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Challenges in Introducing Value Education at Higher Education in India

Challenges in Introducing Value Education at Higher Education in India

Dr.R.Murali

Head

Department of Philosophy

The Madura College(Autonomous)

Madurai-11

Murali_phil@hotamil.com

 

 

Value Education is the much debated and discussed subject in the plethora of education in India. Of course it is true that the main purpose of any education will go with Value orientation. More concentration on Value education has been given at the primary and secondary level of school education than in higher education in India. Values could be effectively imparted to the young minds rather than to the matured ones. It may be the important reason for this prime importance given at the school level. There are so many modules designed with the help of agencies like NCERT and others for effectively imparting the value education to the school students. In this context, many innovative educational practices are being identified by the experts. Good number of experiments and studies are being conducted in the recent days on the effectiveness of teaching value education at school level. Some schools have very innovative and radical course designs to impart the values.

Effective teaching practices in imparting value education ranges from story telling, exhibitions, skits, one act play and group discussions to various other formats. New methods have been evolved by educationists to create an effective learning sphere. The usage of electronic gadgets also gains importance in the teaching-learning practices of value education. But at the higher education level, due to various reasons, the importance given to value education is not as much as it is given at the school level. The curriculum and the teaching methods also could be subjected to scrutiny. It is true that colleges are meant for a kind of specialization in some field of education. But in the Indian social context, the youth require direction and counseling at this stage. They have been exposed to various challenges at this stage which demands the intervention of educationists for his/her betterment. His/her character building also strengthens at this juncture. Students’ perception on various life factors and events are getting shaped at this stage. On the whole they evolve their own philosophy of life. Their sensitivity and knowledge are getting direction at this stage. Hence, an effective value orientation becomes inevitable to the students of colleges. Keeping this requirement in mind, States like Tamilnadu introduced a compulsory paper/course on value education to undergraduate students of all colleges in the State under the choice based credit system.  Though this kind of effort is made with the good intention of imparting values to the youth, many limitations in bringing out the expected outcome could be identified.

The problem mainly begins with the definition of values. Defining the term ‘value’ poses a challenge to all scholars. The term value is loaded with varieties of meaning. Each meaning reflects its own philosophical position. Generally the term value is spontaneously associated with religious values. It is believed by many Indians that values are nothing but the religious and spiritual guiding principles of life. Hence, it is supposed  that the path is already been laid for the life journey. But in the context of modernity and modernism there rises a fundamental question of whether value education is required at all in a modern state.  There are those who argue that modern life is based on science and technology, and both are value neutral. They view that the values are bugbear held out by people living in the past, glued to outdated religious principles that have no relevance to the 21st century. At this point, there is also another group of modernist who propagate the necessity of value education at learning centres in order to safe guard the democratic state and its values. The values they wish to cultivate are modern secular values such as honesty, respect to other, equality, collectivity, democracy, respecting the human rights, sharing equal space in the public sphere and so on. These values are considered as the products of enlightenment period. Hence, four positions could be arrived at on the basis of the above understanding. The are:

There are religious values which are very much essential for every one and must be included in the curriculum.
The religious values should not find place in the educational system. They may operate at the private sphere.
There are non-religious secular values and they must find space in the education.
There is no need for teaching value education in the academics because they cannot be cultivated through formal learning and such value cultivation will make the individual biased.

 

In consequence to these positions, following questions arouse.

Whether value education should find place in the educational system?
If it is required, then what sort of values should be given preference in the curriculum?
What is the importance to be given to the religious values which are primarily developed on the basis of scriptures?
Can modern values alone are sufficient enough or is there any possibility of blending the values of modernity with religious values?
If religious values are to be given importance in the curriculum, which religion will find prime place? If there are contradictory propagation on a single virtue by two religions, then how are they to be handled?
Similarly religions differ on the practices also. Right from eating patterns, dress mode, marriage systems, war tactics, killing, punishments to various other aspects, religions differ on their outlook. In this situation, what sort of perceptions need to be taught?

Besides these questions, another billion dollar question would be raised on the methodology of effectively imparting those values. Then again as it is mentioned earlier, the school education can very well include this education easily because the system itself is advantageous for it to accommodate. But at the college level, the system finds it very difficult to work out.  So this study could analyse the theoretical problems relating to the identification of values to be included in the curriculum at the one side and the problem of effective designing of the curriculum and imparting those values on the other side.

 

II

The necessity for imparting values to the students of all levels has been felt by everyone. The world today is facing unprecedented socio-political and economic challenges. Problems of life are becoming increasingly intense and complex. Traditional values are decentered. ‘An environment of strife pervades all countries and broken homes have become common. An insatiable hunger for money and power, leads most of people to tension and absence  of peace of mind and all kinds of physical and mental ailments have become common place” 1. In the present day context of frequent and often violent social upheavals, we have to look at the problem of restlessness of the youth, their frustration born out of futility of their search for meaning of life and the purpose for which they are living, often leading to evil and wickedness. This calls for a new approach to, and a new vision of education. It is obviously felt that the present educational system promotes rat race and keep the student community in a sense of insecurity. Educational institutions have become the pressure cookers building pressures in the minds of youth. Also a loft sided educational pattern which insists on instrumental and technical rationality for the successful life in terms of gaining money and power has invaded the educational system of India. The person who is deemed to be unfit for this survival race becomes disqualified and ineligible to live in this market economy based life.    The spate of industrialization and economic growth in developed nations has brought about a perceptible change in this scenario. And developing countries including India are feeling the ripple effects of this development. Values earlier considered essential by all societies have been eroded and have given way to unethical practices around the globe. Where honesty and integrity were loved and appreciated, greed, corruption and red tapism have come in, bringing in their wake, unethical responses which have pervaded all walks of life and are thwarting efforts of a few enlightened individuals to promote value based society.2 Hence, implementation of well structured education is the only solution available with all states. With growing divisive forces, narrow parochialism, separatist tendencies on the one hand and considerable fall in moral, social, ethical and national values both in personal and public life on the other, the need for promoting effective programmes of value orientation in education has assumed great urgency. Development of human values through education is now routinely seen as a task of national importance. Value education though supposes to be the part and parcel of the regular education, due to the market influences, it could not be so. Hence, it has become an inevitable need to include an exclusive curriculum for value education at all levels.

Now the next question would be about the nature of value education. What sort of values should be given preference in the curriculum is the prime problem in the introduction of value education. This problem surfaces because we can find varieties of values prescribed on the basis of various scriptures and theories. Sometimes they are contradictory to each other. This issue has been thoroughly discussed earlier. But the solution to the problem of the nature of value education is primarily dependent on the social conditions that prevail in the state. There need not be an imported value educational pattern to be prescribed in India. The burning social issues would demand the required value education.  Though India is considered to be the land of divinity and wisdom, the modern value system throws challenges to the ancient value pattern. Right from the Gurkula pattern to the varna ashrama values, all values are under scrutiny by modern rationality. Hence, the relevance of the golden values prescribed by the then society is questionable in the present situation. On the other hand, the so called modern values which have been listed earlier also subjected to criticism by philosophers like post modernists. They question the very nature of the rationality of the enlightenment period. Because critics of modernity strongly declare that the modern rationality is the reason for the deterioration of human concern in the world and they paved the way for inhuman killing and escalation of values. The reason of the modernism is considered as the root of power politics which leads to inhuman behaviour of the power system, according to them. Hence the modern values like democracy, civil rights, environmental ethics, professional ethics, discipline and all such values are found useless in bringing harmony in the society. The values like discipline, tolerance, peace bears the negative connotation in this context. Hence, what sort of modern values are to be included in the curriculum is a challenge thrown towards the educationists. At one side the fanatic  and fundamentalist features of religious values and on the other side the modern values based on the market economy and other factors are to be excluded and a well balanced curriculum with genuine worthy values suitable to the society has to be identified and included in the educational system. In this context, it becomes obvious that there cannot be any universal pattern of values to be prescribed in the system.   When a suitable blend of religious and modern values is to be done, the designing of such course demands an unbiased, scrupulous, intelligent approach on the part of the academician who designs such course. Thus the spiritual values of sensitizing the youth for happy world and rational values for a just world are very much required. Religious values can be taken but not with the label of any particular religion, democratic values are to be included but not with its dogmatic inhuman approach. Thus there need a perfect blend of both. This is the real challenge thrown to the Indian academicians.

After the identification of these values, they need to be inculcated not to be informed to the students. Mostly listing the values is done very easily, but imparting them effectively requires genuine spirit and innovative educational practices. In the Vedic period, the gurukula system prevailed in which the student has to thoroughly undergo a pattern life with the guru shishya hierarchy. Whatever the guru declares are the values of life. But in the modern context, which is supposed to be the democratic sphere, a sense of equality and freedom has to prevail the learning situation. Also the values identified cannot be preached on the basis of the religious faiths. So the teacher has to find effective working module to internalize the values in the minds of the youth. The teachers’ understanding about the values prescribed and his/her commitment in imparting them also play a crucial role here. How to sensitize the teacher before carrying the values to the students is also a challenge to the educationists. The value education class room, if it is dealt with full seriousness and sincerity would be very interesting and challenging sphere for students and teachers. At times they need to sail at the same level with the students. The hierarchy may get disappeared. Value education demands a total responsibility from the teachers. They become more accountable. On the other side, a teacher who is committed to a set of values would always like to preach and impose them on the young minds. That extreme should also to be avoided with a balance of mind. Value education cannot be done by just delivering lectures and screening films. It requires a strong interaction between the students and the society.  A lot could be experimented at this sphere. For which the supreme value ‘integrity’ is expected from the educator.

It is observed that many modules of teaching values have been designed and tested. Some are seemed to be very effective. In Tamilnadu, especially in aided colleges, with all good intention the government has introduced the value education as a compulsory scheme at the undergraduate level. But each university has its own syllabus for the same. The scrutiny of those syllabi also reveals a lot of variations in conceiving the value education. In some universities, some religion based institutions are given the responsibility of designing and even carrying out the course. Similarly the teachers who have not been exposed to any such type of training in value education are given the responsibility of teaching values. The introduction of value education for all under graduate courses is done at the cost of a core paper of that course. The teachers who have been handling their hardcore subject papers had to meet the shortage of workload due to this programme and to solve this problem, they have been entrusted with the job of teaching value education paper. This is done with the aim of avoiding the workload problem of existing teachers. The most valuable and sensitive part of education has been made like a mechanical dogmatic part. At this juncture, the fate of value education at the college level could be imagined. How to solve this issue is again a challenge to the educationists of Tamilnadu. The same fate could be observed in many other states of India. Hence, two important problems surfaces here, one at the syllabus level and the other at the teaching level. As it is discussed earlier the syllabus could be designed by way of paying attention to all aspects but imparting the same requires not only innovative teaching methods, but also innovative training method of the educators. It is as good as training the driver to drive the car; the teacher needs to be trained in imparting the values. The technical education employs teachers with sound knowledge in the subject, similarly it is essential to have teachers with sound mind and creative teaching skill to teach value education. Value education is definitely not to be dealt with compartmentalization but it should be taken as a part of the whole educational system. As Nietzsche puts it, the society requires masters to create and impart values, not the slaves who accept all the values imposed on them without any critical understanding.

If education fails to impart necessary values to its citizens, it will definitely have a telling effect on the society. All efforts to bring just and peace in the world will become futile if proper value education is not imparted.

Notes:

Kireet Joshi, Philosophy of  Value Oriented Education Theory and Practice, ICPR

Publications, New Delhi,p.217.

2.   Ibid., p.218.

 

 

 


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Preparation of Instructional Strategies for Early Childhood Educators in Punjab,Pakistan

INTRODUCTION

 

Early Childhood 

 

Early Childhood is an age, which is denoted differently by different educationists, psychologists, scholars and scientists. To some, it consists of the age three to six (Sahu &Wikipedia) and to some, it spans the human life from birth to age eight (NAEYC). Whatever the duration may be, these are the years, in which all aspects of one’s personality are developed, i.e. physical, mental, emotional, social, linguistic, analytical and creative. Over eighty percent of the human personality, including its attitude and aptitude is shaped before the age of six (Sahu, 2004). Fifty percent of the intelligence measured at age seventeen, is achieved by age four (Bloom).

Early childhood education (ECE)

ECE prepares children for the primary. It lays the foundation for the development of reading, writing and number work. It encourages interaction with the environment, participation in-group activities and enhances creativity and problem solving in children. ECE is a combination of moral, intellectual and social lessons for physical, mental, social, emotional and linguistic growth and development of early childhood age children.

Characteristics of early childhood age children and role of educators

The role of the teacher in ECE is significant, as he is responsible to make the children ready for schooling and providing base for the child’s complete development. Froebel compared the child to a seed and likened the teachers or caregivers to gardeners. The teachers have two functions according to Harlen, i.e. encouraging the child’s curiosity and provide real learning activities. 

