logo
Opinion More regulation on private schools is bad idea

Opinion More regulation on private schools is bad idea

Indian Express25-04-2025
In 1959, a wonderful essay by Ram Manohar Lohia suggested that powerful people have caste, wealth, and English education. The logical antidote to the problem posed by Lohia was improving India's free K-12 school education. But this opportunity has been sabotaged by flailing government schools; the share of India's children attending a government school has now declined to 45 per cent. This number is 85 per cent in the US, 90 per cent in the UK, and 95 per cent in Japan. Policymakers redirecting the anger at free government schools to self-funded private schools through higher regulatory cholesterol must proceed with caution — the most expensive school is no school.
Good K-12 schools not only represent our best bet for improving social mobility but are also imperative in the new world of education, skills, work, and jobs. In the old world of education, Google knew everything. In the new world, AI is learning everything. In the old world of skills, the objective was to prepare, in the new world, the objective is to repair and upgrade. In the old world of work, employment was a lifetime contract. In the new world, employment is a short, intense, and taxicab relationship. In the old world of jobs, policymakers and educators could predict where jobs would be in the next decade; in the new world, all market predictions seem to have the efficacy of palm reading. More importantly, in the new world of work, dangerous, dirty, repetitive, and uncomplicated jobs will increasingly be done by software and machines.
The low student enrolment share of government schools was choice, not fate. It was a blind spot for the central and state governments in the first 45 years after Independence, and the next 35 years were lost to tactical changes like smaller class sizes, higher teacher salaries, and higher teacher qualifications. This second miss is a warning against the overselling of randomised control trials by economists — they offer solutions that are often correct but rarely scalable, generalisable, or replicable. Some of the tactical changes were necessary but insufficient without systematic reform of governance and teacher performance management.
Performance management is often equated with teacher attendance, yet a teacher needs to be evaluated on outputs (skills and scores) and inputs (competence and classroom management). Scores can be measured based on continuous assessments or end-of-year exams. Skills and concepts are harder in a world where soft skills — being curious, courageous, confident, risk-taking, collaborative and communicative — are also hard skills. Judging teacher competence involves evaluating student interaction, knowledge, planning capacity, communication, feedback abilities, collaboration, and a drive towards excellence. Classroom management needs assessment through observation of teaching and learning (teaching often occurs without learning), classroom setup, instructional differentiation (for process, product, and learning styles), and communication (clarity, questioning, and responsiveness).
Governance is mainly about controlling resources, but it should also be about learning, planning, design, responsiveness to students, parent involvement, teacher management, integrity, faculty growth planning, feedback capability (both formal and informal), role modelling, and fair decision-making. Currently, government school governance confuses school buildings with building schools; almost 4 lakh of our 15 lakh schools have fewer than 50 students (70 per cent of schools in Rajasthan, Karnataka, J&K and Uttarakhand). China has a similar number of students to India, but it has 30 per cent of our schools. State governments must consolidate schools (this will reduce the teacher shortage and multi-grade teaching), dump opaque transfer policies (in a system where tenure and compensation are off the table, location is a potent tool for performance management), grant budget flexibility and delegate funds, functions and functionaries away from state capitals.
Excellence in government schools requires substantive performance management. In other words, a fear of falling and hope of rising, rather than the current box-ticking best captured by the Tamil aphorism, Naan adducha maadri addikyeren, nee arrara maadri aru (I will pretend as if I am beating you, you pretend as if you are crying). Bureaucrats and incompetent teachers, benefiting from the status quo of government schools, insist that progress requires more patience, time, and money. But the current system will fail our children just like Indian socialism failed its poor.
My yearning for better government schools is not an argument against private schools (I attended one). Without this market response to demand, the post-1947 policy errors in primary education would have been catastrophic for India's human capital, the software industry, and corporate India. The notion that the failure of government schools can be overcome by higher regulatory cholesterol for private schools ignores rising costs, including higher teacher salaries, skyrocketing construction costs, and increasing land prices. The cynical confiscation of capacity from private entrepreneurs (RTE takes away 25 per cent) feels like a policy surrender to a tragedy where poor people are paying money to avoid something that is free. It should, instead, be a catalyst for adding quality to what is free.
The challenges of government schools are hardly unique to India or new; Abraham Lincoln filled out an election form describing his education as 'defective'. But it's time to take on the vested interests in government schools that steal the future of our young. Children have only one chance to grow up.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gadchiroli's Maraknar gets its first-ever bus service since Independence
Gadchiroli's Maraknar gets its first-ever bus service since Independence

