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MAKING EDUCATION MORE RELEVANT FOR CHANGING SOCIETY. How can India prosper when its education system stagnates?.
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MAKING EDUCATION MORE RELEVANT FOR CHANGING SOCIETY How can India prosper when its education system stagnates?
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“It is very nearly impossible to become an educated person in a country, so distrustful of the independent mind.” -JAMES BALDWIN • Education has assumed great importance in the new world. It makes a man a thinker, completes him as a person. • And if this foundation is faulty, the system and society collapse in all entirety. • It is high time that we understand the gravity of the situation and shift from ‘an examination system to an education system’.
IMPLEMENTATION • Proper utilization of educational budget through elimination of middlemen and red tapism. • Rigorous selection process for recruitment of teachers. • Adopting a global curriculum; expanding the horizons of the students.
PROPOSED MEASURES • Regular revision of books is extremely important. • The text should be more practical and less theoretical . • Study material should be relevant and applicable to the current scenario. • Assign activities to extract creativity and innovation.
IMPLEMENTATION • Rules should be passed for the compulsory revision of textbooks on yearly basis . • Inclusion of topics related to current issues should be made compulsory. • Use of wall magazines and newspapers should be encouraged. • Working projects in sciences, dummy companies in commerce and regular workshops could be of great help.
FEMALE EMPOWERMENT • Low rates of educated female participation in the labour force means some of India’s significant human capital is simply not coming on the job market. • Literacy rates in 2011 were : • 82.14% for men • 65.46% for women. • Approximately 40% of students, mostly girls, drop out of secondary schools.
IMPLEMENTATION • Setting up of schools in slum areas will make education more accessible. • Door to door checks should be carried out to ensure maximum enrolment. • Fines should be charged to defaulters. • Rewards and incentives should be given to parents encouraging education.
CHANGE IN TEACHING TECHNIQUES This is how a conventional book reads, to explain a concept as simple as ‘Tectonic Plates’: The two sub layers of the earth’s crust (lithosphere) that move, float, and sometimes fracture and whose interaction causes continental drift, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, mountains and oceanic trenches.
INFERENCE • Audio visual aids tend to leave a lasting impression on the minds of the students as it involves more of his senses. • It provides a fun-filled learning atmosphere. • A teacher shouldn’t be burdened with the overloading syllabi and overcrowding classrooms but should have a healthy environs for fruitful discussions.
NEW APPROACH Teaching Techniques To The Taste of The Taught: • Learning by doing • Group discussions • Introduce the concept ‘learning through teaching’ • Use of audio visual aids • Greater use of laboratories. • Encouragement of activity based learning.
GLOBALIZATION • Recently Narayana Murthy said that even premiere institutes like IITs have failed to produce professionals who can rub shoulders with the best in the world. • Youth veers towards a globalized society, and wants an education and upbringing like that, which our education system fails to provide.
AARAKSHAN- India v/s India • Backward communities have increased from 1257 in 1991 to 2297 in 2006. • 27% of the seats in the central institutions for higher education are reserved for OBCs; 15% for SCs and; 7.5% for STs. • A major disadvantage is that the creamy layer of the reserved category is still availing its benefits.
MEASURES • If at all reservation should exist, it should be on the basis of economic status and not on the basis of caste at all. • Economic verification should be conducted every year. • Minimum income level should be the basic criterion for availing reservation.
MARKS CENTRIC OR ECCENTRIC • The so called 100% cut-off percentage of Delhi is the best example for our title. • The rise of toppers from last years’ 1200 to 2097 this year is a clear indication of lax, careless checking and emphasis on ‘keywords’. • Rote learning should be replaced by ‘right’ learning.
PARADISE OR PURGATORY? On the basis of an independent study conducted on students, some shocking facts were revealed: • 67.6% students feel that RTE has not been effective. • A stark 80.28% students state that they are not regular with lab usage. • Only a meagre 21% students feel that the education system ensures them sufficient exposure. • 71.8% respondents feel that school teaching is not enough to do well.
VOICE OF THE YOUTH ways to make learning more relevant and refreshing
BUDGET If only 6% of our GDP is consciously dedicated to the cause of education, can Indian education be a success.
STAKEHOLDERS • Education in India is provided by the public sector as well as the private sector, with control and funds coming from three levels: federal, state, and local. • Corporate houses can also set up educational institutions like : • BITS (Birla Group) • Shree Ram School (SRF Limited) • TISS (Tata Group) • NGOs can also help in setting up schools like those by Pratham, Teach for India, Samaritan Help Mission etc.
ASACRED HEARTPRESENTATION MENTOR: Ms. Lucy Sebastian TEAM : Surprit Rekhi Sakshi Bhalla Jayanti Jha Isha Ghai