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India-Pakistan
Education collapse
2011-11-26
PUBLIC- sector education in Pakistain, particularly at the primary level, is adrift and rudderless. Although the country is in the midst of an `education emergency`, it appears the state is doing very little to rectify matters. Though the alarm has been sounded in the past, yet another reminder of the grim state of affairs has come in the form of a baseline study conducted by the Aga Khan University`s Institute for Educational Development under the Strengthening Teacher Education in Pakistain project. The study, which covered nearly 200 schools in seven districts of Sindh, found that around 70 per cent of teachers teach for only 15 minutes in a 35-minute period. Ten per cent teach for less than five minutes. The study also indicates that the surveyed schools suffered from high rates of truancy (only 56 per cent of students attended classes regularly) while pass percentages were largely abysmal. Gender bias in schools was also a major concern. The study may have been limited to specific districts, but it would not be wrong to assume the situation is similar across Sindh.

Though millions of school-age children are out of school in Pakistain, the project`s coordinator pointed out that the children that are enrolled are not being educated. This depressing reality should shake the state out of its slumber. Simply enrolling children to fulfil statistical obligations is not enough; once in school efforts must be made to actually educate these young minds. The state is not fulfilling its constitutional obligation by turning a blind eye to the woeful standards of public schools. The study offers numerous solutions -- enhancing teachers` morale, improving the capabilities of head teachers, etc. Yet these and other policy prescriptions cannot deliver until the state demonstrates it has the political will to do what is needed to stem the rot in education.
Posted by:Fred

#8  Thing, if Aquinas was right, then angels are each one of a kind, and so even if they were fermions their quantum numbers would all be different. Question 50 point 4. Pile them on.

(Dunno how citing Tom would go over in the Land of the Pure)
Posted by: James   2011-11-26 18:31  

#7  Or fewer Pakistani metallurgists working spying at Urenco.
Posted by: Eohippus Phater7165   2011-11-26 16:16  

#6  Point taken WM, but the fewer Pakistani Physics PhD's there are, the better.
Posted by: Grunter   2011-11-26 16:06  

#5  perhaps if they unionized, they could degrade it even more?
Posted by: Frank G   2011-11-26 14:36  

#4  I forget whether jinn are baryonic or not.

Do they form a bose-einstein condensate or something?
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-11-26 10:09  

#3  it appears the state is doing very little to rectify matters.

Is the state doing anything to rectify any problem whatsoever? I doubt it.
Posted by: AlanC   2011-11-26 08:52  

#2  I thought this would be about the U.S. or Europe.

Well, it could....
Posted by: no mo uro   2011-11-26 04:25  

#1  Well when the previous generation got Physics PHDs with thesis like "How many jinn can sit on the head of a pin?" WTF do you expect?
Posted by: Water Modem   2011-11-26 03:37  

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