his child or, as the case may be, [a] ward between the age of six to fourteen years.
[169]
The bill was passed unanimously in the
Lok Sabha, the lower house of the
Indian parliament, on 28 November 2001.
[170] It was later passed by the upper house—the
Rajya Sabha—on 14 May 2002.
[170] After being signed by the
President of India the Indian constitution was amended formally for the eighty sixth time and the bill came into effect.
[170] Since then those between the age of 6–14 have a
fundamental right to education.
[171]
Article 46 of the Constitution of India holds that:
The State shall promote, with special care, the education and economic interests of the weaker sections of the people, and in particular of the
Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes, and shall protect them from social injustice and all forms of social exploitation'.
[96]
Other provisions for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes can be found in Articles 330, 332, 335, 338–342.
[96] Both the 5th and the 6th Schedules of the Constitution also make special provisions for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
[96]
Central Government expenditure on education[edit]
As a part of the tenth
Five-year Plan (2002–2007), the central government of India outlined an expenditure of 65.6% of its total education budget of
₹43,800 crore (US$6.1 billion) i.e.
₹28,800 crore (US$4.0 billion) on elementary education; 9.9% i.e.
₹4,325 crore (US$610 million) on secondary education; 2.9% i.e.
₹1,250 crore (US$180 million) on adult education; 9.5% i.e.
₹4,176.5 crore (US$590 million) on higher education; 10.7% i.e.
₹4,700 crore (US$660 million) on technical education; and the remaining 1.4% i.e.
₹623.5 crore (US$87 million) on miscellaneous education schemes.
[172]
During the Financial Year 2011-12, the Central Government of India has allocated
₹ 38,957 crore for the Department of School Education and Literacy which is the main department dealing with primary education in India. Within this allocation, major share of
₹ 21,000 crore, is for the flagship programme 'Sarva Siksha Abhiyan'. However, budgetary allocation of
₹ 210,000 million is considered very low in view of the officially appointed Anil Bordia Committee recommendation of
₹ 35,659 crore for the year 2011-12. This higher allocation was required to implement the recent legislation 'Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009. In recent times, several major announcements were made for developing the poor state of affairs in education sector in India, the most notable ones being the National Common Minimum Programme (NCMP) of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government. The announcements are; (a) To progressively increase expenditure on education to around 6% of GDP. (b) To support this increase in expenditure on education, and to increase the quality of education, there would be an imposition of an education cess over all central government taxes. (c) To ensure that no one is denied of education due to economic backwardness and poverty. (d) To make right to education a fundamental right for all children in the age group 6–14 years. (e) To universalise education through its flagship programmes such as
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and
Midday Meal Scheme
However, even after five years of implementation of NCMP, not much progress has been seen on this front. Although the country targeted towards devoting 6% share of the GDP towards the educational sector, the performance has definitely fallen short of expectations. Expenditure on education has steadily risen from 0.64% of GDP in 1951–52 to 2.31% in 1970–71 and thereafter reached the peak of 4.26% in 2000–01. However, it declined to 3.49% in 2004–05. There is a definite need to step-up again. As a proportion of total government expenditure, it has declined from around 11.1% in 2000–2001 to around 9.98% during UPA rule, even though ideally it should be around 20% of the total budget. A policy brief issued by [Network for Social Accountability (NSA)]
[173] titled "[NSA Response to Education Sector Interventions in Union Budget: UPA Rule and the Education Sector]
[174] " provides significant revelation to this fact. Due to a declining priority of education in the public policy paradigm in India, there has been an exponential growth in the private expenditure on education also. [As per the available information, the private out of pocket expenditure by the working class population for the education of their children in India has increased by around 1150 percent or around 12.5 times over the last decade].
[175]
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