New education policy
too good to be real, say teachers
According to the teachers, the policy states ‘teachers will not be allowed to participate in any non-teaching activities.
Mumbai: Latest educational changes announced in the
Union budget 2019-20 have irked the teaching fraternity. Teachers claim the new
education policy is too good to be real, as the measures are not practical, far
from reality and difficult to implement.
According to
the teachers, the policy states ‘teachers will not be allowed to participate in
any non-teaching activities (such as cooking mid-day meals or participating in
vaccination campaigns) during the school hours that could affect their teaching
capacities.
Sujita
Menon, a teacher, said, “We don’t have sufficient staff. We are compelled to
help other staff for extra-curricular non-academic activities. The government
is not hiring sufficient staff. We have to help each other in basic
activities.”
In addition,
the teachers revealed the Bachelor of Education (BEd) course is not considered
as the basic requirement for jobs. Jitendra Tadvi, another teacher, said, “The
policy states the four-year BEd will be a predominant way to become a teacher.
But, this
course is not considered during the recruitment. Teachers are hired on a
temporary basis without a thorough background check of their educational
qualification.”
Currently,
the curriculum follows a framework of 5-3-3-4 design -- five years of
foundational stage (three years of pre-primary and class 1 and 2), three years
of preparatory stage (Class 3 to 5), three years of middle stage (class 6 to
8), and four years of secondary stage (class 9 to 12).
School
authorities claim they were not involved while drafting the policy, but were
informed when it was ready. Francis Joseph, director of School Leaders Network
Foundation, said,
“The
measures in the policy are difficult to implement. These must benefit children,
teachers and society at large, and the curriculum should be based on the
developmental and learning abilities of the students.”
The students
claim there is no scope for research at the school level. Viraj Salunkhe, a
student, said, “There is no scope for research in the state-run schools.
There are no
opportunities to excel at the national or global level. With the availability
of the internet and smartphones, we read and learn much more on own than what
we are taught in our school.”
Source
| Free Press | 9th July 2019
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