We Need To Make Education A Political Issue

Raising children who can think and play a meaningful role in the world is at the core of a good education system

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Raising children who can think and play a meaningful role in the world is at the core of a good education system

When I was doing my masters in history at the University of Oxford, UK, the war in Iraq and Afghanistan broke out. Students all over the world, including me, protested. But nothing changed really. It was then that I realized that to change people’s world view, you need to change the education that shapes it in the first place. While at one level we have to work on improving structures, systems, politics, the economy and so on, at the centre of all this is the human being and how that human being thinks, chooses to act in the world and reacts are going to be determined by the education we give them in the classroom.

So when I started working with government schools in Delhi, it was quite obvious that we first needed to fix the classroom. I still remember the stench of the toilets that hit me when I walked in through the school gates. There was no running water, no drinking water, the windows were broken, the lights dysfunctional, the white fans had turned black with dirt. Several girl students told me that they avoided using the toilets in school. The first year and a half was spent cleaning up the schools; right from thinking about the number of bottles of disinfectant a school needs in a month to the required number of sanitation workers for a given number of students. It made me understand that policymaking is largely commonsensical; if government schools in this country are not changing, it is not because it is difficult to improve them, but because no one cares or wants to.

One key way to bring about long-term transformation of educational institutions is to get parents involved. Governments may come and go but it is the parents who will always care the most about how a school is run. School management committees (SMC) are mandated under the Right to Education Act, 2009. An SMC is a body consisting of parents and teachers, and it is supposed to monitor and assist in the affairs of the school. By encouraging parents to participate in thes...

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