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Asha today works with partners in India on efforts to make education
opportunities accessible to children from poor economic backgrounds.
Our interaction with various groups has exposed us to many
differences and inequalities in the quality of schooling experience
the children go through. It has led us to question the role of
education and schooling. Education should continue to
encourage the spirit of enquiry in all of us. It should not only be
meaningful at a personal level, but should also help achieve a sense
of social justice, and respect for fellow human beings. The
ultimate objective of education should not only be to create a
balanced individual but also a balanced society where everybody is
assured of a living wage and a right to social freedom.
Schools that are seen as a place for learning do not always
encourage every child's curiosity. Majority of the schooling
experience for a child is spent on learning a limited set of skills.
Rural, village-based skills have no place in the curriculum. A
person from a poor and/ or rural background feels alienated and is
also sometimes unable to compete successfully in the present
economic system. Various forms of discrimination based on caste,
gender, culture, livelihood and religion continue to exist within
the school structures. The system fosters very little nurturing for
a person as a whole and relies more on just one-track
development - so called the "intellect". Instruction
and learning of even basic academic subjects needs a fresh outlook
to stimulate a child’s innate curiosity and enthusiasm.
The current education system raises some pertinent issues. Can
education also address the fact that we not only require subject
knowledge and skills for our living but also a spirit to enquire
into our basic human problems? Can education become person and
ecological centered instead of just economic centered? How can
education play a role in bringing about socio-economic change? Can
we enrich the experience of the socio-economically disadvantaged
children in the conventional system?
Our hope is to help create, participate and learn in a network
that can find answers to these questions. Our hope is that as
this network evolves it will address problems with conventional
education in different ways and strengthen already existing
individual efforts in this area. This network will be a resource for
interested groups, individuals, educators, and parents seeking
meaningful approaches to education.
With these objectives, we had organized a
conference in Bangalore as the first step towards forming a network
of groups and individuals. The conference was held on January
11-13, 2003 at Bangalore. More than 80 people participated in the
conference over the 3 days. The government officials from DPEP also
attended and gave a presentation on the scale of the government
programs in Karnataka. For conference proceedings, please click
here.
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