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Home Opinion Ideas

Crisis in J&K’s Public Education System

Sajad Paul by Sajad Paul
March 19, 2025
in Ideas
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New Education Policy full of flaws: NISA
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The Indian education system is marred by a glaring paradox government school teachers, entrusted with the solemn duty of imparting education in state-run institutions, prefer to enroll their own children in private schools. This phenomenon not only undermines the credibility of government schools but also perpetuates the socio-economic divide in education, where the children of the underprivileged are left with no choice but to endure the substandard quality of instruction in public institutions. The question that demands rigorous scrutiny is: If government teachers themselves lack confidence in the system they serve, how can they expect the common populace to trust it?

A Crisis Of Faith In Government Schools: Government schools in India were originally envisioned as egalitarian institutions aimed at providing quality education to all, irrespective of financial standing. However, over the decades, systemic neglect, bureaucratic inertia, and the increasing commercialization of education have eroded their standing. The very custodians of these institutions—government teachers implicitly acknowledge their deficiencies by seeking private education for their offspring.

This raises an unsettling conundrum: If those who design and implement public education policies have abandoned faith in them, why should a poor man’s child be condemned to these institutions? The flight of government teachers’ children to private schools symbolizes an intrinsic failure of governance and an abdication of responsibility by those who should be its strongest advocates.

Institutional Decay, Bureaucratic Apathy: A fundamental reason behind this crisis is the pervasive inefficiency and mismanagement within government schools. Some of the most critical issues include:

  1. Lack of Accountability: Teachers in government schools enjoy job security irrespective of performance, leading to complacency. This contrasts starkly with private schools, where teacher retention is performance-driven.
  2. Deteriorating Infrastructure: Many government schools operate in dilapidated conditions with insufficient classrooms, lack of sanitation, and absence of basic facilities like libraries and laboratories.
  3. Outdated Pedagogy, Curriculum Delivery: Rote learning, uninspiring teaching methods, and absence of technological integration render government schools unattractive.
  4. Political and Administrative Interference: Frequent transfers, politicization of teacher appointments, and lack of meritocracy dilute the efficacy of teaching staff.
  5. Lack of Parental Trust: The exodus of even middle-class families from government schools is indicative of a profound trust deficit. Parents are compelled to invest in private education despite financial constraints due to the perceived superior quality of learning.

 “If public education is to be revived, it requires more than superficial interventions it demands a paradigm shift. Teachers, as the backbone of the education system, must reclaim ownership of public institutions by actively participating in their upliftment. Only when government schools become institutions of aspiration rather than compulsion will the dream of universal quality education be realized. If we do not address this anomaly, we risk perpetuating a dual education system one for the privileged and another for the marginalized. The time for introspection is over; the time for decisive action is now. A teacher’s belief in the institution they serve should not be a matter of choice but a matter of principle. Only then can we bridge the chasm between policy rhetoric and educational reality.”

Ethical Dilemma: A Betrayal of Public Trust? At its core, this issue represents a profound ethical contradiction. Government school teachers, who draw their salaries from public funds, are unwilling to entrust their own children to the very system that sustains their livelihood. This is tantamount to an implicit admission of inefficacy. If those tasked with upholding public education opt out of it, they inadvertently endorse private institutions, thereby reinforcing the notion that quality education is a privilege rather than a right. This practice also exacerbates educational inequality. While the elite and middle classes navigate towards private institutions, the economically disadvantaged are left with no option but to remain in an educational framework that is largely dysfunctional. The consequence? A widening chasm in learning outcomes, employability, and social mobility.

The Legal And Policy Conundrum: The Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009, mandates free and compulsory education for children aged 6-14, but it fails to address the underlying disparities in quality. Various state governments have attempted to improve the quality of government schools through initiatives like smart classrooms, English-medium instruction, and midday meal enhancements. However, these efforts have largely been cosmetic rather than substantive. In some states, there have been demands to make it mandatory for government teachers to admit their children to government schools. Such policies, if implemented, could compel systemic improvements, as teachers and policymakers would then have a vested interest in enhancing school quality. However, powerful teacher unions and bureaucratic inertia have ensured that such proposals remain mere rhetoric.

A Call For Structural Overhaul: To restore public confidence in government schools, a radical transformation is imperative. Key reforms should include:

  1. Merit-Based Recruitment, Appraisal: Performance-linked incentives and strict accountability measures should replace the current system of tenure-based promotions.
  2. Enhancement of Infra,Technological Integration: Investment in digital education, smart classrooms, and adequate facilities must be prioritized.
  3. Teacher Re-skilling, Professional Development: Mandatory training programs should be introduced to ensure that government teachers remain at par with evolving educational methodologies.
  4. Mandating Teacher-Student Synergy: Introducing a policy that requires government teachers to enroll their children in the same institutions where they teach could serve as a powerful incentive for quality enhancement.
  5. Community Engagement and Participatory Governance: Greater parental involvement, regular audits, and social accountability mechanisms should be instituted to ensure transparency and efficiency.

The Need For A Paradigm Shift: The migration of government school teachers’ children to private institutions is symptomatic of deeper systemic failures that cannot be ignored. If public education is to be revived, it requires more than superficial interventions it demands a paradigm shift. Teachers, as the backbone of the education system, must reclaim ownership of public institutions by actively participating in their upliftment. Only when government schools become institutions of aspiration rather than compulsion will the dream of universal quality education be realized. If we do not address this anomaly, we risk perpetuating a dual education system one for the privileged and another for the marginalized. The time for introspection is over; the time for decisive action is now. A teacher’s belief in the institution they serve should not be a matter of choice but a matter of principle. Only then can we bridge the chasm between policy rhetoric and educational reality.

(The author a lawyer by profession is a freelancer. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)

Sajad Paul

[email protected]

Sajad Paul

Sajad Paul

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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