Saturday, March 21, 2015

Be the change you want to see –CBSE board a living example of MK Gandhi’s advice .

With change of Government comes change in education thinking. Two successive Governments tinkered with the lives of students. So who gains ?

The UPA Government decided to do away  with  class X  Board Exams for CBSE students  in 2012.  Students studying  in this stream ,woke up to find out that  post class X , the number of seats available  to pursue subjects and streams of their choice were not available . Intentionally , some schools were indulging in weeding out average students and creating  opportunities for bright students from other boards  who aspired to pursue engineering courses in future.  This was attractive for bright students from other boards, as the Joint Entrance Examination for IIT’s or other engineering colleges  is  mapped to CBSE syllabus.  The School could brag and market it’s academic performance to gullible parents  and earn  higher tuition  fees  by doing nothing extra and students had a syllabus closer to their success requirement.


The  CBSE students who opted out of CBSE stream, post class X had to overcome hurdles such as marks and grade parity with other boards , domicile status  and  all of this added to a students nightmare for getting admission in a Junior college of choice, just to complete high school. Of course each of these students and their parents had to pay a price to seek  back channel favours for admission.

In the recent past, there has been a rethink in this and the system is likely to roll back to earlier system of conducting  board exams for class X and Class XII.  So this is likely strategic change once more, but how has all of this worked on ground so far ?

The adequacy of delivery platform

Teaching

The syllabus by design had  appraisal system  based on formative and summative  evaluation system, with weightage built in. The formative system was based on classroom interaction, some quizzes, project work, periodic assessment  while normative system was examination based on syllabus completion over a term. Much of the formative evaluation assumed teachers skills and randomness of assessment . Biased grading became a reality. Students started taking private tuitions – sometimes from their underpaid subject teachers at school , who saw additional earning opportunity for extra  tax free cash. 

Syllabus change

The syllabus changed it’s pattern. Some higher order thinking skills were built in each subject. Most teachers follow broadcast lecture based methodology  - read aloud, preach or write on the blackboard. Class interaction is limited to confirmatory questions. So how was higher order thinking going to be triggered when instruction methodology is on paper only and class teachers are ill equipped in these skills ? So here was one more business opportunity – emergence of Publishing industry that published model questions and answers guide books.

The chaotic Class XII Board examination 2015

The CBSE XII examinations this year is mired with controversy.  Newspapers have carried reports that this year the exams were held with a difference. Most  question papers were difficult , lengthy and pattern shift. More of higher order thinking questions . As a system, most of the students have prepared based on pattern of past 10 years examinations. All of them have been caught with a shock and surprise. Shock because of their inadequate performance and surprise because of sudden change. Even the board website has indicative question papers  based on past pattern.  Are the teachers equipped to  correct these answers  with lateral thoughts and  unscripted answers. What happens to the score parity issue for low scoring board performance overall ?  A class CBSE girl school  student committed suicide in apprehension of a bleak future. Many students are on the edge. Why does change get initiated without systemic execution  in ground ? So the students lose once more

Now a new direction is brewing.

With the new Government , lots of thoughts about making Sanskrit a preferred language and underplaying foreign languages  is doing the rounds. As it stands , the principal vote bank of the ruling largest party is Hindi heartland with Hindu heart, saffronisation  of  CBSE is a real possibility. That is future and is definitely visible. Such contrarian view on education has potential to send students in a vortex of doom.

Results on Ground

  • Mass copying during exams . An eco system has got developed in which copying to clear exams is the rule. Even the lawmakers see the futility in changing this.
  • No Indian university in Top 200 listing.
  • More than 80% of Indian graduates are not employable after they pass colleges. This number has not changed since the last 10 years.
  • Education Industry – of private tuitions, prepatory coaching classes, online tutors, is valued at more than Rs 600000 crores.  So you know, who is gaining at whose cost.
  • Most private education institutions  operate under minority trusts or not for profit trusts. Majority  of not for profit trusts have leading politicians and their family members as trustees.

How is this being viewed by others

Singaporean Thomas Ong, a director at a local private equity firm, recently got invited as a guest lecturer at a private college in Jaipur, India. "I had heard stories about India's young people with 'excellent academic and English speaking skills' but what I encountered was the complete opposite," he said.Not one student in a class of 100 has ever heard of Bill Gates or Warren Buffet. Most students could not understand, let alone speak fluent English. "The only question they had at the end the lecture was how to find a job at home or abroad," Ong said.


Frequent changes , reluctance to  build systemic education, and high political interference, senile and regressive educationists are leading India to a doom  and a visible demographic Tsunami of unemployed youth. In a sense, this is paradoxically in line with Gandhi’s thinking of minimal living in rural environment.