India is being always developing why?
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wonder why ? thats because of ….
Thanks to Indian politics. Indian politics has ruined every department in India ! you see people who expect favours to make things done ! they tend to forget that its their job to do work !
Indian politics has ruined the whole education system. As, we can see that 28% of indian rural population goes to private schools ! why is that ? thats because of low quality education system in government schools where you find improper staff and school location.
It is not just the rural rich who are moving to private schools. Studies have found that a large mass of parents are shifting because of the low quality of government education, and concern for their children’s future.
So what is fuelling this extraordinary surge and what is the quality of education being imparted? The key to understanding this surge lies in the low entry barriers.
Schools need a “recognition” status so that they can issue valid “transfer certificates” to students leaving the school. But what the recognition status primarily ensures is that teachers are paid according to relatively high government salary scales.
This massive expansion of private primary schooling across India is a harbinger of the Unknown Indian Education Revolution. A survey found that more than 80% of government-school teachers send their own children to a private school.When government teachers don’t trust government schools with their own children, it’s time to sit up and take notice.
As a matter of fact private schools did 246% better than government school children on a standardized English test, with around 80% higher average marks in mathematics and Hindi according to James Tooley.
Private schools benefit from being “unrecognized” because they save on labour costs. Teacher costs are the largest expense in the schooling sector. State governments easily spend 90% of their total budget on teachers. In contrast, private-school teachers are paid one-fifth to one-tenth of government salary levels and have more flexibility to innovate and improve learning outcomes.
There are important lessons here for education policymakers in India. Education entrepreneurs need to be encouraged by removing rules that hinder the establishment and operation of schools in the primary, secondary and higher secondary areas of education. Competing schools will create choices for parents, improving access and quality for all. The government can then focus its limited education budget on the neediest sections of society.
Inadequate education in India is not only a funding problem but also a result of over-regulation of the school market. The burgeoning market of low-budget private schools has enormous potential to do public good.
It was mostly an agrarian society until the British Empire came along all conquesty and what-not.
Actually, the prior response “because they feel like it” is pretty much on the ball. The whole “industrialized = good, developing = bad” is *our* standard, and what makes *us* happy. What works well for one society doesn’t necessarily work well for others.
Here’s where I take off on a rant about why Universal Healthcare should be permanently mothballed in the United States. We’re not a socialist people, and those few “progressive reformers” who would impose it upon us need to better consider their audience.
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