Corruption
eats away education quality
Staff Correspondent, Khulna
04 May, 2003
Corruption and campus violence
are two main impediments to raising
the standard of education and
a proactive civil society role
is a must to achieve consensus
on different education-related
issues. For maintaining a congenial
academic atmosphere, there must
be a 10-year moratorium on politics
by teachers, students and employees
at educational institutions, higher
salary for teachers, increased
teacher-student contact hours
and more teachers.
The University Act of 1973 has
to be amended and availability
of standard learning materials
ensured. This was the unanimous
view of participants at a dialogue
on "Education Policy",
in the city yesterday. Organised
by the Centre for Policy Dialogue
(CPD), The Daily Star and the
Prothom Alo, the dialogue was
part of the Regional Consultation
Meeting on National Policy Review
Forum-2003.
Vice-chancellor of Khulna University
Prof. Abdul Kader Bhuiyan was
the chief guest while Principal
of Government B L College, Khulna,
Moazzem Hossain chaired the dialogue
held at the Millennium Inn.Prof.
Bhuiyan said in the past education
was never separated from politics,
but then there was a positive
political motivation. But now,
an unhealthy political influence
is vitiating the academic atmosphere.
Dhaka University came into being
after Calcutta University on the
basis of a political motivation,
which was a positive one. But
that could not be materialised,
he noted. "We need to have
a consensus first whether we want
to have a corruption- and violence-free
campus for a modern and scientific
education system," Bhuiyan
said.
CPD Executive Director Dr. Debapriya
Bhattacharya, who coordinated
the dialogue, called upon the
civil society to work as a pressure
group to bargain with the government
on different education issues.
"Education sector could
get rid of the vicious circle
of politics if the civil society
remained vigilant against it,"
he observed.
Supporting the demand for higher
salary for teachers, he said,
"Without giving due recognition
and social security to teachers,
we can't expect better education.
Trained teachers are the driving
force of human resource. "Dr.
Kaniz Siddique of North South
University, Dhaka, mentioned that
there was a World Bank-aided programme
under secondary education reforms
to harmonise teachers' salaries
in the public and private schools.
Moazzem Hossain said the standard
of education is being affected
as students passed the primary
level with 'only 17 competencies
out a total of 50'. This also
creates problem in secondary and
higher education, he added. Secondary
education lacks proper academic
supervision, he said. "The
existing monitoring is administrative
rather than academic. "He
pointed out that the country does
not have a 'fully-fledged education
policy' even 32 years after independence.
Prof. Khandaker Khalilur Rahman
said to draw highly talented persons
into teaching profession, teachers
should be given higher salaries
and other benefits. "We got
a total of eight education policies,
but none of those were properly
implemented." Prof. Mohammad
Masum of economics department
at the Jahangirnagar University
presented a progress report on
the CPD task force on education
sector. Although there has been
a remarkable achievement in enrolment
for primary education, the standard
remained very poor, he noted.
He mentioned that only one per
cent students were able to 'achieve
the 50 competencies' in five years
of primary education. There is
session jam even at primary educational
institutions and five-year courses
take more than six years to complete,
he said. Prof. Masum criticised
the government's 'cash for education
programme' for primary level,
involving Tk 623 crore in five
years. This would not bring a
positive impact on education as
students of secondary level are
usually lured by labour market.
There are 6.3 million child labourers
in the country. "So the government
should think about 'cash for education
programme' for secondary level
students," he observed. Advocate
Firoz Ahmed said there should
be a unified curriculum for both
public and private universities
for at least five years. Some speakers
proposed a teacher exchange programme
between reputed schools and the
others not so.
The other speakers included
Shahidul Islam of the Teachers-Employees
United Council, Sheikh Didarul
Alam, Dr. Gazi Mizanur Rahman,
Dr. MMA Hasem, Jannatul Ferdous
Rekha, Kazi Wahiduzzaman, Ahad
Ali, Dr. GC Ghosh, Dr. Shibendra
Shekhar Shikder and Rizia Parveen.
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