‘Every third child in Sindh is out of school’

Education secretary says teachers do not want to be stationed outside the city.


Express March 20, 2011

KARACHI:


Every third child in Sindh is out of school even though school enrolment in Sindh is four per cent higher this year, said the education secretary.


Naheed S Durrani, the secretary for the department of education and literacy, was speaking at a seminar titled ‘Empowerment through girls’ education in contemporary Muslim societies’ on Saturday.

Of those listed as literate in the country, 33 per cent can read one sentence, 21 per cent can read a story and 27 can calculate two-digit subtractions while only 13 per cent can work on three-digit division problems. These are not government statistics, Durrani clarified. During the seminar, she wished to present herself as a member of the civil society rather than a bureaucrat.

With the present situation, it seems “highly challenging” to meet the Millennium Development Goals of the universal completion of primary education and elimination of gender parity in education, she said.

During the secretary’s presentation, a slide read that there are a total of 11 million school going children in Sindh but only 6.4 million are enrolled in schools. The total number of schools was listed as 49,605 with 150,000 teachers. And of the Rs70 billion budget, 85 per cent is spent on salaries, Durrani said.

Referring to the challenges of teaching, Durrani said that lecturers, professors and teachers do not want to be stationed outside the city. In fact, most even refused to take courses in Malir and Ibrahim Hyderi, she added. Clearly frustrated with the lack of due diligence by some teachers, she said that when show-cause notices were issued and action was taken against them the teachers started protesting, only to be supported and covered extensively by the media.

According to the secretary, 85 per cent of the schools in Sindh were in a space of four or less rooms. Another 20 per cent do not even have a building and 60 per cent have no access to clean drinking water. Meanwhile, 61 per cent of the schools were working with just one or two teachers.

Durrani said her department is trying to achieve a merger and consolidation between schools to ensure accountability of teachers and other resources. She also endorsed greater administrative autonomy in which school headmasters will make the final call when hiring staff members. This will also help eliminate teachers, who are not appointed on merit but rather through influential means.

The secretary accepted that the socio-economic context for Sindh and Balochistan has been tougher than other provinces especially with the floods. On scarcity of jobs, she defended her department by saying that the education department is not a recruitment agency and its job is to educate and not create jobs.

Educationist and teacher trainer Abbas Husain said there are six major influences for girls’ education in Pakistan. First, her family and the ‘muhalla’ she lives in; second, the political environment of her country and the laws on education; third, her school and its curriculum, which should be free of gender biases; four, her office space in which many positions allotted for women are occupied by men; five, the role of religious institutions that limit the role and growth of women; and six, the media, which presents women as showpieces and trophies in advertisements.

Talking to The Express Tribune about her personal experience, columist Zubeida Mustafa said that she noticed a stark difference in education when one of her daughters did her O’ Levels and the other one did Matric. “Frankly, private schools do not represent the state of education in the country,” she said.

She supported the need for a balance in the standard of education between private and public schools and said that the decline began with the start of nationalisation. “Private schooling is very expensive. Some years ago, I calculated it to be one-fourth of the budget of a double-income household with two children. Now I expect it to be a bigger chunk.”

Published in The Express Tribune, March 20th, 2011.

COMMENTS (2)

Amar Fayaz | 12 years ago | Reply Very well written. Here I am adding some points. I’d worked in Sindh Education Project and have found that majority of primary schools are non-functional because following reasons: 1. Buildings of schools are encroached by local influenced persons. 2. Teachers are not attending and they are treated as ghosts. 3. Non-planning of schools allotment, eg: mostly schools are founded very remote areas, or nearby to another school (somewhere three schools were found in small village) 4. Due to law and order situations and tribal clashes parents are not sending their children in schools. 5. Especially girl’s primary school, lady teacher was unable. I have also suggested to the Education department that review the policies of schools foundations and immediately terminate the ghost teachers. But the problem comes same like a tribal and feudalism psyche. Here mostly education officers are belonging from those tribes and feudal who have already encroached the school buildings. There is only one solution. All schools should hand over to Public Private Partnership (PPP) system. So the sense of ownership in community may be increase. Thanks
jadgaal1 | 13 years ago | Reply The uncovered face of brutality, inhumanity and apex of barbarism by Pakistani security forces and intelligence agencies in Balochistan against the indigenous Baloch. These bodies are unrecognizable and have turned into skeleton. Are Human Rights organisations and the International Community still waiting for more brutes to recognize us as Humans? Intervene before its too late, none will be safe from Pakistani barbarism in the future. Unstable Pakistan in order to stable the world
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