Monday, 24 February 2020

The role of educational institutions in constructing stereotypical role models of persons and structures to perpetuate the existing unjust social order through curricula, admission and appointment policies, governance, values, norms and the like.



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Introduction
Education is a tool to empower the individual and it has brought about phenomenal changes in every aspect of people’s life. India has its own indigenous education system and in India education was not foreign in origin. When we are under British rule, they formed institutions, universities, and implemented English education. Institutions play a great role in development. New development cannot take place without the establishment of new institutions. Today, establishment of new colleges and universities has been based on political rather than academic considerations[1].
1) Etymology: - The word education has derived from the Latin word ‘educare’ which means ‘bring up’, ‘to bring forth’. In other words education means to lead out of ignorance. Education is important one in our life and it is a continuous process; it provides the individuals to develop their mental, physical, social and emotional qualities[2]. It is one of the vital needs of every individual and society which should spread as a movement[3]. Education begins immediately after the child is born and continues till his breath in some way[4].
2) Purpose of education: - The chief purpose of education is preparing the present for the future.  The aims and objectives of education itself in any society are influenced by various factors like the history of the society, social patterns, economic and political systems. It is true in India, due to changes in its socio-political fabric; the educational scenario has undergone modifications in curriculum[5].
3) Ancient education system
F.W.Thomas remarks, Education is no exotic[6] in India. There is no country where the love of learning had so early an origin, lasting, powerful and influence. But the educational system was not a universal one, narrow, partisan and discriminatory[7].
(a) Gurukula system:- During vedic period Gurugula system of education was followed[8], there existed a clear bond of academic relationship between the provider of knowledge (the Guru) and the seeker of Knowledge (the Shishya) even though institutionalization of any formal kind was yet to be established at that time[9]. Education was given to all, no caste and sex difference exist. Girls were educated at home and they taught music and dancing[10], allowed to learn Vedas and Upanayana, and later gradually lost their right to learn[11], education was prohibited to physically and mentally challenged. Every student serves his teacher by doing duties and they obeyed the guru fully. Students memorized the lessons presented orally by the teacher, the second lesson was taught only when the first had been memorized. Meditation, pronunciation of words and discussion took place in gurukula[12]. The duty of the teacher was to take care and give medical treatment[13]. The curriculum was the guru’s ways of life, actual instruction and practice were yoked together. The learner –motivation for skill acquirement was propellant in the Guru-shishya system[14].
(b) Religious system:-During the middle ages, education in India was essentially religious in its orientation.  Indian caste system restricted formal education to the men from dominant castes. The Hindu system of education considered three stages in the learning process. (i) Sravana, one hears the vedic texts read and explained by a teacher. (ii)Manana, is reflection of what is heard. (iii) Nididhyasana, continuous meditation leading to an intuitive realization. Later this system developed into two types of education- elementary and higher learning. The Tol was the school of higher learning, Sanskrit was their medium of instruction and it was religious in character[15], bratas for women education[16] and pathasasla for elementary education. Buddhists continued with the same two types of education, but it is open to all. Muslims had elementary schools (the maqtabas), commonly attached to the mosque, which taught students to read especially the Koran and to write. The centers of higher learning (the madrassahs) prepared a selective group of men for professions, like priesthood, judiciary and medicine[17]. Farsi[18] schools – impart training in Farsi language and literature[19]. It was mostly the higher and middle class who are few profited from the education[20]. They were generally one teacher, hardly controlled by state and no centralize system exist. The teachers played a pivotal role, followed certain established traditions and norms of education which differed from place to place. Modes of financing these institutions were different. The tols and madrasahs were fully supported by land endowments, while pathshalas depend solely on fees and occasional gifts from villagers. The pathshala became wide spread, covering all class of local people[21].
(c) Institutionalized education system:- During the transformation from the gurukula to religious society, a gradual institutionalization of the system of education has emerged as evidenced by Nalanda, Takshila[22], Ujjain, Vallabhi in Kathiwad, Nadia in Begal, Kanchi in Tamil Nadu, and Nagarjunakonda in AP attracted scholars from all over India and abroad. Arts, humanities, sciences and Technology flourished at these universities. The contributions of eminent scholars like Aryabatta, Varamihira, Bhasa, Carvaka, Nagarjuna, Kautilya and others in the fields of Mathematics, Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry, Medicine and state craft are universally recognized and respected[23].
4) Education in modern India
Indian universities and modern higher education owe their origin to the British Raj[24]. After the arrival of the British in India, sweeping changes in the sphere of education have taken place[25]. They left the legacy of English medium institutions to our nation. Fee-levying English medium schools sprang up everywhere. The education system in our country virtually deteriorated and collapsed, owing to the uncontrolled growth of these schools[26]. The Guru-shishya system got slowly diluted. Emphasis and importance was bestowed upon certification rather than acquiring skills, there by paving way for a kind of commercialism to creep into the system of education[27]. We are continuing the same structure of higher education that we inherited from British[28]. These schools are under the constant “Tyranny of text books”.  The system is text book oriented. Pupils are taught to memorize and vomit at the time of examination, and these schools can be called as “Parrot schools”[29]. We have the most rigid education system in the world that is the separation of academic and vocational subjects which is responsible for poor progress in vocationalism[30].