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Gadchiroli's Maraknar gets its first-ever bus service since Independence

Residents of Maraknar—in Gadchiroli district on the foothills of Abujmarh which had no access to public transport until now— got a reason to rejoice as an MSRTC bus made inroads into this remote village on Wednesday, the first time since Independence. Until last year, residents had to walk five to six hours through dense forests to reach Kothi, the nearest village with bus connectivity. Although a road upto Markanar was built last year, bus services began only on Wednesday. Over 1,200 people, including students, patients, and farmers, are expected to benefit from the bus service. According to Gadchiroli police, the new bus route from Markanar to Aheri will also benefit nearby villages such as Murumbhushi, Phulanar, Koparshi, Poyarkothi, and Gundurwahi, which for long did not have access to public transport. The initiative was made possible through the concerted efforts of Gadchiroli Police and the Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC). Gram Patil of Maraknar Jhuru Malu Mattami inaugurated the bus while CRPF Assistant Commandant Avinash Chaudhary and police sub-inspector Dilip Gawali of Kothi police station formally flagged it off. The moment was celebrated with the distribution of sweets by the police. Located just 6km from the Chhattisgarh border in the Bhamragad sub-division, Maraknar is one of several villages now benefiting from recent development under police protection. Roads like the one from Kothi to Maraknar were completed last year, and the ongoing Maraknar to Murumbhushi road has opened up long-isolated areas in the region. A mobile tower was also installed in Maraknar recently, improving communication in the village. On February 9 this year, villagers unanimously passed a resolution refusing to support Maoists in any way. Subsequently development work was expedited under the civic action programmes by the Gadchiroli Police Force. In recent years, the Gadchiroli Police Force has facilitated the construction of over 420km of roads and 60 bridges, despite security threats. Earlier this year, similar services were launched from Gatta-Gardewada-Wangeturi and from Katezari to Gadchiroli, also aimed at easing life in some of the most difficult terrains. This initiative was the result of efforts led by PSI Dilip Gawali, CRPF personnel and Kothi police in Gadchiroli. The initiative was guided and supported by senior officials of Gadchiroli, including Superintendent of Police (SP) Neelotpal, Additional SPs M Ramesh, Satya Sai Karthik, Gokul Raj G, and DySP Vishal Nagargoje, along with SDPO Bhamragad Amar Mohite.

Veteran Congress leader C.V. Padmarajan passes away
Veteran Congress leader C.V. Padmarajan passes away

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Veteran Congress leader C.V. Padmarajan passes away

Veteran Congress leader C.V. Padmarajan passed away in Kollam on Wednesday. He was 93. Doctors attributed the cause of death to old-age ailments. Mr. Padamarajan had handled Finance, Power, and Fisheries in the K. Karunakaran and A.K. Antony governments. He was twice elected to the Assembly from the Chathanoor constituency in Kollam district. Mr. Padmarajan also served as the president of the Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee from 1983 to 1987. Born in Paravur, Kollam, in 1931, Mr. Padmarajan began his political life as a member of the All Travancore Students' Congress during the heydays of the Independence movement. He later graduated in law and served as District Government Pleader and Public Prosecutor in Kollam. Mr. Padmarajan's wife, Vasantha, and two sons survive him. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan expressed his condolences to Mr. Padmarajan's family, friends and Congress workers. He said the veteran leader had made his mark as a lawyer, co-operator, and parliamentarian. Mr. Vijayan said that Mr. Padmarajan had risen in the ranks of the Congress through sheer hard work and grassroots-level organisational skills. As a legislator and Minister, Mr. Padmarajan was adroit in presenting the government's case in the Assembly and outside. Mr. Vijayan said Mr. Padamarajan's friendships transcended politics. Mr. Padmarajan had insisted that he [Mr. Vijayan] inaugurate the foundation coming up in Mr. Padmarajan's name in Kollam. The Chief Minister remembered Mr. Padmarajan as a politician who led a simple life and rarely veered from his opinions. Leader of the Opposition V.D. Satheesan said Mr. Padmarajan was responsible for acquiring the KPCC headquarters in Thiruvananthapuram, known as the Indira Bhavan. 'Mr Padmarajan was a symbol of Congress's unity and resolve', he added. All India Congress Committee (AICC) general secretary (Organisation) K.C. Venugopal remembered him as a mentor and guide to a generation of Congress leaders. He described Mr. Padmarajan as a humanist and staunch secularist. KPCC president Sunny Joseph, MLA, also condoled Mr. Padmarajan's passing.

