Sujata’s Dream

Entries categorized as ‘Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India’

Teacher qualifications and training in India

October 31, 2007 · 2 Comments

img_1285big.jpgAs we take a step back and eye the state of education at the Tathagat School and the impact of our ongoing support, one fundamental issue that rises to the surface as an area of concern is the matter of teacher qualification and training. Presently, none of the adults teaching at the school have formal teacher training and certification. This obviously impacts the quality of education they are able to provide.

While this may seem a gross violation and an unacceptable situation, my research found that it is quite common in India for schools that are not funded by the government to resort to hiring uncertified teachers, often reducing their hiring requirements to the completion of 10-12 years of school. This is both for lack of funds to pay certified teachers, and, because they essentially can get away with it, due to lack of standardized regulation and enforcement means.

Clearly, there is a chronic problem here. It demonstrates one of the ways in which the poor and disadvantaged live outside the system of government services, protection, and concern, and one of the reasons why the cycle of poverty is perpetuated.

Background
Certification for teaching at the elementary stage in India is bestowed by the States’ Departments of Education. The coursework required to attain this certificate takes roughly two years to complete, consisting of varying curricula determined by the individual states. The resulting certificate is not a B.A. equivalent, but a diploma that may be titled BTC (Basic Teaching Certificate), D.Ed. (Diploma in Education), and TTC (Teachers’ Training Certificate), depending on the state. A B.Ed. degree is required to teach high school and is provided by accredited universities.

Until 1995, the standards, curriculum and required examinations for teacher education and certification in India were determined by each state and each university individually, and therefore varied widely. In 1995, The National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) was set up by India’s parliament and given a broad mandate with legal powers to determine and enforce standards of teacher education throughout the country.

However, with 900,000 schools and 4.6 Million teachers in the country (according to an Educational Survey conducted in 2003), this is a daunting task. The need to transition jurisdiction of these programs away from individual states and institutions and onto the central government further complicates and slows down the process. The NCTE decided to divide its enforcement into two stages, first working on enforcing standards in terms of physical infrastructure, and later addressing the enforcement of qualitative standards. According to Professor Maheshwari, Chairman of the NCTE, although some order could be restored in the teacher education system, it remains a continuous battle for the NCTE. The challenge of producing competent teachers, committed to providing quality education, will continue to be a daunting task for sometime.

The current reality
Currently, required qualifications for teachers still vary widely among states, and between government funded and non-government-funded schools. While government and state run schools recruit only certified teachers, it is common for NGOs to hire teachers without any certification or training.

In Bihar, the required certification for teaching elementary school is the Elementary Teacher Training Education certificate, or, ETT Education. It is a two-year program, and is offered at a Teacher Training College in Gaya (half hour drive by Rikshaw from Bodhgaya). Details of what the program entails are here: www.ttcgaya.org/index.php?page=ett. Completion of 12 years of school with at least 45% on tests is the prerequisite for admission.

This Teacher Training College was established in 2004 in response to the dire and increasing need in the area for qualified teachers. According to the college’s website, the whole region, including Bihar and several neighboring states, is experiencing a severe shortage in qualified teachers, while at the same time experiencing pressure from the NCTE to enforce qualification in all schools. For more details on this see: www.ttcgaya.org/index.php?page=au

img_1411.jpgConsidering the impact of the above on the Tathagat School (and other similarly poor, rural schools), it seems that 1. It is going to be hard to find qualified teachers, as too few of them exist in the whole area; 2. Those who are qualified or become qualified in the near future are going to be in such demand that they will be in a position to require higher salaries, making it very difficult if not impossible for poor schools to retain them. 3. The good news may be that, given this scenario, becoming a certified teacher is shaping up to be a highly desireable position to strive for, in terms of readily finding employment and in terms of salary level. Hopefully, some of the children may be inspired to work toward it as a way to a brighter future.

With the backdrop of these serious challenges, we nonetheless continue to explore ways in which to improve the quality of education provided to the children of Bakrour and Ganga Bigha villages through the Tathagat School. This includes networking with other area schools and individuals to try to identify creative ways to provide teacher training, future fundraising on this blog for certified teacher salaries, and exploring new avenues for improving the children’s educational experience. Your thoughts, advice and suggestions are always welcome and greatly appreciated.

For more on the history of the educational system in India and the mandate of the NCTE, look here: www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/2686/teacher-education-certification.htm

Categories: Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Updates about the School

Poor but defiant, thousands march on Delhi to fight for their land rights

October 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

gd5094751an-indian-landless-fa-6865.jpg The Indian government is obsessed with economic growth. In its pursuit it provides financial incentives and legal loopholes and advantages to industry and corporations, whose growth increasingly costs peasants their lands, their livelihood and their health. Many of the poorest and most vulnerable have had their meager land taken away from them, or the water on which their fields depend diverted away, in the name of development. Increasingly, these attempts of land takeover result in violence. gd5094415indian-landless-farme-6101.jpg

Some 25,000 peasants and landless laborers, men, women and children, who have been marching for the past three weeks about 200 miles, arrived today at the Indian Parliament in New Delhi, to fight for their land rights. A New York Times article today describes the march and the marchers’ goals:
www.nytimes.com/2007/10/29/world/asia/28cnd-india.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

The British Guardian newspaper had a more detailed and less watered down article looking both at the plight of Indian peasants and at the global political movement of peasants and indigenous people, in Africa and Latin America as well as in India, which is rising now to demand land rights, as accelerated industrialization worldwide robs millions of their livelihoods, health and ways of life. www.guardian.co.uk/india/story/0,,2198382,00.html

