Education analysis: As compared to other major cities, students of Karachi show the least progress
Surveys by Alif Ailaan and Aser reveal the shortcomings of education in the country.
KARACHI:
Perhaps the main problem that plagues the schools of Karachi, as well as those in the rest of the province, is the limited progress that students show during their formative years.
Grade 1 students of the country’s largest city show remarkable prowess in mathematics and languages but fast forward to grade 10 and the students perform worse than those of any other major city. It is therefore clear that learning outputs in the city are by far worse than that of any other, with teachers receiving the chunk of the blame for failing to impart knowledge to the students.
Teachers need training
To improve matters, it is vital that the teachers are trained and the fact is not lost on education minister Nisar Khuhro. “We are trying to improve the output of teachers and we have been working hard to train them,” he said. “We have trained almost 35,000 teachers in collaboration with the Canadian International Development Agency since 2006, and we are aiming to train another 5,000 this year. As many as 40,000 headmasters across the province will also be trained under this project.”
Khuhro was also quick to accept that the education system, in the city, in the province and in the entire country, needs a lot of work and he felt that focus on school development projects is required to improve the situation. “A significant amount has been kept aside for development projects,” he claimed. “Out of that amount, 40 per cent will be for new projects and 60 per cent is for ongoing ones.”
The system is in shambles, however, and there is just as much need to invest in the short-term as there is in the long-term. Realising this, the provincial government has decided that funds will be released to projects depending on estimated time till completion. “The projects that can be finished soon will get money first so that there are immediate improvements,” revealed Khuhro.
A lack of teachers or the increased number of students cannot be blamed either, as the ratio of teachers to students in the city’s primary schools stands at 20:1, nearly half that of the national average of 37:1 and the ratio is dwarfed by those of Lahore and Peshawer; 43:1 and 47:1 respectively.
Eyebrows are often raised at the amount of money being spent on the salaries of teachers - 75 per cent of the total Rs134.3 billion education budget - and the lack of output of government teachers, who out-earn private school teachers, has done little to silence the critics.
System? What system?
Khuhro may be satisfied with the state of teacher training but others are not. “How is training 40,000 teachers in eight years a satisfactory number?” asked Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi programmes director and one of the brains behind the Annual Status of Education Report, Baela Raza Jamil. “And what good does training those teachers do when there is no long-term vision and so much institutional disconnect, especially since the Sindh Teachers Education Development Authority (Steda) is still not functional?”
Steda, she went on to reveal, was supposed to be the umbrella body to monitor all teacher training programmes in the province and was to accredit all private and government training programmes. However, the body that was built in accordance with the Steda Act, 2012, has yet to be made functional and its Rs100 million annual budget goes unspent, added Jamil.
There is also a Provincial Education Assessment Centre to monitor the progress of students, but just like Steda, it is an organisation only on paper.
Lack of facilities and infrastructure
However, fingers should not be pointed only at the teachers as other factors hinder education output. Many of the schools in the province are without basic facilities and even Karachi is not an exception. As many as 30 per cent of the city’s public schools do not have electricity, 43 per cent do not have water and 10 per cent do not have a boundary wall. For comparison, only three per cent of schools in Lahore do not have electricity, a negligible number do not have water and a mere two per cent do not have a boundary wall. “We will be focusing on repairs and maintenance of schools,” promises Khuhro, saying the right things as always, but nothing palpable has been done so far on this front.
A change in curriculum
In an attempt to improve output, the curriculum for primary schools has been changed and teachers are now being given refresher courses, claimed Khuhro. However, gauging the benefits of such a change is difficult as any improvement due to the curriculum is dependent on the teachers.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 29th, 2014.
Perhaps the main problem that plagues the schools of Karachi, as well as those in the rest of the province, is the limited progress that students show during their formative years.
Grade 1 students of the country’s largest city show remarkable prowess in mathematics and languages but fast forward to grade 10 and the students perform worse than those of any other major city. It is therefore clear that learning outputs in the city are by far worse than that of any other, with teachers receiving the chunk of the blame for failing to impart knowledge to the students.
Teachers need training
To improve matters, it is vital that the teachers are trained and the fact is not lost on education minister Nisar Khuhro. “We are trying to improve the output of teachers and we have been working hard to train them,” he said. “We have trained almost 35,000 teachers in collaboration with the Canadian International Development Agency since 2006, and we are aiming to train another 5,000 this year. As many as 40,000 headmasters across the province will also be trained under this project.”
Khuhro was also quick to accept that the education system, in the city, in the province and in the entire country, needs a lot of work and he felt that focus on school development projects is required to improve the situation. “A significant amount has been kept aside for development projects,” he claimed. “Out of that amount, 40 per cent will be for new projects and 60 per cent is for ongoing ones.”
The system is in shambles, however, and there is just as much need to invest in the short-term as there is in the long-term. Realising this, the provincial government has decided that funds will be released to projects depending on estimated time till completion. “The projects that can be finished soon will get money first so that there are immediate improvements,” revealed Khuhro.
A lack of teachers or the increased number of students cannot be blamed either, as the ratio of teachers to students in the city’s primary schools stands at 20:1, nearly half that of the national average of 37:1 and the ratio is dwarfed by those of Lahore and Peshawer; 43:1 and 47:1 respectively.
Eyebrows are often raised at the amount of money being spent on the salaries of teachers - 75 per cent of the total Rs134.3 billion education budget - and the lack of output of government teachers, who out-earn private school teachers, has done little to silence the critics.
System? What system?
Khuhro may be satisfied with the state of teacher training but others are not. “How is training 40,000 teachers in eight years a satisfactory number?” asked Idara-e-Taleem-o-Aagahi programmes director and one of the brains behind the Annual Status of Education Report, Baela Raza Jamil. “And what good does training those teachers do when there is no long-term vision and so much institutional disconnect, especially since the Sindh Teachers Education Development Authority (Steda) is still not functional?”
Steda, she went on to reveal, was supposed to be the umbrella body to monitor all teacher training programmes in the province and was to accredit all private and government training programmes. However, the body that was built in accordance with the Steda Act, 2012, has yet to be made functional and its Rs100 million annual budget goes unspent, added Jamil.
There is also a Provincial Education Assessment Centre to monitor the progress of students, but just like Steda, it is an organisation only on paper.
Lack of facilities and infrastructure
However, fingers should not be pointed only at the teachers as other factors hinder education output. Many of the schools in the province are without basic facilities and even Karachi is not an exception. As many as 30 per cent of the city’s public schools do not have electricity, 43 per cent do not have water and 10 per cent do not have a boundary wall. For comparison, only three per cent of schools in Lahore do not have electricity, a negligible number do not have water and a mere two per cent do not have a boundary wall. “We will be focusing on repairs and maintenance of schools,” promises Khuhro, saying the right things as always, but nothing palpable has been done so far on this front.
A change in curriculum
In an attempt to improve output, the curriculum for primary schools has been changed and teachers are now being given refresher courses, claimed Khuhro. However, gauging the benefits of such a change is difficult as any improvement due to the curriculum is dependent on the teachers.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 29th, 2014.