Educational Development in South Asia: From Regionalism to Interregionalism
In: The Global Educational Policy Environment in the Fourth Industrial Revolution; Public Policy and Governance, S. 195-216
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In: The Global Educational Policy Environment in the Fourth Industrial Revolution; Public Policy and Governance, S. 195-216
In: South Asian education policy, research and practice
In: https://doi.org/10.7916/D89887FB
The passing of Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act (2009) provides a new policy context and a new series of opportunities to strengthening the quality dimensions of primary education in India. The Act further reinforces the suggestions made by the National Curriculum Framework of 2005. Given the recent developments where new provisions are put into place for revision of textbooks, teacher recruitment and training, student assessment and tracking, and so on, we hope that this study contributes to the understanding of district-level concerns pertaining to public primary textbooks and the wider curriculum approach. This working paper is second in the series of three research studies conducted under MDEP's first year's commitment to understand and analyze the primary education scenario in the two districts. The purpose of this paper is to present the findings of empirical research to study the key gaps and challenges in the policies and practices pertaining to curriculum in public primary schools in our two districts of Morigaon, Assam and Medak, Andhra Pradesh. The paper concludes with a list of recommendations to the local governments and education authorities that it has derived from an assimilation of findings from different sources. It encourages the local departments of education to view educational needs of their region through an integrated approach. It encourages the local offices to partner with other actors in the field to better understand educational quality and achievement and its determining factors: student health and nutrition, textbook design, teacher training, school participation, district level education and budget planning, school environment, and monitoring and evaluation.
BASE
In: CGC SA Working Paper No. 11
This paper presents to its readers perceptions of teachers, cluster resource coordinators, resource persons, and staff members from district and state level offices of SSA, DIET, Department of Education and SCERT, on the challenges and opportunities related to the textbooks in public primary schools. The study used a mixed-method design, combining qualitative data from individual interviews (n=16) and focus group discussions (n=20), and observations with a cross-sectional survey of a random sample of primary school teachers (n=789) in the two districts. Primary research in this study attempts to examine: 1. The role of textbooks in the existing curricular approach at schools; 2. The nature of alignment between textbooks, and teacher training and student learning in Assam and AP; 3. Ways in which textbooks can better support teaching learning processes at schools.