Categories: Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Village Life

Recommended Movie: Outsourced

October 23, 2007 · 1 Comment

If you ever wondered what things really look like and what you might expect to encounter when visiting India for the first time, you can get a few hints by checking out Outsourced. Outsourced is a great new cross-cultural comedy about a Seattle-based call center manager whose job and whole department get outsourced to India. He is sent to India to train his replacement… I was quite impressed with the sensitivity and insight with which this movie was made. It provides a good opportunity to take a peak into Indian culture and way of life, with its sharp contrasts, harsh poverty, different ways of relating, warm hospitality, and more. Not really a comedy, it is a light movie but one with real substance, and one that makes you think. It frames some of the brow-raising idiosyncrasies in both cultures, and showcases the challenges of cross-cultural interaction, and the learning opportunities inherent in such interaction, for both sides. Warmly recommended.

According to the movie’s website, the movie is not being given a fare chance in U.S. theaters because it does not feature big name actors. So if you want to see it you better hurry, or otherwise wait for the DVD release.

Link to a review from the New York Times:
http://movies.nytimes.com/2007/09/28/movies/28outs.html

Categories: Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Village Life

Hope in a Hundred Dollar Laptop

September 6, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Nicholas NegroponteRecently, the CBS television newsmagazine 60 Minutes ran a story featuring the work that Nicholas Negroponte is doing with his organization One Laptop per Child. Their mission is to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment and express themselves using an educational computer created for use in developing countries at a cost of $100.

In a talk he gave at the TED seminars, Negroponte outlined the principles that drive his work:

  • Children are our most precious resource.
  • The solution to peace, the environment and poverty is education.
  • Teaching is one way to learn, but not the only way.

In a demonstration of his own commitment to these principles, he has recently stepped down from his chairmanship of the prestigious MIT Media Lab to devote the rest of his life to this work.

$100 LaptopThe OLPC (One Laptop per Child) laptop is ruggedized for use in rural environments, has built in Wi-Fi capabilities and is designed from the ground up for use by children. You can review the mission, history of the project and progress to date, as well as all the details about the computer on the OLPC website. One interesting aspect of the laptop is that it doubles as an e-book reader. This is important since in many developing countries, it is difficult and expensive to ship textbooks. In a recent development, it was announced that OLPC is teaming up with microchip manufacturing powerhouse Intel. This can offer manufacturing, sales and distribution capabilities that will truly allow the project to achieve its global dreams.

cell phone ladies in BhangladeshTechnology has a way of permeating every corner of our lives. Perhaps this is one use of technology that will spur the growth of education in remote areas. The 60 Minutes piece pointed out that the laptops are often used by all members of the child’s family and inspire the parents to keep their children in school. The presence of technology could dramatically alter and improve village life, just as when Muhammad Yunus introduced cells phones into rural areas of Bhangladesh.

Projects like these inspire our current efforts and provide a potential vision of next steps for the Tathagat school. It is conceivable that someday, the children of Bodhgaya will be using such technology as a regular part of their learning.

Categories: Community of Supporters · Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Village Life

Coping with the Rains

July 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

In a recent report from Sanjay, the school and the students are faring relatively well in this challenging time of the Monsoons. Attendance is down, as the excess water in the fields ushers in “paddy season”, (rice planting?), the busiest season for farmers. This means that ALL hands in the family are needed either in the fields or in watching over young ones, so many families cannot afford to spare their kids from the work load. It is the work in the fields at this time that will determine the amount of food available later in the year.

The rainy season with its floods and sewer back ups often brings with it higher incidents of water borne disease. It is part of the mixed blessing of the Monsoons. Also from Sanjay’s email:

“…life is [a] little difficult in [the] village during rainy season but people are habituated . We have not heard [of] any diarhea cases and one day we have called a doctor and made all children checked up. Of course some children are affected with seasonal fever but they got medicine…”

We cross our fingers that those who are ill will receive the care they need and heal fully, and that the rest will manage to stay well throughout the rainy season.

This brings to mind another dire need in the village — access to health care. In our visit there in January we learned that a basic visit to the doctor costs about 50Rs (about $1.00), which is about equivalent to a full day’s wages for most people in the village (any medicine would be additional cost), and more than they can afford to pay without sacrificing some of the already meager food for the day. As we provide access to basic education for the children, we are improving their chances of earning higher incomes as adults. This, coupled with support from caring people like you, could make access to medical care possible for the people of Bakrour and Ganga Bigha villages. You can help make this happen by making a donation toward the building and operations of the School. Please join us.

Categories: Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Updates about the School · Village Life

Volunteering at the Tathagat School

July 29, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Hi all,

We found out recently that a young American student has been doing a service project teaching English at our school! What a great experience this must be. The Trust members and the children are very excited and grateful to have him there, and extend a very warm welcome to anyone who would like to come at any time to volunteer at the school and experience the warm and peaceful atmosphere of the village and nearby Bodhgaya. Think about it… This could be a great grounding end of a longer trip or pilgrimage, a personal learning experience, and a profound and rewarding service experience and encounter with another culture. If this sounds interesting and you would like more information, or to discuss possibilities and opportunities in volunteering at the Tathagat School, please contact us. We would be glad to help you with arrangements, information and recommendations.

Categories: Ongoing Challenges and Opportunities in India · Updates about the School