1.      At this stage, there is coordination between what the children want to do and what he is able to do. The role of early childhood educators is to encourage each child’s development by accepting their prior experiences. They need to observe constantly the children’s growth patterns and development of the motor skills in them and employ different kinds of plays.
2.      According to Piaget’s description, the children during the age level of 2 to 6 are pre-operational. His approach Social Constructivism emphasizes the active role of the children in constructing their own understanding. According to Vygotsky, the role of the adults in cognitive development of the children is much more important rather the activities of the children chosen by themselves. Early childhood educators should lead children’s learning by giving them chance to learn what they may not be able to learn by themselves.
3.      During these years, the children’s interactions within themselves and with the elders, as well as teachers take on new dimensions. Much of the play is decided through interaction and negotiation. They need to have solitary as well as cooperative play. Many educators emphasize the provision of playing opportunities for social and emotional development of the children. They should be given open ended experiences, choices at mealtimes and flexibility in indoor / outdoor experiences (Arthur et all, 1998). Educators should be aware of the development of the concepts in the children. Individual differences and diversity should be positively handled.
4.      The language is taught from the time the first the child enters the class room in the morning until the last child goes home. The teacher teaches both directly, through activities and experiences and indirectly through her own speech, language and behavior. (Preface, Mathew, 2005).
5.      Much of the understanding of moral values during this age level is based on the notion of fairness. Meaning that what is considered to be fair and good is morally acceptable. Negotiation not only enhances children’s ability to solve problems but also encourages them to adopt the perspectives of others.  

Objectives of Early childhood education

According to Ministry of Education (2006) objectives of early childhood education are, i.e. to develop child potential to learn and grow, provide an appropriate environment ensuring safety, use play way method and concrete experience in teaching and learning, prepare a child for formal schooling and to develop awareness of basic cultural values and norms.

Importance of Early Childhood Education

ECE assists many at risk children in avoiding poor outcomes such as dropping out of the school. Global Monitoring Report on Education For All(2005) reports:

“Good quality ECE not only enhances children’s physical well being, cognitive and language skills, social and emotional development, but also lays the foundations for subsequent education.”

ECE develops in children the love for knowledge, activity and questioning. They are encouraged to do things themselves. They are prepared for the school life. Learning opportunities in early childhood provide benefits by promoting later achievement in school and further life long learning.
Early years are critical in the formation of intelligence, personality, social and physical development. These years lay the foundation of all these aspects, which will persist through the life course. (woodhead, 2006). Early year’s brain development influences the long term cognition, imagination, behaviors and skills of the individuals. (Mustard, 2002). Early childhood has been described as the key investment phase in improving outcomes through out the life course (Hunzai, 2007).

Early childhood education in Pakistan

In Pakistan, Islamic or Quranic education is emphasized from an early age. This education is imparted through three modes i.e., formal, non-formal; and informal either in mosques, madrassahs or at home. Even in the farthest areas, Quranic education is considered to be “compulsory” by tradition and an effective way to inculcate moral values and teach life skills at an early age. It is estimated that more than 80 percent of children in the age group 4-10 years receive Islamic education in this way.

ECE has existed in Pakistan since 1970s in formal primary schools. In public schools, the qualification required for teaching in katchi class is the same as that for primary school i.e., higher secondary education certificate with one-year teaching certificate. In Katchi Classes, a part of the class one curriculum of the National Curriculum is taught. The Teachers Resource Center (TRC) which has developed the national ECE curriculum has been engaged to provide support to teachers’ training and classroom material development and distribution of ‘taleemi bastas’, learning kits for ECE and early primary years.

 A study by Juma(2004) shows that, children were taught in a traditional way with the teacher standing at a blackboard directing the children. Rote memorization was encouraged. In the private sector there were early childhood provisions, which mainly used Montessori approaches fulfilling only to the needs of the elite and the upper-middle class of the society.  It is observed that the teachers do not involve themselves in teaching. Some times, they do not know the principles of growth and development of children. Often, they do not try to attract the children to teaching learning process. They just give lesson to the children and order them to memorize these words without understanding. It is very boring, especially for this age level children, as, this is the age to play with toys, enjoy the company of the peers, imitate the elders and make things themselves.

Private work in ECE is comparatively hopeful with reference to the achievements of the public sector. Children’s Resource International (CRI); the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF); the Teachers’ Resource Centre (TRC) and the College of Home Economics, Lahore have developed various kinds of teaching and learning aids such as blocks, charts, posters, handbooks, flashcards, teachers’ guides; planners; teachers’ kits; etc.

Pakistan is committed to the Dakar Framework of Action, adopted in an international conference on “Education for All”, held in 2000 A.D at Dakar. The first goal was to expand and improve comprehensive early child hood care and education for all children, especially for the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Pakistan accepted this challenge and formulated National Plan of Action (NPA) in 2001. Punjab government has also invested in ECE out of its own budget in its Provincial Plan of Action in 2003. The focus is on providing ECE by means of material resources, but the role of teacher in ECE is very much important, and it is being neglected. For the first time, government has contributed separate attention to it in the National Education Policy, 1998-2010 and in 2009 policy as well.

Theories regarding early childhood education

 

The theories already in vogue all over the world for ECE have all the basics to prepare instructional strategies for early childhood education. The most common theories are, Behaviorist orientation (Locke, Skinner etc), Maturations orientation (Rousseau, Freud, etc) and Constructivist orientation (Dewey, Piaget and Montessori). (Dopyera, 1993).The behaviorist orientation works employing principles of reinforcement i.e., positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, non reinforcement, and punishment. Maturation orientation works employing principles of growth and development and Constructivist orientation works keeping cognitive structure of students in concern.

According to Carten &Allen(2003)

“The foundation for all curricula is developmental theory or beliefs about how children develop and learn. These beliefs guide our view of teaching and supporting children as learners”.

Ref: Jack man H.L(2005).

According to Siddiqi, theoretical perspectives for ECE are 1) Maturationist, 2)Learning and 3)Interactionist. Here is an insight into these theories:

Table No:1

 

S.no

Theoretical perspectives

Curriculum objectives

Curriculum content

Instructional techniques

Key concepts

Thinkers of this theory

1

Maturationist

Social, moral and cognitive development. preparation for the present

Determined by the developmental level of the child

Teacher as facilitator, director.

Experimental learning

John dewey

2

Learning

Behavior change. Preparation for the future

Determined by the teacher

Teacher has main role

Operant learning

Skinner

3

Interactionist

Independent thinking and problem solving skills. Preparation for understanding

Determined by the age and developmental level of the child

Teacher as coworker. Prepared environment. Discovery learning

Constructivism

piaget

 

Instructional Strategies

 

Plasma Link Web Services provides the Glossary of Instructional Strategies as a resource for all educators. Current number of strategies and methods is 988 according to this service. (October 19, 2007).

According to Singh and Rana(2004),

“Instructional strategy is some thing that is arranged designed by the teacher to establish interaction between the teacher, the student and the subject matter, or any combination of these three dimensions”

We can say that instructional strategies are the planned sequence of teaching methods. Instructional strategies are an important part of the early childhood Curriculum. The instructional strategies, used for enhancing learning of the children are usually derived from behavioral research. Each strategy is useful for teachers to support children’s early learning and development of all aspects and dimensions. The instructional strategies are the plans and the ways in which the teacher designs his/her teaching. (Singh&Rana: 2004).The strategies are the application of the skills of the teachers in the organization of the teaching learning process.

Principles to prepare instructional strategies for Early Childhood Education

Here are some principles derived from the books i.e. Early Childhood Education Today, by Morrison(1988), Guiding young children, by Verna(1990) and Becoming a teacher of young Children, by Dopyera(1993)etc. The researcher considers them to be helpful in preparation of instructional strategies for early childhood educators:

Activities should be a joyful experience for the children. Activities should be about daily living, so that, they may teach the children their responsibilities. Activities should follow the children’s nature. Activities should be less structured. Activities should have ability to have sensory training. Place every thing before the senses. Activities may not only be able to give training of socialization, but also training of religious and moral instructions. The teacher herself should give direction and guidance, but in in-formal way. Activities must be child centered, language based and cooperative learning based. Teacher must respond to the child questioning. Positive feedback must be provided to the students.  Respect for the child should not be ignored; rather, they should be Involved in motor activities as much as possible and encouraged to act in different activities related to practical life. Use multi-dimensional activities to encourage social inter action between teacher and students. The teacher must observe students during activities, give individualized instruction and emphasize drill and use concrete material as much as possible.  Activities should be reinforcing and meaningful. Physical, mental, motor, language, moral and psychological development of the child should be the first preference while developing the activities. Activities must increase the child’s ability to think, make children do the things themselves free from sexist behavior , should be free choice of activities, There should be combination of indoor and outdoor, quiet and active activities, Sharpen the power of observation of the children. Organize children in small groups. Use neither too hard, nor too easy activities. Put learning material on low shelves. Avoid crowding material. Use variety of methods. Be specific while developing activities. Give clear instructions. Help in assessing the students. Teach intellectual concepts through art activities. Bereiter and Englemann (1966) propose rewarding the child who tries, avoiding shaming and preserving the spirit of group.

Problems faced by early childhood educators

According to Ministry of education, Pakistan,2003,  Shahida Mohiuddin, Hunzai, 2006, Juma, 2004, problems faced by the early childhood educators are lack of proper training both in the public and private sector, lack of resources, i.e. teaching kit, balls, blocks etc, big size of the class, lack of interest and commitment of teachers, lack of proper classroom, lack of cooperation of the society, lack of government support in terms of financial allocation, lack of an agreed amount of social values, domestic problems, contradictory situation at home and school, lack of exemplary personality traits among teachers, no laboratory, no transportation system, the same syllabus for all the children, no knowledge of objectives, new strategies are not encouraged by the head teachers, limited knowledge of using the instructional aids, limited ability to prepare instructional aids themselves, no knowledge of linking instruction with the objectives, limited awareness of the benefits of the ECE among parents and society.

METHODOLOGY OF THE STUDY

The study dealt with the improvement of the teaching learning process at pre primary at present, so the researcher used the descriptive method of research. The data was collected from the teachers and the students in the form of questionnaires and observation sheets. These tools were used because of less expensiveness, ease of administration and suitability to the problem.The population of the study consisted of the early childhood educators of the early childhood education institutions in Punjab province. The students learning in these institutions were observed during teaching learning process.  Simple random sampling method was used by selecting samples from private schools and government schools throughout Punjab.Total 66 early childhood educators were selected randomly from three districts of the Punjab, i.e. Bahawalpur, Lodhran and Bahawalnagar.Total 270 children were observed during the teaching learning process. 

FINDINGS

On the basis of analysis and interpretation of the data following findings were made:

  Findings of Questionnaire for Teachers  

Language:

 (87%) of the respondents is of the view that imitation is used to teach language,  (91%) agree that the teachers use verbal instruction.89% agree with the use of questioning strategy. 74% agree with the use of lecture method to teach language. (83%) of early childhood educators agree with providing storybooks to the children. (87%) agree that repeated presentation of the poems is used to teach language. (86%) agree showing films and videos to the children. (78%) agree that, listen, follow instructional strategy in games and  (82%) agree that listen; follow strategy in plays (dramas etc) is also an effective instructional strategy. For learning language, discussion based on pictures is agreed upon by 86% respondents and dramatic play is agreed by (77%)  respondents and (90%) agree that telling stories to the children is an effective instructional strategy for teaching language.                 

Mathematics:

 (88%) of respondents agree for drill method to be used for teaching mathematic concepts. (90%) agree upon problem-solving strategy and (83%) of respondents agree for questioning strategy, (70%) agree that teaching activities regarding mathematics should be integrated with other activities and other activities should also be integrated with mathematic activities. (78%) think that writing should be used as a tool for learning counting. (75%) agree with writing strategy to be used as a tool for learning addition. (79%) agree for Puzzles given to children to solve math problems.70% agree with songs and poems focusing on rote memorization to be used as a tool for learning. (78%) agree with math concepts to be learnt through plays. (92%) agree withblocks to be used as a tool for learning math concepts.

Science: 

89% respondent early childhood educators agree with learning science concepts by experiments.81% agree that exhibitions should be used as a tool for learning science concepts. Carrying out study tours is also an instructional strategy agreed by 82% respondents.74% agree carrying out project based learning as a tool . (86%) agree learning science concepts by group problem solving strategy.81% agree upon use of whole class discussion. (87%) agree for demonstration of science related objects, to be the tool for learning.88% agrees with learning science concepts by the laboratory work. (90%) agree that questioning strategy is used for understanding science concepts. (87%) agree that, Class gardens are made for understanding botany related concepts. 

Social studies: 

 (87%) of respondents agree about field trips to be arranged for the children.  (87%) agree about storybooks to be given to the children. (85%) teachers agree that textbook, having knowledge related to society is given to the children. (86%) agree that, festivals are celebrated inside the school. (90%) agree that, assembly lectures are used as a tool for learning social norms. (91%) agree that the children memorize national songs. (87%) agree thatdramatic plays are held for teaching social and moral values. (91%) agree that classroom discussion is used as a tool for learning.83% respondents agree that the teachers tell historical stories.

Religious education: 

(91%) of the respondents agree that modeling is used as tools for learning religion.87% agree with the statement that the teacher uses verbal instruction for religious education. (89%) agree upon questioning strategy, (84%) agree upon use of lecture method for teaching religious education. (82 %) teachers agree that storybooks are given to the children. (80%) agree that dramatic readings are given to the children. (86%) of the respondents agree that summer reading is given to the children. (94%) of the respondents agree that prayers are memorized. (91 %) agree that Thought for the day is given to the children. (91%) agree that the teacher behaves as a role model. (88%) agree that role-playing is used as a tool for learning religious education.(86%) of respondents agree that assembly lectures are prepared and presented by the teachers.

Creativity

 (82%) of the respondents agree that prepared environment is given to the children. (81%) agree that color it (shapes etc) type activities are given to the children. (79%) agree that the children make things with rods. (86%) agree that the children make things with clay. (77%) agree that doll making is taught to the children. (87%) agree that house making is used as tool for creative thinking of the children. (92%) agree that constructive plays are arranged for the children. (84%) agree that demonstration is used as a tool for creative thinking of the children. (81%) agree that teacher plays his role as a coworker in the creative work of the children. (82%) agree that laboratory work by the children is encouraged. (91%) agree that block building is also used as a tool for creativity enhancement. (94%) agree that solve it (puzzles) type activities are given to the children.