(a) Categories of education: - The education system is divided into many divisions namely, Pre-primary (3-5years), Primary education (5-10years), secondary (10-15), higher secondary (15-17), and higher education (degree courses, P.G courses, M.Phil, Ph.D etc.). Universities are the centres for higher education, which includes engineering, medical, agricultural etc[31].
(b) Problems of modern education: - Education has become a marketable commodity. The entry of private enterprise in education will continue to increase and it cannot be prevented. Now the government has started regulating fees and admission procedures in institutions. It results in wastage of time, and the complicated procedures stipulated by the governments make a delay in completing the admission formalities. Students have purchased their seats and they have no respect to teachers or management which leads to indiscipline in campus. The university system gets politicized when the executive and the judiciary become subservient to a party[32]. Those who have acquired “free” government seats are facing ever higher demands of donations which tend to drive their families into debts and the successful candidates move into corrupt practices in their later professions in order to settle those debts.
The examination system favors memorizing rather than critical inquiry, practical development and application skills. As a result school leavers are satisfied to move into white collar jobs however dull the work may be where as the dropouts, considered as failures move into manual labor jobs. The top- performers are recruited even before they leave the colleges, by companies which expose them to new sorts of brain washing which isolate them from the social background from which they originate. They are not only receiving training for particular skills, but are temporary transplanted into the luxury “life world” of five star hotels in order to turn them into loyal servants/consumers/ defenders of the new order of the rich without asking any more questions[33].
(c) Reformation in modern education system: - In a democratic country the educational system should be free, free from government control. But monitored, evaluated and supported by the public. A system whose individual institutions are accredited by the teaching community which is flexible and student oriented. The teachers will teach what the student wishes to learn, apart from what stipulated as a minimum requirement by state. The students will be guided in choosing the subjects of study by their parents and teachers. A student oriented educational programme would naturally be a credit based system. Financial support and management would be evolved by the public in which state would provide funds depending upon the requirements[34].
(i) Admission: - The teacher would decide who is to be admitted to his class and when to close the admission to his course. The teaching will be based upon the capacity of the students; it will be imparted through a method that is best suited to the students in the class. The evaluation by the teacher will be continuous, and student will have the option to declare when he is ready to take the final test. In which student may take as many credits as he likes and may study at his own pace and complete his course[35].
(ii) Curriculum: - The curriculum must necessarily include apart from the learning of the state language, the elements of Mathematics, ethics, the duties and rights of citizens, and other essential details for pursuing a useful life. Apart from curriculum the teachers in consultation with the parents can prepare curriculum. The syllabus has to be the responsibility of the district educational committees which should be constituted with the members of the public of the village, union or the districts as the case may be and representative members of the teaching community of the relevant region[36]. Teaching of our own literature and teaching through the state language.
(iii) Law: - The constitution of India acknowledges education as right in its Directive principles. It also contains several provisions with regard to the poor and the minorities. In practice this right has been denied to many most so to women and members of scheduled castes and tribes. The struggle for better education is bring the directive principle of the constitution into practice by making formal education accessible for all. Freedom to learn and freedom to teach should prevail in order to sustain democracy.
(d) Alternative education: - Instead of spending all energies on getting a limited number of marginalized people admitted into the present exclusive system. An educational system should be develop based on human potential of children, not to make them fit for competition, but to equip them with values and skills of co-operation and mutual care as the basis for survival. Education is diverse to cultural and natural environment rather than to text books. Apart from such alternative education there is a wave of training in all sorts of fields[37].
Conclusion
Education in India is old which was altered by the societal, cultural, and religious values resulted in a form of institution. Arrival of British again brought change in education and new system of education based on text books emerged. That mode still exists which has lot of flaws in which educationalists and reformers are gazing for an alternative system. The contemporary education system is based on competition. Education should be based on diversity of gifts one possesses and make students mutually enriching by developing cooperation instead of competition. The education process would further as regard on the development of life skills which will provide a means of livelihood. Part of this would be an environmental awareness of the need to maintain the physical surroundings and to live in a sustainable way.

