<p align="justify"><b><span class="headline_INSIDE">Language of the future, who cares?</span></b></p>
<div class="story_text" align="justify"><span class="story_text">Karnataka does a Tughlaq. Lakhs of students are displaced as government orders closure of 1,400 English medium schools. TYAGARAJ SHARMA reports </span></div>
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>When little Abhigyan asked his mother why he was suddenly being prevented from going to school where he was learning English for the last five years, she had difficulty in answering him.
<br>And so did lakhs of parents who overnight found that they could not send their wards to the schools they had been attending for so many years. Karnataka's primary and secondary education minister, Mr Basvaraj Horatti, however, was more than willing to help. After all, it was under his direction that at least 1,400 unaided primary schools using English as the medium of education in the state, were ordered to close down recently.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>Mr Horatti was not concerned that his decision would seriously affect about 300,000 students of these schools and that, too, in the middle of their academic year. What mattered more was his pride in Kannada, the local language. According to him, these schools, opened after 1994, were issued licences on the condition that they would use Kannada as the medium of instruction. Recent inspection, he argues, showed that they had violated the rules. Which is why they had to be punished, taught a lesson for ignoring Kannada. Promptly, he ordered that the schools be closed. That was his gift to the hapless students who were getting ready to enjoy the fortnight-long Dusshera vacation. More important, the crackdown came on the eve of the celebrations to mark 50 years of Karnataka's formation as a state.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>The move has made the parents of these children furious. After all, where do they go to admit them now. Though the minister has promised to accommodate the displaced children in neighbourhood government schools, the number of affected children is so large that it is virtually impossible to satisfy all. No doubt, the minister is quick to argue that the crackdown on the guilty schools was not sudden. They had been given enough
warnings.Yet, he says, they continued, paying scant attention to the government directive. Some were even collecting huge donations for teaching in English. <br>He, however, has no answer to the question: why should the students and their parents be made to suffer? He could not care less as he maintained that they should have verified everything before admitting their wards in these schools.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>At the same time, he is quick to admit that neither the government nor he had anything against English.Yet it could not be promoted at the expense of Kannada! The minister's Tughlaq-like decision has created panic all over the state, though it is the IT capital which is the worst hit as the number of schools that are being shut here exceeds 1,000. The government's move comes a few days after it appointed Infosys' mentor, Mr Narayana Murthy, as chairman of the committee to head the state's IT vision group. He is a prominent advocate of English as the medium of instruction in local schools, a must to enable the students to get the required jobs, as he said. As expected, the education minister's move has caused an uproar, with the management of these schools even seeking legal recourse. Virtually all the schools agree that the pressure from parents to teach their wards in English was tremendous. More important, a majority of the students from these schools belong to the economically and socially backward sections.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>As Mr GS Sharma, president, Karnataka Unaided School Management Association, for one, said, the government could not discriminate between schools which started before and after 1994. For, according to him, institutes that were set up before that year were allowed to teach in the language of their choice. Why this discrimination against the schools which were set up later, he wonders.
<br>He is equally confident that the government has no powers to shut down the schools. Citing the recent TMA Pais vs State of Karnataka case, he said the Supreme Court had upheld the fundamental right of citizens to run educational institutions, clearly highlighting the autonomy of private schools. Which is why all the affected managements would now meet soon to chalk out a strategy to contest the government's move; even seek a stay.
<br>Critics are foxed by the coalition government's decision to ensure the implementation of a 12-year-old order now, especially as it has just completed 200 days in office. What were the previous governments and their education ministers doing?
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>That is the common refrain. The question is easily answered as two former education ministers, Mr BK Chandrasekhar and Mr Ramalinga Reddy, said, they were aware of the language policy of 1994. They allowed the schools to continue with English as the medium of education in the interest of the children. It was that simple! English, they contended, was the language of the future and could be promoted without ignoring Kannada. The argument, however, does not cut much ice with Mr Horatti as he is determined to push through his agenda. These schools, he said, could either close down or conduct classes in Kannada by seeking fresh approvals. The minister obviously believes that he is on a firm wicket. This, despite the fact that chief minister Mr HD Kumaraswamy has promised to find a via media to solve the vexed issue. The minister, however, will have none of this as his response indicated, thus paving the way for more confusion and a legal battle with the managements of the affected schools.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><br>His critics, on the other hand, believe the government has engineered the controversy to arm-twist the managements of the affected schools. If they are to be believed, another Bellary-type scandal is in the offing. This leaves the beleaguered Abhigyan and thousands like him none the wiser about their future.
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<div class="story_text" align="justify"><a href="http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=4&theme=&usrsess=1&id=131140">http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=4&theme=&usrsess=1&id=131140
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