 

Imitation is the most preferred strategy (35%) by the early childhood educators for teaching language, while questioning and lecture method are the second preferences of the educators (23%). Drill method is the most preferred strategy (38%) by the early childhood educators for teaching mathematics, while Puzzles are the second preferences of the educators (23%). Experiment, exhibitions and study tours are the most preferred strategy (30%) by the early childhood educators for teaching science. Assembly lectures are the most preferred strategy (38%) by the early childhood educators for teaching social studies while, field trips and dramatic plays are the second preference (23%) each. Modeling is the most preferred strategy (45%), while, by the early childhood educators for teaching religious education Verbal instruction is the second one(24%) and Questioning strategy the third preference (15%). Constructive play is the most preferred strategy (38%) by the early childhood educators for teaching creativity. while, Demonstration is the second one (32%) and Teacher as coworker the third preference (23%). Almost 61% educators say that there is no guide available to them. The most common deficiency is training (45%) given to the educators ,big classes (26%), less time(20%),pay scale (24%) are the responses of the educators. 

Findings of observation sheet for the children

Almost 44% children were involved in learning. Almost 56% children were enjoying learning. Almost for 22%children, activities were being done for physical health when observed during their learning time. To almost 77% children, positive reinforcement was being used for their learning.  Almost 78 % children were not learning habits of cleanliness and health. All the five senses of almost only 11%children were being trained to learn. Almost 67% techniques employed by the educators did not ensure safety. Almost only 22% children were getting instruction by more than one method of teaching Almost 67% activities were focusing on the growth patterns of the children. There was freedom for almost only 33% children to choose one activity or the other. Almost only 44% classroom atmosphere was free of any tension and weather intensity. Almost 56% children were encouraged to be silent in the class, 44% children seemed fully involved in learning with both the mind and the body. Almost only 44%children were engaged in activities like drama, simulation etc. 44% children were provided with facilities like play apparatus, sand play, water play and gardening. Almost 67% children seemed having emotional touch with the educator. The things being taught to the children were shown to 44% children.  44%children were learning the concept of colors with the help of the things of those colors, i. e. blocks, garments and balls. Almost 89% children were learning the concept of seriating with concrete things. 44% children were learning the concept of shapes by tracing, cutting and pasting. Almost 56% children were learning the concept of opposites through different objects available in the class. 33% children were learning the names of the foods at the snack time. Almost 56% children were learning counting with the help of the things around instead of rot memorization.  44% children were learning science concepts through observation and experiments. Almost 56% children were learning to follow the rules. Almost 67% children were learning school habits. Only 33%children were learning reading skills by play way method. Only 33% children were learning writing skills by play way method. Almost only 33% children were learning speaking skills by play way method. 44% children were learning listening skills by play way method. Almost 89% children were learning to follow the routines in daily life. Almost 56% children were learning cultural values through stories told by the educator. Almost 56% children were learning cooperation with others through play activities. 44% of children were able to understand social norms by the help of conversation. 44%children were learning civic responsibilities and other manners inside and outside the class. Almost only 11%children had opportunities to read storybooks having moral and social lessons Almost 45% children were learning love for country and nation through dramas, stories and games.

CONCLUSIONS

There is no guide available for the early childhood educators. 61% educators say that there is no guide available to them. It shows that there is need for a teacher’s guide for this level. The most common deficiency is training given to the      educators ,big classes ,less time, pay scale are the other responses of the educators. So, these are the problems, which should be solved as soon as possible.
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching languages can be imitation, verbal instruction, use of questioning strategy, use of lecture method, providing storybooks to the children, repeated presentation of the poems, showing films and videos to the children, listen, follow instructional strategy in games and in plays (dramas etc), discussion based on pictures, strategy of using dramatic play and telling stories to the children. 
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching mathematics can be drill method, problem-solving strategy, questioning strategy, teaching activities regarding mathematics integrated with other activities and other activities integrated with mathematic activities, writing used as a tool for learning counting and addition, Puzzles to solve math problems, songs and poems focusing on rote memorization, math concepts to be learnt through plays and use ofblocks.  
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching science can be learning science concepts by experiments, exhibitions, Carrying out study tours, project based learning, group problem solving strategy, whole class discussion, demonstration of science related objects, laboratory work, questioning strategy and class gardens made for understanding botany related concepts. 
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching social studies can be field trips, storybooks and textbook, having knowledge related to society, given to the children, celebrating festivals, assembly lectures, memorizing national songs, dramatic plays, classroom discussion, telling historical stories to children.
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching religious education can be modeling, verbal instruction, questioning strategy, lecture method, storybooks and dramatic readings, given to the children, summer reading, memorizing prayers, Thought for the day given to the children, teachers behave as  role models, role-playing and assembly lectures related to religious education.
Majority of respondents agree that instructional strategies for teaching and developing creativity can be prepared environment, color it (shapes etc) type activities, children make things with rods and clay, doll making, house making, constructive plays, demonstration, teacher plays his role as coworker in the creative work, laboratory work, block building  and solve it (puzzles) type activities.
It is concluded that some instructional strategies can be used for multi purpose teaching, as modeling can be used for teaching language and religious education, demonstration can be used for teaching science concepts, and developing creativity, questioning strategy can be used for teaching language, mathematics, science and religious education, discussion can be used for teaching language, social studies and science, providing storybooks can be used to teach language, social studies and religious education, verbal instruction can be used to teach language and religious education, dramatic plays can be used to teach language and social studies, memorizing can be used to teach mathematics, social studies and religious education, assembly lectures can be used to teach social and religious education, laboratory work can be used to teach science and creativity, tours and trips can be used to teach science and social studies, and finally,  puzzles and blocks can also be used to teach mathematics and creativity.

          RECOMMENDATIONS

The researcher does following recommendations, after intensive study of the phenomena.

1. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching any language:

 

Imitation,
Verbal instruction,
Questioning strategy,
Lecture method
Providing storybooks
Repeated presentation of the poems
Showing films and videos
Listen, follow instructional strategy in games
Listen; follow strategy in plays (dramas etc)
Discussion based on pictures
Dramatic play
Telling stories

 

2. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching mathematics

 

Drill method
Problem-solving strategy
Questioning strategy
A activities regarding mathematics, integrated with other activities
Writing, as a tool for learning counting
Writing, as a tool for learning addition
Puzzles
Songs and poems focusing on rote memorization
Plays
Blocks

 

3. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching science

 

Experiments
Exhibitions
Study tours
Project based learning
Group problem solving
Whole class discussion
Demonstration
Laboratory work
Questioning
Class gardens

 

4. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching social studies

 

Field trips
Storybooks
Textbook, having knowledge related to society
Celebrating festivals
Assembly lectures
Memorize national songs
Dramatic plays
Classroom discussion
Tell historical stories.

 

5. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching religious education

 

Modeling
Verbal instruction
Questioning strategy
Lecture method
Storybooks
Dramatic readings
Summer reading
Memorize prayers
Thought for the day
Teacher as a role model
Role-playing
Assembly lectures

 

6. The following Instructional strategies should be used for teaching and developing creativity

 

Prepared environment
Color it (shapes etc) type activities
Making things with rods
Making things with clay
Doll making
House making
Constructive plays
Demonstration
Teacher as coworker
Laboratory work
Block building
Solve it (puzzles) type activities

 

The resources are not more important than the teacher’s creativity. Teachers should use their own creativity and imagination during teaching. They should not be contented with the teaching learning material available to them. Rather, they should try to make material themselves as well. The educators at early childhood education institute should be given special training. The teachers should be given a teaching guide, which will surely be helpful for them to teach.
The future researchers can work on the effectiveness of using these recommended instructional strategies on child’s learning. Future work can also be done on identifying more effective instructional strategies for early childhood educators. The future researchers can work on instructional strategies for primary, secondary, graduate and post graduate level teachers.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

 


Article from articlesbase.com

Special Education, Public School Law & Educational Laws and Policies, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis

education
by wallyg

 

William Alan Kritsonis, PhD

Professor

 

Public School Law & Educational Laws and Policies

 

 

 

 

FAPE

 

                                               

 

 

INTRODUCTION

 

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) is the law that provides your child with the right to a free, appropriate public education (FAPE). The purpose of the IDEA is “to ensure that all children with disabilities have available to them a free appropriate public education that emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet their unique needs and prepare them for further education, employment, and independent living…” 20 U.S.C. 1400(d) (Wrightslaw: Special Education Law, 2nd Edition, page 20). The Board of Education v. Rowley case is significant because it established the principle that school districts are not required to maximize the potential of a child but provide some educational benefit to the child and how courts would examine future disputes under IDEA (Walsh, Kemerer, and Maniotis, 2005). 

 

 

 

Case One

 

United States Supreme Court

 

BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE HENDRICK HUDSON CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, WESTCHESTER COUNTY,

v.

AMY ROWLEY, by her parents, ROWLEY et al.

No. 80 – 1002

 

LITIGANTS

 

Plaintiffs – Petitioners: Board of Education of the Hendrick Hudson Central School District, Westchester County, et al.

 

Defendant – Respondent: Amy Rowley, by her parents, Rowley, et., al.

 

BACKGROUND

 

The Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975 (IDEA), provides federal money to assist state and local agencies in educating handicapped children, and federally fund States in compliance with extensive goals and procedures. The Act represents an ambitious federal effort to promote the education of handicapped children, and was passed in response to Congress’ perception that a majority of handicapped in the United States “were either totally excluded from schools or [were] sitting idly in regular classrooms awaiting the time when they were old enough to ‘drop out.’” The Acts evolution and major provisions shed light on the question of statutory interpretation which is at the heart of this case.

                                                                                               

Congress first addressed the problem of education the handicapped in 1966 when it amended the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to establish a grant program “for the purpose of assisting the States in the initiation, expansion, and improvement of programs and projects for the education of handicapped children. That program was repealed in 1970 by the Education for the Handicapped Act, Pub. L. No. 91-230, 84 Star, 175, Part B of which established a grant program similar in purpose to the repealed legislation. Neither the 1966 nor 1970 legislation contained specific guidelines for state use of the grant money; both were aimed primarily at stimulating the States to develop educational resources and to train personnel for educating the handicapped.

Dissatisfied with the progress being made under these earlier enactments, and spurred by two district court decisions holding that handicapped children should be given access to a public education, Congress in 1974 greatly increased federal funding for education of the handicapped and for the first time required recipient States to adopt “a goal of providing full educational opportunities to all handicapped children.” Pub. L. 93-380, 88 Stat. 579, 583 (1974) (the 1974 statue). The 1974 statute was recognized as an interim measure only, adopted “in order to give the Congress an additional year in which to study what if any additional Federal assistance [was] required to enable the States to meet the needs of handicapped children.” H.R. Rep. No. 94-332, supra, p.4. The ensuing year of study produced the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975.

 

In order to qualify for federal financial assistance under the Act, a State must demonstrate that it “has in effect a policy that assures all handicapped children the right to a free appropriate public education.” 20 U.S.C. 1412(1). The “free appropriate public education” required by the Act is tailored to the unique needs of the handicapped child by means of an ‘individualized educational program” (IEP). In addition to the state plan and the IEP already described, the Act imposes extensive procedural requirements upon State receiving federal funds under its provisions. Parents or guardians of handicapped children must be notified of any proposed change in “the identification, evaluation, or educational placement of the child or the provision of a free appropriate public education to the child,” and must be permitted to being a complaint about “any matter relating to” such evaluation and education. 1415(b)(1)(D) and (E).6 Complaints brought by parents or guardians must be resolved at “an impartial due process hearing,” and appeal to the State educational agency must be provided if the initial hearing is held at the local or regional level. Thus, although the Act leaves to the States the primary responsibility for developing and executing educational programs for handicapped children, it imposes significant requirements to be followed in the discharge of that responsibility. Compliance is assured by provisions permitting the withholding of federal funds upon determination that a participating state or local agency has failed to satisfy the requirements of the Act, 1414(b)(A), 1416, and by the provision for judicial review. At present, all States except New Mexico receive federal funds under the portions of the Act at issue today.

FACTS

                                                                                   

Amy Rowley is a deaf student in New York.  Amy has minimal residual hearing and is an excellent lipreader.  During the year before she started attending Furnace Woods School, Amy’s parents and school administrators met and decided to place her in a regular kindergarten classroom to determine what supplemental services would be necessary to her education.  Several members of the administration took a course in sign-language interpretation, and a teletype machine was installed in the principal’s office to facilitate communication with her parents who are also deaf.  After Amy was placed temporarily in the regular classroom, it was determined that she should stay in that class, but be provided with an FM hearing aid to amplify words.  Amy successfully finished her kindergarten year.

 

Before Amy entered first grade, an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) was prepared, which provided that Amy should continue to receive her education in the regular classroom and use the FM hearing aid, she should also receive instruction from a tutor for the deaf for one hour each day and from a speech therapist for three hours each week.  The Rowleys agreed with parts of this plan, but insisted that Amy also be provided a qualified sign-language interpreter in all of her academic classes instead of the assistance proposed in other parts of the IEP.