Bibliography
Abel,M. Ideals and reality, Madras: CLS, 1995
Crook (ed), Nigel. The transmission of knowledge in South Asia, New Delhi: Oxford university   press,1996.
Dietrich, Gabriele and Bas Wielenga, Towards understanding Indian society, (Madurai: TTS),      1997.
Jeyaraj, Nirmala. Higher education, Lady Doak College, Madurai, 1998.
Manohar (ed), Moses.P. Education in free India, New Delhi: NCCI/ISPCK, 1998.
Shiny,K. Education in the emerging Indian society, Kanyakumari: KSM Educational and             charitable Trust, 2010.



[1] Nirmala Jeyaraj, Higher education, (Madurai: Lady Doak College) 6.
[2] K.Shiny, Education in the emerging Indian society,(Kanyakumari: KSM Educational and charitable Trust) 1.
[3] Moses.P.Manohar (ed), Education in free India (New Delhi: NCCI/ISPCK) 4.
[4] K.Shiny…1.
[5] Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[6] Originating in foreign counttry
[7] Moses.P.Manohar…24.
[8] K.Shiny…12.
[9]Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[10] K.Shiny…12.
[11] Moses.P.Manohar…24
[12] K.Shiny…13
[13] K.Shiny…12.
[14] Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[15] Moses.P.Manohar…25
[16] Nigel Crook (ed), The transmission of knowledge in South Asia(New Delhi: Oxford university press)98.
[17] Moses.P.Manohar…25
[18] Court language during Mugal rule
[19] Nigel…98.
[20] Moses.P.Manohar…25
[21] Nigel…98.
[22] Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[23] M.Abel, Ideals and reality, (Madras: CLS) 1.
[24] M.Abel…1.
[25] Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[26] Moses.P.Manohar…17
[27] Nirmala Jeyaraj…114.
[28] Nirmala Jeyaraj…8.
[29]Moses.P.Manohar…17
[30] Nirmala Jeyaraj…11.
[31] K.Shiny…114.
[32] Nirmala Jeyaraj…12.
[33] Gabriele Dietrich and Bas Wielenga, Towards understanding Indian society, (Madurai: TTS) 250-251.
[34] Nirmala Jeyaraj…78.
[35] Nirmala Jeyaraj…80
[36] Nirmala Jeyaraj…89.
[37] Gabriele…250-253.

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