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How Delhi schools are revolutionising education, one teacher at a time
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Nivedita Singh | 30 Oct, 2018
When Roshan Lal, a 40-year-old rickshawpuller, got his son Rakesh
admitted to a government school in Delhi, all he wanted for him was to
get a decent education. Since he could not afford to pay for a private
school, all that was on his mind was that "government school mein kuch
toh seekh hi lega" (at least, he would learn something there).
But,
today, Roshan is a happy man because his son, now in Class VI, is doing
well in school and is even able to teach him a thing or two. He feels
elated that many of his son's teachers are even being trained abroad.
Teachers
and principals from over 1,000 Delhi government schools have so far
been sent for training to Singapore and Finland, countries that are
renowned for their pioneering teaching methods.
Many feel it has
improved teaching methods as well as the quality of education imparted
at government schools, hitherto infamous for their poor and archaic
standards of teaching and rote learning methods, and that such training
at different platforms enhances teachers' pedagogic skills and keeps
them abreast with the contemporary knowledge in their domain areas.
"I
got to know from my son that his teachers are going abroad for
training. I am happy with the idea as it will help in improving the
quality of education he is getting currently," Roshan told IANS.
"While
poor people like us cannot afford private schools, it is good to know
that even government schools are now competing with private ones and our
children are learning from good teachers. Even private school teachers
don't go abroad for training," he said.
Many Delhi government
schools, with fresh coats of colourful paint on their walls, now not
only have comparable infrastructure to private schools, but their course
curricula are also transforming. They now also have a "Happiness
Curriculum" designed by a team of 40 Delhi government school teachers
and educators over a period of six months.
As part of this
curriculum, students between Nursery and Class VIII now have a 45-minute
"happiness period" which includes meditation, storytelling,
question-and-answer sessions, value education and mental exercises.
Raju Yadav, a small shop-owner in Laxmi Nagar, feels excited with the focus on teachers' training.
"My
wife and I are not educated. It is also difficult for me to afford
tuition classes. My daughter, Swati, is studying in a government school
in Class II. The teachers getting training is a good thing. The more the
teacher will know, the better they will teach, and the better our kids
will learn," he said.
The Aam Aadmi Party (Common Man's Party,
AAP), which came to power in Delhi in 2015, made the improvement of the
education system one of its priority areas by investing in
infrastructure -- including classrooms and other facilities like
playgrounds and swimming pools -- while also upgrading teachers' skills.
Delhi's
Education Minister Manish Sisodia has repeatedly stressed on the need
to improve education system and, during his first budget speech, when he
doubled the government's expenditure on education, had said "the money
spent on education and health is not an expense, but an investment into
the well-being of coming generations".
According to Sisodia, the
goal of making government schools better than private schools does not
end with improving infrastructure and recruitment of teachers.
"Since
the core of the educational improvement process lies in building
capacity of teachers, the government would train teachers and principals
at the best universities in the world like Harvard, Cambridge and
Oxford," he had said.
The first to receive international training
was a group of 200 teachers who the government called "mentor
teachers". The aim was to leverage their creative expertise to enhance
the pedagogic and academic capacities of over 45,000 Delhi government
school teachers.
Each mentor teacher received training in Mumbai,
Bengaluru, Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Singapore. They were then assigned to
teachers at five to six schools. These 200 mentors have trained
thousands of teachers over the last two years.
Manu Gulati, who
went to Singapore for training in August last year and is now a mentor
teacher, said after the training, she feels motivated and encouraged to
perform better.
"The general feeling is that by investing in
their training, the government is showing its trust in the teachers,"
Gulati, who started her teaching career in 2011, told IANS.
"In
terms of calibre, teaching aptitude, content knowledge and pedagogy
skills, government school teachers are no less than those at private
schools," she proudly proclaimed.
Among the few ground-breaking
improvements, she said, was the feedback from the students. She said a
teacher's job is not just limited to providing knowledge and skills to
students, but also to provide them emotional and psychological support,
something the training helped teachers with.
Medha Parashar,
another mentor teacher who went to a number of training sessions, said:
"The teacher is no more the centre of teaching, but the students are.
Teaching is not mechanical now, it is interactive."
"Through
various trainings, we learned about 45 methods of teaching in a class,
and can use any of these," Parashar, who has been a teacher for the past
27 years, said.
The training, Gulati said, gives a new vision
and purpose to the teachers. The benefit of training teachers had, in
turn, positively impacted hundreds of thousands of students of
not-so-well-off families in the capital who had earlier been deprived of
quality education.
However, Parashar said, it will take some
time for changes to be clearly visible. "We are dealing with living
beings. No change will happen overnight as small children are involved.
Change will happen with time," she said.
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