 

An interpreter had been placed in Amy’s kindergarten class for a 2-week experimental period, but the interpreter had reported that Amy did not need his services at that time.  The same conclusion was reached by the school for Amy’s first grade year.  An independent examiner also agreed with the administrators’ determination that an interpreter was not necessary because Amy was achieving educationally, academically, and socially without such assistance.  Amy performs better than the average child in her class and is advancing easily from grade to grade.  However, she understands less of what goes on in the class than she could if she were not deaf and so she is not learning as much, or performing as well academically, as she would without her handicap.

 

DECISION

 

The Court stated that a “free appropriate public education” is one which consists of educational instruction specially designed to meet the unique needs of the handicapped child, supported by such services as are necessary to permit the child “to benefit” from the instruction.  If personalized instruction is being provided with sufficient supportive services to allow the child to benefit from the instruction, and the other items on the definitional checklist are satisfied, the child is receiving a “free public education.”  Absent in the statute is any substantive standard prescribing the level of education to be accorded handicapped children.

 

“By passing the Act, Congress sought primarily to make public education available to handicapped children.  But in seeking to provide such access to public education, Congress did not impose upon the States any greater substantive educational standard than would be necessary to make such access meaningful.”  Board of Education v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176 at 192.  The Court says the intent of the act was more to open the

                                                                                                Higgins, Green, Reece

 

door of pubic education than to guarantee the level of education once inside.  The Court further states that whatever Congress meant by an “appropriate” education, it did not mean a potential-maximizing education.  It did not mean the State had to provide specialized services to maximize each child’s potential “commensurate with the opportunity provided other children.”  The basic floor of opportunity provided by the Act is access to specialized instruction and related services which are individually designed to provide educational benefit to the handicapped child.

 

DICTA

 

Implicit in the congressional purpose of providing access to a “free appropriate public education” is the requirement that the education to which access is provided be sufficient to confer some educational benefit upon the handicapped child. It would do little good for Congress to spend millions of dollars in providing access to public education only to have the handicapped child receive no benefit from that education. The statutory definition of “free appropriate public education,” in addition to requiring that States provide each child with “specially designed instruction,” expressly requires the provision of “such . . . supportive services . . . as may be required to assist a handicapped child to benefit from special education.” 1401(17) (emphasis added). We therefore conclude that the “basic floor of opportunity” provided by the Act consists of access to specialized instruction and related services which are individually designed to provide educational benefit to the handicapped child.

 

IMPLICATIONS

 

The determination of when handicapped children are receiving sufficient educational benefits to satisfy the requirements of the Act presents a more difficult problem. The Act requires participating States to educate a wide spectrum of handicapped children, from the marginally hearing-impaired to the profoundly retarded palsied. It is clear that the benefits obtainable by children at one end of the spectrum will differ dramatically form those obtainable by children at the other end, with infinite variations in between. One child may have little difficulty competing successfully in an academic setting with nonhandicapped children while another child may encounter great difficulty in acquiring even the most basic of self-maintenance skills. We do not attempt today to establish any one test for determining the adequacy of educational benefits conferred upon all children covered by the Act. Because in this case we are presented with a handicapped child who is receiving substantial specialized instruction and related services, and who is performing above average in the regular classrooms of a public school system, we confine our analysis to the situation.

 

 

 

 

PUBLICE SCHOOL LAW

 

William Allan Kritsonis, PhD

 

                                               

 

LEAST RESTRICTIVE ENVIRONMENT

 

INTRODUCTION

 

An important provision of Public Law 94-142 (IDEA) is that all handicapped students be educated in the least restrictive environment (LRE) (Heron & Skinner, 1981).  Federal law expresses a strong preference for placing the child with disabilities in the setting in which that child would be served if there were no disability (Walsh, Kemerer, and Maniotis, 2005). However, these requirements continue to generate complex and interesting questions from the field. In particular, this report focuses on questions that have been raised about the relationship of IDEA’s LRE requirements to “inclusion.”  If the goal of IDEA is to mainstream students with disabilities, despite efforts made from administrators, specialists, and staff, how can this be achievable if the child has not made academic progress in the regular classroom? 

 

 

Case One

 

United States Court of Appeals,

Fourth Circuit.

950 F.2d. 156

18 IDELR 350

 

Shannon CARTER, a minor, by and through her father, and next friend, Emory D. Carter, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellee,

v.

FLORENCE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT FOUR: Ernest K. NICHOLSON, Superintendent, in his official capacity; SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS; Bennie ANDERSON, Chairman; Monroe FRIDAY, Jack ODOM; Elrita BACOTE; T.R. GREEN; James W. HICKS, in their official capacity

No. 91 – 1047

 

LITIGANTS

 

Plaintiffs – Appellees:    Mark Hartmann, et al.

 

Defendant – Appellant: Florence County School District Four, et., al.

 

BACKGROUND

 

Mark Hartmann is an eleven year old child with autism.  Autism is a developmental disorder characterized by significant deficiencies in communication skills, social interaction, and motor control.  Mark is not able to speak and has severed problems with fine motor coordination.  Mark’s ability to write is limited.  He types on a keyboard but can only consistently type a few words such as “is” and “at”.  Mark has had episodes of

                                                                       

 

Loud screeching and other disruptive conduct; including, hitting, pinching, kicking, biting, and removing his clothing.  The school district proposed removing Mark from the regular classroom and place him in a class structured for children with autism.  However, he would be integrated for art, music, physical education, library, and recess.  Mark would be allowed to rejoin the regular education setting as he demonstrated an improved ability to handle it.  The Hartmanns refused to approve the IEP, claiming that it failed to comply with the mainstreaming provision of the IDEA, which states that “to the maximum extent appropriate,” disabled children should be educated with children who are not handicapped. 20 U.S.C. § 1412(5)(B). The county initiated due process proceedings, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(b), and on December 14, 1994, the local hearing officer upheld the May 1994 IEP. She found that Mark’s behavior was disruptive and that despite the “enthusiastic” efforts of the county, he had obtained no academic benefit from the regular education classroom. On May 3, 1995, the state review officer affirmed the decision, adopting both the hearing officer’s findings and her legal analysis. The Hartmanns then challenged the hearing officer’s decision in federal court.

While the administrative process continued, Mark entered third grade in the regular education classroom at Ashburn. In December of that year, the Hartmanns withdrew Mark from Ashburn. Mark and his mother moved to Montgomery County, Virginia, to permit the Hartmanns to enroll Mark in public school there. Mark was placed in the regular third-grade classroom for the remainder of that year as well as the next.

The district court reversed the hearing officer’s decision. The court rejected the administrative findings and concluded that Mark could receive significant educational benefit in a regular classroom and that “the Board simply did not take enough appropriate steps to try to include Mark in a regular class.” The court made little of the testimony of Mark’s Loudoun County instructors, and instead relied heavily on its reading of Mark’s experience in Illinois and Montgomery County. While the hearing officer had addressed Mark’s conduct in detail, the court stated that “given the strong presumption for inclusion under the IDEA, disruptive behavior should not be a significant factor in determining the appropriate educational placement for a disabled child.”

 

FACTS

 

Mark spent his pre-school years in various programs for disabled children. In kindergarten, he spent half his time in a self-contained program for autistic children and half in a regular education classroom at Butterfield Elementary in Lombard, Illinois. Upon entering first grade, Mark received speech and occupational therapy one-on-one, but was otherwise included in the regular classroom at Butterfield full-time with an aide to assist him.

After Mark’s first-grade year, the Hartmanns moved to Loudoun County, Virginia, where they enrolled Mark at Ashburn Elementary for the 1993-1994 school year. Based on Mark’s individualized education program (IEP) from Illinois, the school placed Mark in a regular education classroom. To facilitate Mark’s inclusion, Loudoun officials carefully selected his teacher, hired a full-time aide to assist him, and put him in a smaller class with more independent children. Mark’s teacher, Diane Johnson, read extensively about

                                                                                   

 

autism, and both Johnson and Mark’s aide, Suz Leitner, received training in facilitated communication, a special communication technique used with autistic children. Mark received five hours per week of speech and language therapy with a qualified specialist,   Carolyn Clement. Halfway through the year, Virginia McCullough, a special education teacher, was assigned to provide Mark with three hours of instruction a week and to advise Mark’s teacher and aide.

Mary Kearney, the Loudoun County Director of Special Education, personally worked with Mark’s IEP team, which consisted of Johnson, Leitner, Clement, and Laurie McDonald, the principal of Ashburn. Kearney provided in-service training for the Ashburn staff on autism and inclusion of disabled children in the regular classroom. Johnson, Leitner, Clement, and McDonald also attended a seminar on inclusion held by the Virginia Council for Administrators of Special Education. Mark’s IEP team also received assistance from educational consultants Jamie Ruppmann and Gail Mayfield, and Johnson conferred with additional specialists whose names were provided to her by the Hartmanns and the school. Mark’s curriculum was continually modified to ensure that it was properly adapted to his needs and abilities.

Frank Johnson, supervisor of the county’s program for autistic children, formally joined the IEP team in January, but provided assistance throughout the year in managing Mark’s behavior. Mark engaged in daily episodes of loud screeching and other disruptive conduct such as hitting, pinching, kicking, biting, and removing his clothing. These outbursts not only required Diane Johnson and Leitner to calm Mark and redirect him, but also consumed the additional time necessary to get the rest of the children back on task after the distraction.

Despite these efforts, by the end of the year Mark’s IEP team concluded that he was making no academic progress in the regular classroom. In Mark’s May 1994 IEP, the team therefore proposed to place Mark in a class specifically structured for autistic children at Leesburg Elementary. Leesburg is a regular elementary school which houses the autism class in order to facilitate interaction between the autistic children and students who are not handicapped. The Leesburg class would have included five autistic students working with a special education teacher and at least one full-time aide. Under the May IEP, Mark would have received only academic instruction and speech in the self-contained classroom, while joining a regular class for art, music, physical education, library, and recess. The Leesburg program also would have permitted Mark to increase the portion of his instruction received in a regular education setting as he demonstrated an improved ability to handle it.

 

DECISION

 

To demand more than this from regular education personnel would essentially require them to become special education teachers trained in the full panoply of disabilities that their students might have. Virginia law does not require this, nor does the IDEA. First, such a requirement would fall afoul of Rowley’s admonition that the IDEA does not guarantee the ideal educational opportunity for every disabled child. Furthermore, when the IDEA was passed, Congress’ intention was not that the Act displace the primacy of

                                                                                   

 

States in the field of education, but that States receive funds to assist them in extending their educational systems to the handicapped.” Rowley, 458 U.S. at 208. The IDEA “expressly incorporates State educational standards.” Schimmel v. Spillane, 819 F.2d 477, 484 (4th Cir. 1987). We can think of few steps that would do more to usurp state educational standards and policy than to have federal courts re-write state teaching certification requirements in the guise of applying the IDEA.  In sum, we conclude that Loudoun County’s efforts on behalf of Mark were sufficient to satisfy the IDEA’s mainstreaming directive.

 

DICTA

 

The IDEA embodies important principles governing the relationship between local school authorities and a reviewing district court. Although section 1415(e)(2) provides district courts with authority to grant “appropriate” relief based on a preponderance of the evidence, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2), that section “is by no means an invitation to the courts to substitute their own notions of sound educational policy for those of the school authorities which they review.” Board of Education of Hendrick Hudson Central Sch. Dist. v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 206 (1982).  These principles reflect the IDEA’s recognition that federal courts cannot run local schools. Local educators deserve latitude in determining the individualized education program most appropriate for a disabled child. The IDEA does not deprive these educators of the right to apply their professional judgment. Rather it establishes a “basic floor of opportunity” for every handicapped child. Rowley, 458 U.S. at 201. States must provide specialized instruction and related services “sufficient to confer some educational benefit upon the handicapped child,” id. at 200, but the Act does not require “the furnishing of every special service necessary to maximize each handicapped child’s potential,” id. at 199.

 

IMPLICATIONS

 

The IDEA encourages mainstreaming, but only to the extent that it does not prevent a child from receiving educational benefit. The evidence in this case demonstrates that Mark Hartmann was not making academic progress in a regular education classroom despite the provision of adequate supplementary aids and services. Loudoun County properly proposed to place Mark in a partially mainstreamed program which would have addressed the academic deficiencies of his full inclusion program while permitting him to interact with nonhandicapped students to the greatest extent possible. This professional judgment by local educators was deserving of respect. The approval of this educational approach by the local and state administrative officers likewise deserved a deference from the district court which it failed to receive. In rejecting reasonable pedagogical choices and disregarding well-supported administrative findings, the district court assumed an educational mantle which the IDEA did not confer. Accordingly, the judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded with directions to dismiss it.

 

 

 

 

William Allan Kritsonis, PhD

 

 

SPECIAL EDUCATION

 

 

SPECIAL EDUCATION

 

INTRODUCTION

 

“Appropriate” education is one that goes beyond the normal school year. If a child will experience severe or substantial regression during the summer months in the absence of a summer program, the handicapped child may be entitled to year round services. The Education for All Handicapped Children Act (EAHCA) passed in 1975, this act provided support to state special education programs to provide free appropriate public education to disabled children. National precedent establishing the tests for determining the need for an extended school year for special needs children.

            For the purpose of this case we will determine if there is sufficient enough evidence of regression to justify requiring the district to provide summer services to the student.

Case One

 

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit

 

 

Alamo Heights Independent School District-Plaintiff-Appellants

v.

State Board Of Education, et al., Defendants-Apelles

790 F .d 1153

 

 

LITIGANTS

Plaintiff –Appellant: Alamo Heights Independent School District

 

Defendants – Apelles: State Board of Education

 

Background

 

In the summer  1979, when Steven was seven, his mother moved into the Alamo Heights Independent School District. That school year Steven attended a special education program at Cambridge Elementary School. In the late spring of 1980, Mrs. G.

