EducationWorld

Maharashtra: Collateral damage

Dipta Joshi (Mumbai)

Primary school teachers in Ma­harashtra’s 65,734 govern­ment-run zilla parishad (ZP) rural schools are simmering with an­ger. The state government’s education ministry has directed all teachers to display A4 size photographs of them­selves in their classrooms. Addition­ally, Prashant Bamb, a member of the legislative assembly (MLA) of the rul­ing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has demanded that the house rent allow­ance (HRA) of zilla parishad teachers who fail to provide proof of residence in the same village as their school, be withheld.

On Teachers Day (September 5) ZP teachers wore black arm bands to pro­test this government directive and on September 11, a large contingent of ZP teachers from across the state staged a protest at Aurangabad. Moreover sev­eral teachers, who were issued notices to submit proof of residence or forgo their HRA, have reportedly briefed lawyers to contest this government directive.

The prime cause of the impugned directives is widespread belief that highly paid government school teach­ers — their Pay Commission stipulated remuneration is often 20-30 multiples of teachers in private, especially pri­vate budget schools — practice mass truancy. Way back in 1998, a PROBE (People’s Report on Basic Education) survey shocked the nation by stating that 25 percent of government school teachers nationwide are absent from school every day.

This widely cited report was sup­ported in 2005 by the US-based Ithaka think tank’s JUSTOR Report whose authors included Nazmul Chaudhury, a World Bank economist and Kartik Murlidharan, a doctorate scholar at Harvard University and currently professor of economics at the University of California, San Di­ego (UCSD). “Twenty-five percent of teachers were absent from school, and only about half were teaching during unannounced visits to a nationally representative sample of government primary schools in India. Absence rates varied from 15 percent in Maha­rashtra to 42 percent in Jharkhand, with higher rates concentrated in the poorer states,” wrote the authors of the report published in the Journal of the European Economic Association (April-May, 2005).

Teachers attribute declining learning out­comes of children in government schools to teachers being assigned a spate of ‘official’ duties outside the classroom which takes away much of their teaching time. According to govern­ment school teachers’ spokespersons, they are obliged to discharge 150 non-teaching admin­istrative duties within schools and beyond school gates. These as­signments include preparing chil­dren’s mid-day meals, maintaining accounts of foodgrains distributed by government to schools, collecting funds for locally sponsored school development projects, submitting re­ports and updating data required by several administrative departments. Moreover, since July the state’s teach­ers have been assigned the additional duty of registering children for their Aadhar unique identification cards on the education ministry’s online plat­form.

In addition, teachers are routinely given assignments to conduct health, animal husbandry, population con­trol drives, door-to-door anti-tobacco awareness campaigns, administer po­lio vaccine doses, survey the number of public toilets, check open defeca­tion behaviour in villages and even regulate queues outside liquor shops. During the Covid pandemic lockdown, over 300 teachers statewide who were assigned pandemic-related duties lost their lives. Moreover during general and state elections, teachers are as­signed booth management and regu­lation duties.

These extra-curricular duties are routinely assigned to teachers despite s.27 of the Right of Children to Free & Compulsory Education (RTE) Act, 2009, stating “no teacher shall be de­ployed for any non-educational pur­poses other than the decennial popu­lation census, disaster relief duties or duties relating to elections to the local authority or state legislatures or Par­liament.”

“It is unsurprising that teachers are running a campaign demanding the right to teach. Government schools, especially in rural areas don’t have proper infrastructure, lack finan­cial support and make-do with huge teacher vacancies. Most rural schools have only one or two teachers and no support staff because of a government ban on teacher and staff recruitment. Therefore, teachers end up cleaning toilets and even ringing the school bell. If teachers are allowed to do their main job, it would automatically lead to a “sense of belonging between students and teachers” which is being propagated by the education minis­try, and learning outcomes would im­prove,” says Khanderao Dhobale, secretary, Maharashtra State Primary Teachers’ Association.

Evidently in massively mis-gov­erned Maharashtra which has experi­enced three new governments in the past three years, children’s education is suffering collateral damage.

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