[lg policy] Social Scientist issue on education in India

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at GMAIL.COM
Tue Dec 7 15:43:46 UTC 2010


Social Scientist issue on education in India

The current issue of Social Scientist (Sep-Dec 2010; vol. 38, no.
9-12) has some excellent articles on the current state and future of
school and higher education in India. Together, these essays
constitute a powerful critique of the recent and forthcoming education
"reforms" in the country.
As Prabhat Patnaik argues in the Editorial: "education is being
transformed into a commodity, like automobiles or washing machines,
that will be produced by capitalists for profit and bought by those
who can afford it."

If these analyses (see Contents below) are accurate - the arguments
are certainly cogent and forceful - then we as a society are headed
for some very bad times indeed. On the subject of language, Anil
Sadgopal (whom we've met before in this blog), in his thorough-going
critique of the Right to Education Act (RTE), considers "The question
of mother-tongue and multi-linguality":

"The knee-jerk policy response assumes that learning of 'good' English
is best achieved through English medium schools, starting from nursery
or kindergarten stage upwards to higher education.... This policy
discourse also ignores the global research that reinforces the
powerful pedagogic role played by the mother tongue as part of the
multi-linguality (this may include English too) of the majority of the
children in plural societies like ours in acquiring subject knowledge
as well as learning languages other than one's mother tongue....

"The consequence of this misconception and lack of a sound policy is
the widespread phenomenon of a rapid attrition of the capacity to
articulate one's thoughts or ideas. The vast majority of the Indian
children grow up in the prevailing multi-layered school system without
acquiring the capacity to learn and articulate in either the state
language or English and, in the process, losing the capacity to do so
in one's mother tongue as well."

As I've blogged earlier, RTE includes the following opt-out: "medium
of instructions [sic!] shall, as far as practicable, be in child's
mother tongue".



Contents

1. Editorial Prabhat Patnaik
2. "Towards Democratization of Education in India" Amiya Kumar Bagchi
3. "Right to Education vs. Right to Education Act" Anil Sadgopal
4. "Education and the Politics of Capital" Ravi Kumar
5. "Policy Crisis in Higher Education: Reform or Deform?" B G Tilak
6. "UPA's Agenda of Academic 'Reforms'" Vijender Sharma
7. "Advantage In-bound Trade in Higher Education, or Advantage Human
Capital in Out-bound Trade" Binod Khadria
8. "Governance of Indian Higher Education: An Alternate Proposal" Dinesh Abrol
9. "Commentary: Science Education" S. Chatterjee
10. "Obituary: Tapas Majumdar" Prabhat Patnaik

http://bolii.blogspot.com/2010/12/social-scientist-issue-on-education-in.html

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