 

requested that the Alamo Heights Independent School District provide summer services for Steven.

For seven years prior to 1980 the Alamo Heights School District had offered a summer program to all special education students who were moderately or severely handicapped. The decision to offer the program was made on the administrative level, as a matter of district policy, and any moderate to severely handicapped child was eligible to

 

attend. In the summer of 1980, when Steven would have been eligible for this program, however, the School District changed its policy and offered only a half-day one-month program, without providing transportation. The decision to curtail the summer program was based on its cost and the apparent lack of interest on the part of teachers and eligible students in previous years.

No students from Steven’s multiply handicapped class took advantage of the 1980 summer program, nor did Steven. It is not clear, however, whether Mrs. G. was not told of the program or whether the lack of transportation and the hours made it impossible for Steven to attend. During that summer, Steven stayed with a baby-sitter who had no training in special education. There was testimony that Steven’s behavior deteriorated that summer and that he suffered regression in his ability to stand, point, and feed himself.

The next year Mrs. G.’s request for summer services and transportation was refused by school officials, without consultation with Steven’s Admission, Review and Dismissal (ARD) Committee or with his teacher. The only caretaker Mrs. G. could find for Steven lived a mile outside of the district boundary, and even during the school year, the School District would not provide out-of-district transportation.

Mrs. G. then employed legal counsel and appealed the denial of services to the Texas Education Agency. The administrative hearing officer issued an interim order requesting a meeting of Steven’s ARD Committee to consider the issue of summer services. The ARD Committee met and agreed only to provide some adaptive equipment for Steven and to request consultative services from the state during the summer of 1981. On August 21, 1981, the hearing officer issued a “proposal for decision” in which he found that the School District was required to provide summer services and related

transportation services during 1981, and also required the School District to make a decision regarding summer services for 1982 by March of 1982.

Facts

 

Without some kind of continuous, structured educational program during the evidence to conclude that Steven G. would definitely suffer severe regression after a summer without such a program, neither can it conclude that he would not and there is evidence that shows that Steven G. has suffered more than the loss of skills in isolated instances, and that he has required recoupment time of more than several weeks after summers without continuous, structured programming. A summer without continuous, structured programming would result in substantial regression of knowledge gained and skills learned, and, given the severity of Steven G.’s handicaps, this regression would be significant.

Decision

 

Mrs. G.’s efforts to obtain the appropriate provision of free educational services for her son were pursued within the administrative framework set up by the State of Texas pursuant to EAHCA guidelines. The success she achieved in requiring the School District to provide Steven with an appropriate individualized educational placement, including summer services, was obtained through and within the “elaborate, precisely

defined administrative and judicial enforcement system. Because we find that, whether or  denominated due process, the claims upon which Mrs. G. has prevailed are rights granted by the EAHCA, and because the EAHCA contains no provision for attorney’s fees, we agree with the district court that no attorney’s fees are to be awarded under Sec. 1988.

We also find that Mrs. G. is not entitled to attorney’s fees under the Rehabilitation Act. In Smith, the Court stated, “Of course, if a State provided services beyond those required by the [EAHCA], but discriminatorily denied those services to a handicapped child, Section 504 [of the Rehabilitation Act] would remain available as an avenue of relief.”

Mrs. G. asserts that the fact that the School District provided a summer remedial reading program, free of charge, to nonhandicapped children without providing an

analogous free summer program to handicapped children is a clear instance of discrimination on the basis of handicap in violation of Sec. 504.

 We do not agree. Under the EAHCA, the School District is required to provide handicapped children with a free, appropriate education geared towards their individual needs. If a handicapped child’s IEP requires summer services under the EAHCA, he is entitled to summer services. The fact that the School District affords some nonhandicapped children remedial help during the summer does not mean that it is required to offer similar remedial summer guidance to handicapped children, irrespective of whether their individual IEP’s provide for structured summer services. The school district’s action in Steven’s case has not been shown to constitute discrimination on the basis of his handicap distinct from the protection afforded under the EAHCA. Hence, Mrs. G. is not entitled to attorney’s fees under 29 U.S.C. Sec. 794a(b), the attorney’s fees provision of the Rehabilitation Act.

Finally, the School District argues that it was denied due process by the procedures employed by the State Board of Education during the administrative stage of this action. It contends that under Helms v. McDaniel, the hearing officer’s initial proposed decision of August 24, 1981 should have been considered the final decision of the case and that the hearing officer’s later adoption of the Commissioner of Education’s decision was a direct violation of Helms. It contends that the failure of the hearing officer to adopt his initial proposed decision as the final decision of the case denied them due process. The School District does not favor us with any authority for the proposition that an adjudicative officer is prohibited by the due process clause from changing his opinion in the course of an orderly procedure. We find the district court did not err in dismissing the School District’s due process claims against the state defendants.

 

Dicta

 

The district court carefully phrased its conclusion and, while it did not explicitly state that the educational program offered by the School District did not meet the “some

 

educational benefit” standard of Rowley, the district court showed that it was aware of that decision and its judgment is therefore tantamount to such a conclusion. Hence, we

 

hold that the district court applied the appropriate standard to the factual determinations supported by the record. The general injunctive relief granted by the court was

appropriate to ensure that Steven receives the summer programming to which he is entitled under the Act.

With respect to out-of-district transportation for Steven G., the district court found that transportation is included in the definition of “related service” under 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1401(a)(17) and that such transportation does not cease to be a related service simply because a parent requests transportation to a site a short distance beyond the district boundaries.

Implications

 

The evidence indicates that Todd was receiving benefit from the TISD special education program, and hence, the TISD special education program was an appropriate placement under IDEA. Equally important, the TISD special education program provided Todd with an opportunity to interact with nondisabled peers, and was a less restrictive environment than The Oaks. Thus, regardless of whether Todd extracted any academic benefit from the educational program at The Oaks, Todd’s parents’ unilateral decision to place him there remains their financial responsibility. For these reasons, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.

 

 

 

 

 

SPECIAL EDUCATION

 

 

Professor William Allan Kritsonis, PhD Program in Educational Leadership, PVAMU, The Texas A&M University System

 

 

SPECIAL EDUCATION

 

INTRODUCTION

 

In order to assure that all children are given a meaningful opportunity to

benefit from public education, the education of children with disabilities is

required to be tailored to the unique needs of the handicapped child by means of an individualized education plan (IEP). As a condition of federal funding, IDEA requires states to provide all children with a “free appropriate public education,” with the statutory term “appropriate” designating education from which the schoolchild obtains some degree of benefit.

            This report focuses on parents rights to place their son in a unilateral placement despite the public school program and IEP. The parents by law have the right to request reimbursement for private placement.

 

Case One

 

United States Courts of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit

 

TODD L., Mr. and Mrs. L., Defendant-Appellants,

v.
TEAGUE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, et al., Plaintiff-Appellee,

Docket No. No. 92-8427.

 

LITIGANTS

 

Plaintiffs-Appellant: Todd L., Mr. and Mrs. L., et.al

 

Defendant-Appellee: TEAGUE INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT

 

 

BACKGROUND

 

As a condition of federal funding, IDEA requires states to provide all children with a “free appropriate public education,” with the statutory term “appropriate” designating education from which the schoolchild obtains some degree of benefit. IDEA requires that children with disabilities be educated to the maximum extent possible with nondisabled children in the least restrictive environment consistent with their needs, a concept referred to as “mainstreaming.” In order to assure that all children are given a meaningful opportunity to benefit from public education, the education of children with disabilities is required to be tailored to the unique needs of the handicapped child by means of an individualized education plan (IEP).

Complying with IDEA, Todd’s local public school district (the Teague Independent School District, “TISD”), in collaboration with Todd and his parents, developed an IEP for Todd. Consistent with IDEA’s requirement that special education services be tailored to the unique needs of the child, the IEP emphasized one-on-one instruction in specially equipped classrooms, and reduced the length of Todd’s school day from seven hours to two hours. Todd’s school day was reduced not for the convenience of school staff, but in response to Todd’s inability to tolerate a longer school day without becoming unduly frustrated and discouraged, leading to regression rather than academic progress.

The school psychologist specifically found that a shortened school day would be necessary, at least temporarily, to assure that Todd’s inability to tolerate frustration did not lead to his giving up on academics altogether and dropping out of school. Though Todd was educated separately from his nondisabled peers for part of the school day, the school arranged for Todd to have contact with nondisabled peers. The goal of Todd’s four-year IEP was to provide him with a nonthreatening environment in which he could continue to make academic progress while gradually learning to tolerate a lengthened school day and increased stress. The record indicates that the authors of Todd’s IEP fully expected that ultimately Todd would be reintegrated into “the mainstream” of regular classes at the TISD school, and would graduate.

 

Facts

 

             When Todd’s parents sought reimbursement for the costs of Todd’s institutionalization, the TISD refused on the grounds that Todd had been able to benefit from the TISD program and that The Oaks placement was more restrictive than necessary to provide Todd with educational benefit. Todd’s parents appealed to a special education

hearing officer, who found that Todd’s parents should be reimbursed. The special education hearing officer found that Todd’s parents had established that Todd’s local

public school was an inappropriate placement while The Oaks was an appropriate placement. According to the hearing officer, there was no evidence that Todd had obtained any benefit from special education at the TISD School. Contending that this factual conclusion was clearly erroneous, and that the hearing officer did not take into account the relative restrictiveness of The Oaks and the TISD School’s special education program, the school district appealed the hearing officer’s decision to federal district court.

            Although the district court indicated that it gave “due weight” to the decision of the hearing officer, the district court concluded, after reviewing all the evidence from the administrative proceeding and hearing additional evidence, that the TISD public school placement was appropriate, and that The Oaks placement was inappropriate. Therefore, the district court reversed the hearing officer’s decision to grant Todd’s parents reimbursement for the cost of Todd’s institutionalization at The Oaks. Todd’s parents appeal the district court’s decision. We affirm.

Decision

          Having decided that the district court did not err in subjecting the hearing officer’s decision to a searching review, it remains only to decide whether the conclusions drawn by the district court were proper. We review de novo, as a mixed question of law and fact, the district court’s decision that the local school’s IEP was appropriate and that the alternative placement was inappropriate under IDEA. Christopher M. v. Corpus Christi Independent Sch. Dist., 933 F.2d 1285, 1289 (5th Cir.1991). We review the district court’s findings of “underlying fact” for clear error. Id. See also Sherri A.D., 975 F.2d at 207. Findings of “underlying fact” include findings that the schoolchild obtained

any benefit from special education services or would be threatened by a longer school day. Christopher M., 933 F.2d at 1289.  If a parent or guardian unilaterally removes a child from the local public school system, the parent or guardian may obtain reimbursement for an alternative placement only if able to demonstrate that the regular school placement was inappropriate, and that the alternative placement was appropriate. School Comm. of Burlington v. Department of Educ., 471 U.S. 359, 373-74, 105 S.Ct. 1996, 2004, 85 L.Ed.2d 385 (1985). If Todd’s IEP in the local public school district was appropriate, then there is no need to inquire further as to the appropriateness of The Oaks’ program.

          Under IDEA, an “appropriate” placement is that which enables a child to obtain “some benefit” from the public education he is receiving; not necessarily maximization of his potential. See Rowley, 458 U.S. at 198-200, 102 S.Ct. at 3047. In addition to requiring that the child’s placement be appropriate in the sense of providing some benefit, IDEA mandates that to the fullest extent possible, disabled children be educated with non-disabled children in the least restrictive environment. See 20 U.S.C. § 1412(5); Rowley, 458 U.S. at 202, 102 S.Ct. at 3048; Sherri A.D., 975 F.2d at 206 (“Even in cases in which mainstreaming is not a feasible alternative, there is a statutory preference for serving disabled individuals in the setting which is least restrictive of their liberty and which is near the community in which their families live”). A presumption exists in favor of the local public school district’s plan for educating the child, provided it comports with IDEA. See Tatro v. State of Texas, 703 F.2d 823, 830 (5th Cir.1983). See generally Rowley, 458 U.S. at 207-08, 102 S.Ct. at 3051.

          There is ample evidence that Todd received significant benefit from his public school placement. Todd’s teacher and school psychologist both testified that Todd made significant progress academically and behaviorally while in the TISD special education program. Not only did Todd advance in terms of grade level, he also became steadily more able to focus on particular tasks for longer periods without experiencing debilitating frustration. At the same time, the TISD special education program provided Todd with

some opportunity to interact with nondisabled peers, and the opportunity to participate in the affairs of the community in which he lived.

          Todd’s one-on-one instruction at TISD was no more restrictive than necessary to assure that he would receive some academic benefit from special education at TISD. The school psychologist testified that while she would have recommended some sort of residential placement had the district not been able to provide Todd with one-on-one

instruction, she would never consider placing a child like Todd at a residential facility as restrictive as The Oaks without first exhausting the full range of less restrictive alternatives. She testified that even though Todd had serious behavior problems, she did not consider him so unruly as to require twenty-four hour supervision in a locked unit. In the school psychologist’s opinion, The Oaks was a placement of last resort.

          By contrast to the unambiguous evidence that Todd benefitted from special education at the TISD school, the evidence that Todd benefitted from educational services at The Oaks is equivocal. The evidence Todd’s parents produced to support their claim that Todd benefitted academically from educational programming at The Oaks compares Todd’s performance before he received special education services at the TISD school with Todd’s performance after he was institutionalized. Hence, it is difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain whether the source of the benefit Todd obtained was provided primarily by the TISD school, or by The Oaks. It is uncontroverted that The Oaks’ focus was on behavior management, and that The Oaks devoted only the same or a little more time to Todd’s educational programming than did the TISD school.