Detroit schools at risk of losing over $16 million as US federal education funds are withheld
Detroit schools at risk of losing over $16 million as US federal education funds are withheld

Time of India

time6 hours ago

  • Time of India

Detroit schools at risk of losing over $16 million as US federal education funds are withheld

Detroit schools at risk of losing over $16 million in US federal funding freeze. Detroit Public Schools, already grappling with some of the highest poverty rates in the country, are facing a major financial setback as more than $16 million in federal education funding is being withheld. The White House has paused the release of $6.2 billion in education funds across the country, impacting hundreds of school districts. But Detroit ranks among the hardest hit, raising urgent questions about how schools will prepare for the upcoming academic year without the support they were legally promised. Although the funds were approved by Congress and signed into law under the Trump administration, the delay in distribution is now threatening key programs that support teacher development, after-school learning, mental health services, and English learners. What programs are being affected The withheld funding covers five major federal education programs: Educator development (Title II) Student enrichment and support (Title IV) Migrant education Support for English language learners 21st Century Community Learning Centers While full data for migrant education is not available, the other four programs account for a projected $81.6 million loss in Michigan. This equals about $65 per student statewide, according to data compiled by the education policy group New America. Detroit alone stands to lose more than $16 million, with some of the steepest losses nationally in programs aimed at supporting low-income and vulnerable students. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Elevate Business Writing With This Desktop App Grammarly Learn More Undo Detroit's poverty rate and high dependency on federal aid Detroit Public Schools serve one of the most economically disadvantaged student populations in the country. The district has the highest school-age poverty rate (46.9 percent) among 46 states. These schools heavily rely on federal programs to fund after-school services, academic enrichment, teacher training, and student wellness initiatives. Because many of these programs are tied to poverty-related formulas, Detroit is more dependent on them than wealthier districts. A pause in this funding puts not only programs but student learning and staff planning at immediate risk. Democratic districts bearing the brunt in Michigan In Michigan, the funding freeze is hitting school districts represented by Democrats harder than those represented by Republicans. Democratic districts are projected to lose $45 million, compared to $36.6 million for Republican districts. Average loss per district in Democratic areas: $7.5 million Average loss in Republican areas: $5.2 million On a per-student basis, Democratic-led districts are expected to lose $84 per student, while Republican-led ones would lose $51 per student. This pattern is a sharp contrast to the national trend, where Republican-led districts are seeing larger per-student cuts. The unique situation in Michigan is partly due to Detroit's heavy dependence on federal aid and its inclusion among the top ten districts at highest risk. The hardest-hit districts: Detroit takes centre stage The congressional district represented by Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Detroit) is facing the highest per-student funding loss in the country: $210 per student. Rep. Rashida Tlaib's district, also in Detroit, is next in line, with a projected loss of $87 per student. These losses are especially concerning given that these districts already contend with widespread poverty, staffing shortages, and limited local funding alternatives. The funding freeze comes at a time of added financial instability. The Republican-controlled Michigan House of Representatives failed to pass the state's education budget by the July 1 deadline, compounding the uncertainty. With federal and state budgets unresolved, school districts are unable to plan effectively. Even if they attempt to temporarily cover program costs using local or reserve funds, federal regulations may prevent them from reallocating those funds later when and if the federal money is finally released. What this means for students and educators The loss of funding could lead to scaled-back after-school programs, reduced access to mental health services, delays in curriculum development, and less training for teachers. These setbacks may be most deeply felt in Detroit's most vulnerable communities, where such support is essential. Beyond the financial impact, there is also a symbolic cost. The delay sends a discouraging message to students and families in already underserved areas, especially as they prepare to return to school in just a few weeks. A school year clouded by uncertainty With over $16 million at stake and the school year fast approaching, Detroit Public Schools are caught in a storm of political delay and financial ambiguity. For students already navigating the challenges of poverty and educational inequity, the funding freeze could not come at a worse time. Unless urgent action is taken at both the federal and state levels, Detroit's students and educators may find themselves starting the academic year with fewer resources, reduced support, and more uncertainty than ever. Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store