Deep Narayan Nayak, 34, a teacher, teaches children, who do not have access to internet facilities and gadgets, in an open air class outside the houses with the walls converted into black boards following the closure of their schools due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, at Joba Attpara village in Paschim Bardhaman district in West Bengal. (Courtesy: The Telegraph,Kolkata)
By Samantak Das i
Chumki’s
nickname is ‘Chutki’ (‘the little one’), since she is quite a bit younger than
her brother, aged about 21 or 22, who helps out in their father’s shop apart
from doing odd-jobs for a local electrician. Chumki’s sister is about 18 or 19,
and finished her Madhyamik (Class X board) examination (or, to be more
accurate, received passing grades for the cancelled exams) this year. She has
decided not to study any further, and has already started to make enquiries about
getting trained as a beautician. Her dream is to, one day, have a parlour of
her own. Unlike her siblings, Chumki is
serious about her studies She does well in the government school she attends,
and hopes to become a doctor.
In many
ways, Chumki’s family is representative of the many millions who may not be
right at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder, but whose existence is
crucially dependent on things remaining more-or-less stable and predictable. In
the winter of 2019-20, matters seemed to be going their way. Chumki’s father’s shop was doing well, her
brother hoped to make the first down payment for a motorcycle, and they’d
recently replaced the tiled roof of their house with a proper cemented one.
There was even talk of buying a small refrigerator. Then Covid-19 struck and
their world, and everything in it, was turned upside down.
Worst Affected
Chumki was
perhaps the worst affected. After several months of no school from March to
about July last year, when online classes started the family’s only smartphone
was seldom available for her. Her sister’s claim was — perhaps rightly — deemed
to be greater than hers and her brother, too, felt he needed the phone more
than the littlest one in the family.
Fortunately, one of the households where her mother works, and from where her father collects used newspapers and other discarded materials, came to know of Chumki’s plight and bought her a smartphone. She was now able to attend online classes; but the problem of poor connectivity and lack of data remained. Today, more than a year later, Chumki’s academic performance has deteriorated considerably, and she often speaks of joining her sister, without first completing Class X. Her dream of becoming a doctor seems to be fading rapidly.
The
recently-released Locked Out: Emergency Report on School Education encapsulates
the experiences of many Chumkis spread across 15 states and Union territories.
The data presented in this short (30 pages) report make for dismal reading. Of
the 1,362 children from underprivileged households — in both rural and urban
areas — who formed part of the SCHOOL (School Children’s Online and Offline
Learning) survey, only 8 per cent of children in rural areas and 24 per cent of
urban children are studying online regularly.
More
distressingly, 37 per cent of rural and 19 per cent of urban children are not
studying at all. Three-quarters of their parents feel that their children’s
reading abilities have declined during the last 18 months. Parents, the report
states, “are desperately waiting for schools to reopen. Indeed, for many of
them, school education is the only hope that their children will have a better
life than their own.”
Online Education A Friction
Calling
online education a “fiction” with teachers “out of touch”, the report speaks of
how literacy rates are “off the charts” and “the predicament of Dalit and
Adivasi households... worse than average”. Locked Out ends
by stating bluntly, “As things stand, the system seems to be heading towards
‘business as usual’ when schools reopen — this is a recipe for disaster.”
An
indication of how such a disaster may be avoided is provided in another new
publication, Learning Together: The Opportunity to Achieve Universal
Education, which calls itself an “action oriented study conducted in West
Bengal” by Shiksha Alochana, a “platform... formed in 2016 by a group of
primary school teachers. The teachers wanted to transform their schools into
active social institutions, which, apart from bringing in excellence in
teaching-learning and all-round development of children, would inspire,
accommodate and integrate local communities with the school.”
In Learning
Together, the experiences of teachers who found novel, innovative ways to
reach out to deprived children during the pandemic are recorded, which, in
turn, may provide clues to how formal teaching-learning can be resumed once
schools reopen. Chapter Two of the study, “Alternative processes of
teaching-learning during the pandemic”, records some of the ways in which
teachers have been reaching out to students whilst schools remain closed.
These have
included in-person classes in spaces where Covid-19 protocols can be
maintained; used digital tools and methods where feasible; or taken the form of
creating plays, cartoons or videos that can be easily shared. Most crucially,
all of these modes of connecting with students have been vitally dependent on
the active participation of local communities and (usually young) volunteers.
Such
experiments by its members have enabled Shiksha Alochana to suggest ways and
means to overcome the challenges that lie ahead, succinctly presented in
Chapter Three of the study, “Challenges ahead and way forward”. These include a
five-point agenda for reopening schools, starting from “Preparing the ground”
to “Preparing the schools” to “Preparing for lessons” where a set of Minimum
Most Essential Learning Outcomes are chalked out for Classes I through V.
Education A Collective Responsibility
The study
ends by reminding us that the education of our children is a collective
responsibility and not something that can be left to the government alone, or
allowed to be blown about by the whims and fancies of private entities. Learning
Together can be seen as a kind of companion piece to Locked
Out, helping us to think through the process of resuming our children’s
formal schooling — not in a typically business-as-usual fashion but keeping in
mind the havoc already wreaked by the pandemic, the contours of which are still
not fully clear.
As Sukanta
Chaudhuri puts it in his magisterial Foreword to Learning Together,
“We are fortunate in having a substantial body of teachers in our state who can
think so big even in this most disheartening of times, and propose a practical
template for reform. Let us not fail them, so that we do not fail our children
and our nation.”
Samantak Das is professor of Comparative Literature and pro-vice-chancellor, Jadavpur University. Views expressed are personal(From The Telegtraph, Kolkata)
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