        Finally, Todd’s placement at The Oaks involved more restrictions on Todd’s liberty than any other potential placement, removed Todd from his home community, and completely precluded him from having any contact with nondisabled peers. There is exceedingly little evidence, other than the hospital’s willingness to admit Todd, that he required such a restrictive environment. Although we can assume, based on Todd’s admission to The Oaks, that a physician

ratified Todd’s parents’ decision to hospitalize their son, the great weight of the evidence indicated that he could not only cope, but thrive, in a less restrictive setting.

Dicta

  The evidence indicates that Todd was receiving benefit from the TISD special education program, and hence, the TISD special education program was an appropriate placement under IDEA. Equally important, the TISD special education program provided

Todd with an opportunity to interact with nondisabled peers, and was a less restrictive environment than The Oaks. Thus, regardless of whether Todd extracted any academic benefit from the educational program at The Oaks, Todd’s parents’ unilateral decision to place him there remains their financial responsibility. For these reasons, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.

Implications

 

The district court carefully phrased its conclusion and, while it did not explicitly state that the educational program offered by the School District did not meet the “some educational benefit” standard of Rowley, the district court showed that it was aware of that decision and its judgment is therefore tantamount to such a conclusion. Hence, we hold that the district court applied the appropriate standard to the factual determinations supported by the record. The general injunctive relief granted by the court was appropriate to ensure that Steven receives the summer programming to which he is entitled under the Act.

Dr. William Allan Kritsonis Inducted into the William H. Parker Leadership Academy Hall of Honor (HBCU)

 

Remarks by Angela Stevens McNeil

July 26th 2008

 

Good Morning. My name is Angela Stevens McNeil and I have the privilege of introducing the next Hall of Honor Inductee, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis. Dr. Kritsonis was chosen because of his dedication to the educational advancement of Prairie View A&M University students. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in 1969 from Central Washington University in Ellensburg, Washington.  In 1971, he earned his Master’s in Education from Seattle Pacific University.  In 1976, he earned his PhD from the University of Iowa. 

Dr. Kritsonis has served and blessed the field of education as a teacher, principal, superintendent of schools, director of student teaching and field experiences, invited guest professor, author, consultant, editor-in-chief, and publisher.  He has also earned tenure as a professor at the highest academic rank at two major universities.

In 2005, Dr. Kritsonis was an Invited Visiting Lecturer at the Oxford Round Table at Oriel College in the University of Oxford, Oxford, England.  His lecture was entitled the Ways of Knowing through the Realms of Meaning.

In 2004, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis was recognized as the Central Washington University Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus for the College of Education and Professional Studies. 

Dr. William Kritsonis is a well respected author of more than 500 articles in professional journals and several books.  In 1983, Dr. Kritsonis founded the NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS. These publications represent a group of highly respected scholarly academic periodicals. In 2004, he established the DOCTORAL FORUM – National Journal for Publishing and Mentoring Doctoral Student Research. The DOCTORAL FORUM is the only refereed journal in America committed to publishing doctoral students while they are enrolled in course work in their doctoral programs. Over 300 articles have been published by doctorate and master’s degree students and most are indexed in ERIC.

Currently, Dr. Kritsonis is a Professor in the PhD Program in Educational Leadership here at Prairie View A&M University.

            Dr. William Kritsonis has dedicated himself to the advancement of educational leadership and to the education of students at all levels.  It is my honor to bring him to the stage at this time as a William H. Parker Leadership Academy Hall of Honor Inductee.

Dr. Kritsonis Recognized as Distinguished Alumnus

In 2004, Dr. William Allan Kritsonis was recognized as the Central Washington University Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus for the College of Education and Professional Studies. Dr. Kritsonis was nominated by alumni, former students, friends, faculty, and staff. Final selection was made by the Alumni Association Board of Directors. Recipients are CWU graduates of 20 years or more and are recognized for achievement in their professional field and have made a positive contribution to society. For the second consecutive year, U.S. News and World Report placed Central Washington University among the top elite public institutions in the west. CWU was 12th on the list in the 2006 On-Line Education of “America’s Best Colleges.”


Article from articlesbase.com

Revolutionary Policy Suggestions For Education Problems In Pakistan

education
by wallyg

Education has great effects over psyches. Whatever sort of education will be the mind will be as such. If we look over the history whenever any nation want to defeat others nation it first occupy the education systems and curriculums of the occupying nations. Education develops the roots of any nation. Through education any nation prepares their generation according to their religious norms and values. We can easily state that rising social unrest in any nation is mainly due to improper education of generations. Within two decades we could prepare one generation for the country. Two decades are a small span to prepare weapon (generation) but impact of this prepared weapon is long and forever. I called generation as a weapon; generation is no doubt is a weapon for development of any country. If we prepare our generation according to our religious norms and values and make them faithful and patriotic then they are useful and best secured weapon. Otherwise we are preparing enemies of our country. If the generations do not put on a right track then they will diverge in the ways which they found in easy access. Any country has one religion therefore there should be only one form of education. A country having different ways and levels of educations mentions that the country have no defined religion and culture.

Pakistan is going through lot of problems like terrorism, poverty, insecurity, sectarianism, ethnic, provisional and regional bigotries and many others. All these problems are due to lack of awareness and tolerance which are developed due to illiteracy. If we observe around us countries with most secured lives and economies prefer education for the people first. However in Pakistan phenomena of education kept far behind at every level of policy making for development. Our historical political parties mostly blame stressed international affairs started just after independence for their poor policies; they claim the foreign tensions do not give them space to think thoroughly about these social matters. Now activities of various governments developed a long history for failure of implementing true policies for education to all masses on equality and quality basis.

In this article first I will narrate the whole history with the help of various books, articles, reports and research papers. Then current situation will be discussed shortly, in the end I will suggest few approaches and policies according to my knowledge and experience. This article will be helpful for future policy makers who kept a sincere heart for the prosperity of people of Pakistan along with cultural preservation.

Contents

Historical background
Current situation Research papers outcomes
New educational policy 2009 ( Qualities and flaws)

Revolutionary policy suggestions Approaches
Curriculum suggestions

Ending words

Historical background

Even before the independence, Pakistan adopted the same education system that poured by Britain rule to occupy the sub-continent culturally. After the independence Pakistan failed to recognize the impacts of British schooling system and could not modify the maktab system of mughlia era according to modernism to fulfill Islamic as well as global competitiveness needs. Britain educational system was introduced with the aim to alienate the Muslims who hate British hegemony. British educational system completely abolishes Islamic way of teaching. They replaced Persian and Arabic, the pride of Muslims, with English. The curriculum designed to serve colonial empire instead of intellectual growth of students. Maktab were replaced by institutions setup by colonial administrations. The goal of all these educational changes was to dismantle the culture of Muslims, which make them able to rule for over centuries in history.

People of Pakistan are well aware of these facts despite this they failed to adopt and make effective policies which could resume their culture besides develop their lifestyles. Nowadays experts calculate myriads reasons of terrorism, poverty, unemployment, failure of economy and democracy, and insecurity but few of them able to understand the impact of educated system with Britain soul. While studying about history of education system in Pakistan I go through a book by M Imtiaz Shahid “Advanced Contemporary Affairs, book 62″. In this book Manzoor Ahmed narrates very controversial views our history of educational flaws in Pakistan. In his article “The problematique of education in Pakistan” he says;

” unfortunately, unlike communism which is based on a well worked out philosophy of history and social theory, amenable to intellectual refutation or amendment ‘ Islamic ideology’ is pseudo concept, having no intellectual sound basis and , since it is divine is not amenable to argumentation. This paradigm suits well to the feudalists and religionists, both having in-built antagonism for education. The situation worsens because Muslims as a whole have been suffering from the delusion that they are the possessors of knowledge and that their knowledge is self sufficient. They suffer from the phobia that an exposure to new ideas would threaten their identity and would weaken their belief system. If we look back at our history which ha been very proudly presented as one of the best, we would be perplexed to note that Muslim intellectuals ( ulema) have constantly refused to study the ideas which emerged in the wake of modernism, but were eager to claim that whatever the modernist were saying has already been said before by the Muslims……… during the days of Indian independence movement the critical mass of intellect as well as the intellectual capacity of Muslims leaders was very mediocre, though we had very sincere and educated leaders like Mohd Ali Jauhar, Hasrat Mohani, Allama Mashriqi, Maulana Maududi etc. none of them were able to visua;izae the world they would be living within in the next 50 to 100 years or so” page 417

Manzur Ahmed is himself Pakistani and Muslim but I don’t know why he narrates the Islamic ideology with such disdainful way, and I can’t understand why editor of this book approved his article for his book. No doubt there were various drawbacks of our intellectual leaders but those flaws should not connect with Islamic ideology. These shows that how we loss our Islamic cultural heritage and its implications that our people become, slave mentally. Although vast majority of people have great hearts for their Islamic ideology but they failed to utilize it due to incognizant of diversified knowledge recited by Quran. Like Manzoor various secular scholars feel Islamic ideology as a hurdle towards implications of modernism. Implications of modernism failed in Pakistan due to wrong perceptions spread by upper and secular classes. Especially in Musharraf era modernism aspersed in patriotic and fundamentalists groups. Mr. Musharraf introduces modernism by the nomenclature “modern Islam” these shacked fundamentalists and arouse fidgetiness among the people. He separated the Islam in two categories modern Islam and old Islam. However Islam is only Islam neither modern nor old. However modernism is something else. By definition, ‘process of adopting systems, methods, ideas more modern and more suitable for use at the present’. These systems are mostly related to technology advancements, diversified subjects literature and more in-depth study of cultures, origins and all other school of thoughts with the help of research and theorizing. Islamic studies do not bound people to seek knowledge; instead it encourages evaluating nature. There are no prohibitions by Islam to develop and investigate new methods and systems for the prosperity and development of people. Islam does not restrict to seek advancing education and implementing advance economic and marketing systems. Actually on the eve of concept of ‘modern Islam’ various evil psyches find a place to fit their evil thoughts and, hence make the Muslim Pakistanis subordinated towards implementations of modernism.

In Pakistan now we have number of such psyches who do not accept Islamic ideologies to be capable of capturing modernism. This happened due to adaptation of educational system with British soul. This turned the psyches of Muslims away from their religious knowledge and pride. After six decades of independence till now our governments are passive towards developing effective educational system that could resume our cultural values and develop self esteem in Muslims to adopt modernism to meet their needs and compete in world economies. From the next paragraph, I am going to illustrate workings of various governments for the provision of education.

In 1947, after independence, the new country had 83 colleges, 3 Engineering colleges, 108 teacher training schools and 71 technical, industrial and agricultural institutions. M. Ikram Rabbani demystifies history of education after independence in his book “New Millennium Pakistan Affairs, 12th edition 2008″. According to him, from 1947 to 1955 education was responsibility of local bodies. During that era education policy was victim of political instability and chaos. The first educational conference in Pakistan was held in November, 1947 in which Quaide-eAzam outlined an educational philosophy which incorporated both the fundamentals of Islamic traditions and modern science and technology. Among others things he suggested curriculum revision, diversification of courses, compulsory religious instructions and development of administrative machinery. Despite this, from 1947 to 1958 no significant reforms were introduced. However, during Ayub era, efforts were made to transform the educational system in a planned and systematic manner. His reforms include National Commission on Education (1959), Commission on student’s problems and welfare (1964), National commission on manpower and education (1969), New educational policy (1979). In his era, educational planning was handed over to the educational establishment which was charged with plan implementation and the evaluation of progress. Annual development program introduced in his time brought long range developmental needs.

Bhotto’s regime gave its Educational Policy on March 15-1972. He nationalized the privately managed institutions which, was considered a landmark of Bhutto’s regime. Education was made free and compulsory at primary up to class X. The university grants commission was established to coordinate all universities. During Zia’s era Maktab schools were revived and national education policy was announced under which private sector encouraged to contribute towards provision of education. Islamization of education was remarkable achievements of his era. Later, Junejo launched a strategy which was aimed to promote mass education. He gave top priority to education in his 5 point program and assigned Rs. 27400 million for that purpose. He focused mass literacy and enrolment of school dropouts through Nai Roshni Scheme.

In 1992 New educational policy ( NEP 1992) designed , its main areas of interest were primary education, literacy, quality of public institutions, setting up national testing service, decentralization of authority in the administrative set up of education system and resource generation. Benezir Bhotto introduced, “social action program” in which great emphasis laid on education and literacy rate within given span of time. Silent features of National education policy 1998 were to evolve integrated system of education by streamline all educational sectors which include private as well as public institutes and Deeni Madaras. Eradicating illiteracy through formal and informal education by involving communities. Revising curriculum, imparting in-service teachers training and revising teachers training curriculum, enhancing technical education opportunities to reduce poverty, developing higher education, information technology sector and library and documentation besides encouraging private sector. In sum all the policies developed were most of similar natures. There may be any difference in documentation format but all have same goals with changing words. Moreover all the policies use future tense and future continues tense while documenting which shows haphazardness approach adopted by all government. Every new government criticizes previous educational policy and developed new one despite ensuring implementation they focus only to documenting confabs.

In Musharraf regime no new educational policy designed, he follows the already existed policy. He converted the University Commission Grant by Higher Education Commission. In his regime all sectors adopted objective type examination pattern. National Testing service was also activated at various levels. His government approved 4% of GDP to education in 2007. He introduced 18 new public universities. Although he focused education more then any government before, and carried out his policies immediately but he could not tackle with Deeni Madaras dilemmas successfully and his failure leads to currents situation of terrorism and hate.

Despite long historical works have done on Educational development, heretofore we are facing huge illiteracy, low quality sub standard and unequal education. Poor and improper educational philosophy and phenomena adopted in Pakistan is creating different stratums with different means and objectives. This alternatively raises argumentation among various stratums and, hence whole situation becomes regretful.

Current situation

Education system of Pakistan is facing strong criticism both from national and international researchers. Numbers of documents are available on search engines which highlight different perspectives of false education in Pakistan. International folks give a special importance to the educational system of Pakistan as they understand the role of education in building nations. Various researchers discuss Pakistan’s educational system extreme heatedly. While reading these documents I do not scold those international researchers, whereas I was guilty at the attitude of my own leaders towards a very sensitive issue. Despite failure of all previous national education policies current designed national education policy seemed to be failed also.

Research papers outcomes

Center for research and security studies (CRSS) published a research paper with heading “curriculum of hate”. In this research paper they condemn the curriculum of public schools scornfully. Although I do not agree with this paper because this show hate of non-Muslims with Muslims and this is another issue. Although there are various faults in the education system of Pakistan but it is false to state that curriculum of Pakistani schools increasing hate and bigotries. There are various other factors of rising hate in fundamentalists, secularists and nationalists. No doubt education plays a vital role in eliminating these factors but we could not blame only education system. Because we have various affirmative personalities raised from the same curriculums.

Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) of Pakistan also put forward a research paper “The Subtle Subversion, The state of curriculum and textbooks in Pakistan” in 2002 which highlights various drawbacks in curriculum of Pakistan. The research paper also condemns education system of Pakistan and put forward various measures to follow for the government. However, unfortunately despite discussing technology and knowledge backwardness of the Pakistani curriculum, SDPI condemn Islamic norms and values and patriotic themes of Pakistani curriculum. SDPI research paper condemns the curriculum of Pakistan because it violates the rights of minorities. The research papers narrates that Islamic studies made compulsory for non-Muslims also which is against Islam. The whole researched paper seemed to be in favor of religious minorities but SDPI do not highlight the statistics of minorities in Pakistan. There are 96.16% of population are Muslims, 1.69 are Christians, 1.40% are Hindu, 0.35% are Qadiani, 0.33% schedules casts and 0.06 are others. So, why education system should design for other 3.84% of non-Muslims? The report criticizes Pakistan’s curriculum as a minority right violation, whereas according to current educational policy 2009, English language suggested to be compulsory as a medium of instructions at secondary and higher levels violate Pakistan’s people’s rights. While deciding English as a medium of instruction they should think that what percentage of our people can speak and understand English. By introducing English as a medium of instruction number of students will fail to understand lecturing and ask questions.

While condemning Pakistan’s education system SDPI must consider the facts that Muslim celebrates Christmas days and other events in western countries in schools, holi in India with Hindus, then there should be no objections on Islamic soul in whole Pakistani curriculum. I am, agree with the fact that our text books are not typically according to new world needs but its not mean that we have to blame Islam so. Whereas, it is significant to teach students about Islam more thoroughly for their moral development. Our scholars failed to spread true picture of Islam in the text books and there is a need to develop the pattern of Islamic studies. Students should be taught in a way that they become able to analyses Quran themselves and implement its teachings in their lives accordingly. Due to low quality teachings of Quran most of our people depends on priests and they mostly give suggestions on the basis of their sec and therefore various argumentative misconceptions develop over Islamic teachings among people. Our priests explain Quran is a way that it creates bigotries and hate. Quran have such moderate teachings that non-Muslims increasingly entering the circle of Islam by studying it thoroughly. The overall impacts of SDPI report shows that they are against Islam and they want to separate Muslims from Islamic studies.

Harvard University, Pomona College and World Bank jointly passed a research paper “Madrassa Metric: The Statistics and Rhetoric of Religious enrolment in Pakistan”. This research paper negates the all previous statistics about madrassa enrolments in Pakistan. According to them only 1% of Pakistani children attend madrassa, which is much lower then previously reported statistics. The report denies various facts attributed to reason of admitting children by Pakistani people in madrassa. The report explains that not only poverty is not the reason of admitting children in madrassa but various ethical groups prefer madrassa for their Islamic nature of teachings. Beside this most of children attend madrassa because of absence of government schools there, and the only option of madrassa there. Moreover, the research also discussed that madrassa are not making inroads into mainstream society in Pakistan. They support their statement by discussing qualities of various private schools in village areas. Overall the research was of the view that madrassa teachings are not only and major reason of terrorism in Pakistan.

Haroon Jaml and Amir Jahan measures inequality in education of Pakistan through their research “The knowledge divide: Education inequality in Pakistan” in 2003. They successfully measure, the persistence of education inequality in Pakistan through District Education Index (DEI). Their results show low levels of educational status with high inequality. The most vulnerable groups are rural areas, Balochistan province and rural females.

New educational policy 2009 (Qualities and flaws)

New educational policy 2009 highlights all the drawbacks and dilemmas of education in Pakistan successfully but it do not define track of implementation. The decision of NEP2009 to introduce national education system need tremendous workout, but despite completion of one year no such measures put forward to aware the public about new system which would be certain for all. Education policy 2009 use excellent words to narrate a positive picture of policy but how will this happened and when will this started and what would be the initial steps these all are not defined well and nothing have done even after one year. A very long document of national education policy is seemed like a text paper showing importance of education and dilemmas of education and its effects on the nations. The document beautifully describes all these topics and use very limited words to new decisions and their implementation processes.

New educational policy 2009 criticized a lot by intellectual circles. Shahid Siddiqui criticize this policy in hi article “New Education Policy” in the book 63 of Advance Contemporary Affairs by M Imtiaz Shahid. His first criticism is that this policy announced before the expiry date of previous policy. Government defends this criticism by quoting that previous education policy could not give required results. Further the writer condemns this statement of government by stating that this education policy also does not meet desired results and there is a problem at implementation level. According to him introducing English as a compulsory subject is not new, this had been decided by Musharraf regime. Moreover he explains disconnection between policy declarations and budget allocations. His most important criticism is on announcement of allocating 7% of GDP to education by 2015. The writer could not trust this statement because of facts that, in 2006-07 the allocation was 2.5% of GDP and in 2007-08 this was reduced to 2.47%. In the year 2008-09 the amount further came down to 2.1% Of GDP. Similarly Mr. Shaukat Aziz, announced 4% GDP for education but fails to catch this figure. NEP 2009 announced to raise level of public-sector schools will be lifted to match the levels of good private schools and deadline for this is 2010. Three months of 2010 have been passed but no any measure has been observed. New session had been started and student bought the same books that I studied in my school time.They may have any magic to meet target suddenly. Mr. Shahid asked repeatedly that how this all will be done? NEP announced to adopt universal curriculum but do not mention any strategy. Another intellectual Ejaz Naveed from Imperil College London criticizes education policy in the same sound.

NEP 2009 decided to exclude PTC and CT for hiring quality teachers and announced that to become a teacher one should be BED with Bachelor degree. If we observe in our schools and colleges most of teachers are masters with BED and MED but despite this they could not teach well. And in various places a teacher with simple Bachelor degree without any BED in private schools teach very well. Hence government should compare hiring process and training processes of private and elite schools with their process of hiring teachers.

According to this policy curriculum from class one and onwards include English (as a subject), Urdu, one regional language, mathematics and integrated subjects. Provincial and area education department have choice to select medium of instruction up to class fifth. This means after fifth class medium should be English. Moreover, math and science should be in English and provinces have option to teach these subjects in Urdu or English up to level five after this they should adopt English language. By reading these points I come to a result that our policy makers think that only English can make them developed nation. They do not cater the student’s problems they just make a policy with Musharraf’s tail. If on regional and provincial level students study in Urdu from 1 to 5 then how they could understand all the concepts of science and math by entering class 6, where they immediately have to face all concepts in different language. By doing so we are willfully deteriorating the quality of education and students mentality. Teachers will also burdened because they have to pay extra time to tell them meanings of all science and math terminologies first and make the students to memories them and then they could able to teach new language. This would also confuse the students too much. In the primary age students are not responsible enough to study themselves at home, parents have to read their diary and stress them to do homework if we introduce whole system in English then those parents who cannot understand English will be vulnerable to stress their students to do homework. After fifth class only those students become responsible for homework and exam preparations that are good in studies but careless students need strong check and balance at home. If of English language system most of the primary or secondary pass parents will fail to understand the text and nature of student’s assignments and could not help their children hence students will become weaker in studies.

While introducing new education policy 2009 it seemed that they aimed to preserve English language. Our policy makers think that only English can bring change. China, Japan, Korea, France, Germany all these countries do not use English at academic levels. They use software translators and interpreters to communicate with world and to understand them. Native languages enable the person to understand matters more thoroughly. Despite various English medium schools most of our people could not understand and speak English well and they depend on views and discussions of others on researches, reports, speeches and other events. Other people always discuss events according to their knowledge and views all people could not understand the real shape of matters through their discussions. Therefore there is a need to enhance and spread knowledge in native language.

Nevertheless, after carried out education system in last six decades, creates big number of populations who could not understand and utilize science and math concepts in Urdu language. Therefore we have to develop such a policy which preserve our cultural language Urdu, help us to understand Quran by studying Arabic and help us to understand world by studying English. Pakistan enters such circumstances that it needs to learn all these languages to defend themselves worldwide and compete with world without compromising their own Pakistani and Islamic culture. From the new section of this article I put forward some suggestions to develop such an educational system.

Revolutionary policy suggestions

Approaches

In this section of article I am suggesting some approaches to follow. I designed these approaches on the foundations of my own experience, knowledge and observations. These approaches are not theoretical proof of any intellectual; they are just my ideas as common person of this society. These approaches could help to design sound approaches to follow later by any good government. Because for implementation of such approaches and suggestions there is a dire need of good governance by our politicians. These approaches with details are following:

1.   Crescendo Approach

Most of our policies seemed sudden jump to targets. For example, the decision of present government to equalize public sector schools and private schools within one year. This is not an easy task. We have to design steps to achieve this target. And those steps should be decided before announcement of such activity. Government policy does not seem to have gradual steps to achieve this target. At this stage we could not stress schools and colleges to have English as medium of instructions. First curriculum should be designed such that student could become able to speak and understand English well, otherwise its flapdoodle to announce English as a medium of instruction. Moreover schools in villages and in less developed cities should be upgraded by hiring excellent professional and by introducing advance facilities. Beside this all the subjects should begin in any one language from early classes. Government decision to give option provinces to teach math and science up to fifth class either in Urdu or English will create problem in developing concepts in higher classes. They should be in English from beginning.

2.   Brain Gain

Higher education commission should send position holder students of intermediate under their strict observations and conditions, to foreign developed countries for studies with full facilities and contracts to return after completion of studies. China adopts the same strategy to meet the global competitiveness.

3.   Utilizing elite schools scholars in teaching

Most of circles suggest abandoning elite schooling, (City, Becon, Roots etc). Despite abandoning, government should benefit from such schools. Scholars of these schools should be hired in remote areas with good grades to improve the systems of those schools along with preparing reports over various issues related to the area and the school problems. Such students should be bounded for one year in remote areas, after that they should be prized at national level for encouragement. Then they should left independent to continue the same task or to do any other job. We could term it as brain gain within country.

4.   Improving, hiring process of teachers

Teaching is not an as much easy profession as much it is considered in our country. Concepts developed by teachers from very early life used by one in whole life. A kid learns to take out percentage in level-5, if he got good teacher then he could learn to calculate percentage in his brain without calculator just in few seconds but if he could not got a good teacher then in the whole life career after level-5, he could not calculate percentage without calculator. Hence while hiring teachers there should be very critical process just like for selecting bankers. In our country most of teachers hired due to their relationships with local MNAs. And in most places teachers hired but they do not attend schools in remote places. In various villages teachers put any girl or boy on their place and enjoy their pay while sitting in home and give some percentage to their substitute teachers. Hiring process should include written test, interview and demonstration. Private schools mostly prefer only demonstration, because they hire teacher to teach not only to give them money for their degrees. Teaching is an art and everyone could not teach, it should be checked through demonstrations.

5.   Teacher training

Government should compare its training mode with training of elite schools teachers. Or government should train trainers from elite school’s trainers to improve whole training menu. A very simple girls and boys having qualifications from public sector schools becomes excellent teachers after training thorough elite school trainers, therefore government should use this existing resource to improve teachers standard.

6.   Parents training institute and adult literacy schools

In developed countries besides teacher’s training there is strong concentration on parents training. Children passed only 8 to 6 hours with teachers and remaining 16 hours with parents. Children learn from all sorts of activities and experiences in their life therefore there is a dire need to improve their all teachers (parents are real teachers). Parents should be trained that how should they behave with their children in different matters, how could they create tolerance and democratic attitude in their children. Connecticut Commission on Children develops PLTI (parents leadership training institute) in 1992 in USA to enable parents to become leading advocates of children. Government should go through the documents of PLTI and other such organizations and develop parents training institute. Due to illiteracy and rigid customs Pakistani parents are unable to guide their children and to develop tolerant minds. Most of the parents could not understand the tracks of their children and strictly push them towards own wills and which ultimately destroy, number of generations in our country. In childhood parents mostly use abusive language with children and mostly scold them without any fault. Parents do not care that how much their attitude effects children moral life. Moreover most of parents discuss family disputes with children, even mostly mothers share misbehave of in-laws with young children which deteriorates their whole life and they start disliking and disobeying parents. There are several such matters which are creating argumentative generations. Hence government should put special concentration on this matter.

Besides this as there is number of illiterate people in adult ages and hence we have illiterate parents. Therefore adult literacy schools should be established which include 5 years education. In these five years parents should made able to read and write at least Urdu. The timing of these schools should also be adjusted two times in a day, so that mothers and fathers could attend them one after another.

7.   Institutionalize parent’s teacher’s coordination

While teaching in elite schools for several years and then in orphan school for one year I observe in both environments that there is strong lack of teachers and parents coordination. Teachers mostly blame parents and parents always blame teachers. However, they should sit together to understand the real problems of students. Most of the parents thought that teacher do not like their child, and they willfully neglect, him and do not give him position. Such attitude of parents should be improved through training. In public sector schools, parent’s teacher’s coordination is about absent. Private schools have their proper calendar for parent’s teachers meeting but public sectors do not give any importance to this matter. Public schools should strictly bind to manage PTMs and submit reports on them.

8.   Make teachers job attractive

Teaching job is not attractive in Pakistan. Most of girls and boys do teaching just for time pass in their study gaps. If we ask from any young, what will you want to become in elder age? Very few will answer “Teacher”. Most of teenagers will answer as doctor, engineer, lawyer or banker. This show the teacher’s job has no respect and status in or country, that’s why we have lot of low standard and unqualified teachers. The hiring process, facilities and pay packages of teachers also shows that teacher job is a poor job and professional people do not prefer it. Government should make this job attractive by announcing number of income packages especially for those who hired in remote areas. Remote area teachers should be facilitated by resident and transport facility along with additional pay.

9.   Forming complaint desks

Teachers and students faced lot of problems within their schools and colleges. There should be e-complaint desk, where students and teachers could mail their problems. Also there should be facility for students and teachers who could not use Internet or do not have facility of Internet to post mails to head office of complaint desk. Complaint office should have only one office in Islamabad for secrecy and for immediate action without any hurdles. Address of complaint desk should be mentioned on text books of schools so that everyone understands it and parents could also contribute. Annual reports should also be submitted to complaint desks and members of complaint desks should also visit schools as required for strong check and balance. This institute should be made highly well organized and highly qualified and educated people should be hired there.

10. Formation of book banks

Book banks mostly exist within schools; they should be developing officially like other banks. Elite people and foreign donors along with government and NGOs should donate books, copies, stationary, uniform and bags in the bank for poor people in the country. Moreover there should be special branch for student’s fee, where fee for poor children could be submitted by rich people. The bank should be advertised in media and Internet and people should encourage in supporting poor people for education.

11. Make annual reports compulsory (M&E)

For better monitoring and evaluation all schools should bound to submit annual reports to complaint desks. Then compliant desk should compare reports with complaints and manipulate progress of each. Members from complaint desks should also visit suddenly to schools for strict check and balance. Annual reports should contain all sorts of statistics on students along with number of parents meeting in the school and views/complaints and problems of parents. These reports should be utilized to check improvement in whole system and to establish new policies to new issues.

12. Adopt integrated curriculum

In the NEP-2009 government announce for one universal curriculum in country which is also termed national curriculum. However government faced lot of problems in formation of such curriculum. I go through document “curriculum reforms in Pakistan, a glass full or half empty” by Baela Raza Jamil, while reading it, I observe that they want to follow SDPI document on textbooks of Pakistan that I have discussed earlier in research outcomes. Like many other policies present government follow Musharraf policy in another face towards education dilemma.

Adaptation of national curriculum is good decision but there is a need to be fair in this regard. Our government is not fair and wants to injure Islamization and ideology of Pakistan through new curriculum. Punjab text book board and NWFP board both opposing this policy and understand the reality. People of Pakistan should wake up in this regard and, save the generation of Pakistan. Despite highlighting technological and literal knowledge backwardness, government is concentrating on abolishing Islamic norms and values and hinders patriotism of Pakistani people.

Integrating curriculum should be developing by considering curriculum of elite schools and public sector schools as well as Madrassa’s curriculum (to integrate Islamic education in curriculum and reduce madrassa system). Besides this repetition of various concepts should be minimized for example, students have to study about seasons both in social studies and science. They have to study about Seerat-e-Nabi both in Urdu and Islamiyat. There are various such topics which repeated in same level in different subjects. This increases text burden on students without increasing knowledge. Therefore subjects should be integrated in one broad category, to minimize number of subjects by increasing quantity of knowledge delivery. Various subjects integration suggestions are given in following sub-section of this article.

Curriculum suggestions

Presently students have to study English A and English B, Urdu A and Urdu B, Islamiayat, Social studies, science and maths from 1 to 5 in public sector schools and in additions to all these Arabic and Computer from 6 to 8. Later students have to study physics, biology and chemistry on place of Science and Arabic excluded in 9 and 10.in intermediate classes i.e. 11 and 12, science students of metric have options to selects engineering, medical or computer sciences and those students who studied economics in metric mostly move to social sciences in intermediate, although various students with less marks in science group of metric also selects social sciences in intermediate or move towards totally Art group. In various schools there is also option for Art group in metric.  If we compare subject diversification with elite school we could easily understand very few options for education careers in public sector schools. Therefore such a curriculum should be designed which could give place for more subjects. In this regard I put forward few suggestions.

Curriculum suggestions from 1 to 8

1    Islamic Studies

In this subject Islamiate, Arabic and Nazra should be integrated. It is rubbish to teach Arabic from 6 to 8 and after it in BA/BSc. This is only increase of quantity of subjects, it does not lead to make students able to understand and speak Arabic. In early ages students have to study Noorani Qaida from Qari sahib in homes or in Mosques/Madrassa, despite this Noorani Qaida along with reading and understanding Quran should be made compulsory subject from 1 to 8 so that on one hand students learn to speak and understand Arabic and on other hand they complete Quran in schools along with understanding it. Islamic stories and morals should be taught stepwise as explained in Quran Majid. In this way each Muslim will be become able to understand Quran himself and could apply it in their lives. Islam should be taught only in this subject no other subject should have topics from this subject, so that minority could have option to study that subject. In schools from level 1 to 5 non-Muslim students should be engaged in other activities during the period of Islamic studies. And from 6 to 8 non-Muslim students should give an option to attend the periods or to not attend it.

2    Urdu

In most of schools Urdu literature (Urdu A) and Urdu language (Urdu B), taught separately. This increase text burdens on students, despite this in the end of every comprehensive topic there should be grammar exercises related to the topic. Comprehension should be related to Urdu Adab only; it should not from Quran Majid. Islam should teach only in one subject thoroughly. Although some of writers work on Islam in their literature, it should be taught accordingly without any exaggeration.

3    English

Similar to Urdu, English literature and language should also integrate in one book. And only English writers should be discussed in this subject. Most of English books contain stories about Pakistan and Islam, it should be deleted as English is a language and it should teach to learn only language. In this way SDPI objections could also tackled while preserving our religion through subject Islamic Studies.

4    General knowledge

From 1 to 5 social studies, science and economics should be integrated in one subject General Knowledge. In our public schools text books there is no information on economics and therefore students unable to understand current affairs despite highly intelligence. In science and social study students study different topic repeatedly in both subjects such as seasons, planets, lunar and solar eclipse, latitude altitude, formation of rocks and layers of soil, parts of body and many others. Therefore these two subjects should be integrated in one to avoid repetition and minimize text burden. From 6 to 8, science should be separated and economics and social studies should be integrated in one subject “social sciences”

5)   Mathematics

Mathematics should be made advance and treated as separate subject throughout.

6)   Computer

Computer should be started practically from 6 to 8. In most of schools there are books on computer which give very little information on computer. That information could be delivering in one chapter in the beginning of class 6, therefore there should be no computer before 6 classes, and it just destroys students. From 6 to 8, students should make able to use MS office, installing windows, dealing with software, Internet, search engines and e-education. This is not difficult as most of people learn it all within 3 months course. Therefore it is better to teach all this thoroughly from 6 to 8.

In this way from 1 to 5, total number of subjects will be 5 instead of 8 or 9. Similarly from 6 to 8, total number of subjects will be 7, instead of 9 or 10. It is important to reduce number of books and copies to lesson weight of heavy bags and burden of too much text and copy work. Some of suggestions in this regard are following.

A.  Reduce copy work and home work by introducing work books

In most of schools teachers use whole time in displaying answers for question on white board and students copy them on their note copies with full silence. Some of students have very slow writing and they could not complete all in one period, teachers mostly waste their time in checking about 200 to 300 copies daily with lot of mistakes and despite this mostly scold by admin and parents over little mistake. Therefore workbooks should be introduced in which answers of various questions given, and students only have to learn them, and teachers could have time to clear them questions and answers both. In most of the cases students do not know what the question is and what the answer, in exams they mostly give, answer of another question to the question asked. This happened because students could not understand English language, and teachers have, pressure to complete syllabus and therefore they could not clear meaning and concept of each question along with answers. Therefore workbooks should be installed which include, question answers, objective type activities i.e. fill in the blanks, MCQs, true false, matching columns etc ( available on Internet as worksheets which are easy to download and print, to develop workbooks one should get benefit of those websites). Workbooks with answers of question should be for 1 to 5, before this (from6 to 8) space for answers should be left empty and students should be guided verbally in class by teachers about answers and students have to fill themselves. After 8 class there should be no work books.

B.  Activity based learning

Activity based learning should be introduced; most of concepts could not cleared to students unless they do not experience it. On Internet search engines now there are variety of activities provided on each subject and concept. In the end of each topic in work books there should be explanations of activities and schools should be compelled to follow them and give statistics about them in annual reports and it should be then checked by complaint desks whether there is any reality in the reports or not?

C.  Painting activities

In most of the schools there is separate paper of drawing which is totally unfair. Drawing is an art and some students could have natural interest in it while others do not have. It is natural that some students could draw pictures finely but some could not even after lot of practice. Therefore painting should be installed only as an activity and students should not forcefully compel to draw dog or cat only. Coloring, painting, sketching and other techniques should be delivered to students but they should let independent to do any work in drawing activity periods.

D.  Extracurricular activities

Most of the public sector schools in remote areas neglect extracurricular activities like sports, annual day, fun fair, and various types of competitions. Schools should be bound to start such activities and give statistics over them in annual reports to complaints desk.

Curriculum suggestions for 9 and 10

In the end of 8 classes, after one month counseling about various subject options in 9 and 10, students should be kept independent to select any one of following four subjects which include further subjects and there should be no compulsory subject in this stage. Students who select any one of following four subjects would study only enlisted sub-subjects with detailed comprehension thoroughly.

1. Islamic Studies ( islamic law, islamic history, Arkane-Islam, Quran with full translation and commentary)

2. Literature( Urdu, English, Arabic, Arts)

3. Social Sciences ( Pakistan Studies,World Affairs,  Economics and Politics, Sociology)

4. Science ( Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Computer, Maths)

Students should give assignments which they have to search on Internet, each section should have there own website which should open to students to submit their subjectivity that develop in their minds during studying as articles, newsletters and manuscripts. Students should encourage developing their magazines which include their writings and views.

Curriculum suggestions for 11 and 12

In intermediate, after one month counseling, students have to give option to select any one from sub-subjects of their particular category. And that category should be divided further in few subjects for more comprehensive and advance education over the various topics. Here I want to discuss Pakistan studies, students have to study same Pakistan studies from 9 to 13 class, that is from metric to Bsc. It is totally flapdoodle and crummy to make such a subject compulsory for 6 years without any solid knowledge. Contents of Pak studies should be made more comprehensive in metric, so that after metric if students select this subject for their intermediate then they could study further diversification of this subject.

After intermediate

In the end of 12 years qualification, now students have to select any particular subject for four years Bachelor. After such a sharp education from 1 to 12, students could absorb advance concepts in active ages of their minds i.e. teenage, in this age student mind is most active and they could understand and learn more quickly. Therefore it is effective to utilize this age. In Pakistan most of students have, chance to study advance concepts in Mphil or PHD, in the age where he/she have also to marry and support their parents. In that age various other tensions attached with any single person, and they could not seek and absorb advance concepts. Pakistan is far behind in race of concepts in every subject therefore there is a need to improve the system in a way that it not only increase quantity but also improve quality.

While describing curriculum I suggest “counseling” in the end of each step of education. The aim of this counseling is to tell students that how a particular subject could help you in life. And it could make easy for students to select subject according to their will. Most of the parents compel children to select medical or engineering only, after wards students could not absorb them and waste their important years of life. Counseling could help them to select subject according to their taste.

Summer Camps/Vocational trainings

In schools there summer camps should be make certain in which students have to learn cooking, stitching, knitting, driving, singing , reading writing any regional language and etc. such courses should be make open to both girls and boys to reduce gender dependency in the society.

Diploma Education/ technical training

Technical education courses should be offered after 10 years qualification but diploma courses should be offered after 12 years of qualification. Instead of BED and MED, any diploma and post diploma course in education should be offer after 12 years qualification. To increase the number of quality teachers for primary and secondary school years in short span of time.

Ending words

In the end I want to tell that suggestion that I have display in this article may not be best but they are not as worse as much existing are. Although these suggestions seemed very difficult to achieve but infact they are not, there is a need of work hard only. Even I can’t say that it is much costly, formation of book bank could reduce various expenditures. Moreover it is very clear that if existing funds utilized fairly then there could be no shortfall of funds.

Sadia Hanif From Pakistan


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