Monday, October 29, 2012

A Brief History of formal Education of South Sikkim District with special reference to involvement of Community and PRIs


Available literature says that the system of formal education started in Sikkim as Monastic education which was based on myths and mystics of Buddhist Lamaism. This was the education imparted in the monasteries to the Buddhist children for monkhood. There is no any evidence of formal system of education in the State other than Monastic Education.  

History
The Educational History of South Sikkim District goes back to 2nd half of the Nineteenth Century. The formal education started in the district when Christian Missions started schools in the district. English, Finis and Scottish Missions had very significant contributions towards the educational beginnings of the district.  Vok, Sadam, Namthang, Temi, etc. are some of the lucky villages of district where these missions worked for education before the kingdom’s regime thought for the formal education of general children.

The record of the school establishment of the district shows that Nain Tshering Lepcha (Wak) Government Secondary School is the oldest government school of the district, which is established during the regime of the Chogyal Thotub Namgyal in the year 1881A.D. However, Shri Prem Thulung, a retired Joint Director of Education Department writes in his book ‘Sikkimma Shikshako Vikash (Sangchhipta Parichaya)’ published in the year 1998 ‘…the senior citizens of the locality remember that Vok School is established in 1890 A.D. by an Englishman, named Makerland.’

The second oldest school of district is Sadam Government Senior Secondary School. It is established in the year 1887 A.D. As per Shri Thulung, this school is first established by Scottish Mission in 1886. The records show that there were only two schools viz.  Wak and Sadam in the district till the end of 19th century. Sumbuk Government Secondary School is the next school that is established in the year 1923 A.D. after Wak and Sadam School.

Slowly and gradually, the education began to flourish when it crossed the threshold of nineteenth century. The social workers and general public who fall in the category of little bit well informed group mobilized the people to establish schools. In this way, the community schools began to emerge in the district; which were popularly known as “Committee Schools”. But the progress was quite slow as the conditions of the people were not good and the prevailing situation of the kingdom was also not encouraging. However, the Maharaja of Sikkim seemed supportive towards education. The book ‘Educational Administration in Sikkim’ written by Baldev Mahajan, Srilekha Majumdar and D.C.Agnihotri and published by NIEPA in 1995, writes “The royal family of Sikkim took a keen interest in education and considered it to be a social service; one of the councilors of the royal ‘darbar’ generally looked after it. In 1920, the Maharaja of Sikkim reorganized the education department and placed it under the administration of a full-fledged Director of Education who was assisted by a ‘Board’ under the headship of a President. In 1922, the Education Department was placed under the Judicial Secretary.”  However, many of the senior and retired officials of the department say that in 1950, an officer was given the charge of the Education Department; in 1953 the first Executive Councilor of the department was appointed and a full-fledged Director of Education was appointed only in the year 1954. The first Inspector of Schools was appointed in Sikkim in 1945.

In between 1880-1945 AD, almost within forty five years, only ten schools were established in the district. However, after 1945, there was a marked increase in the number of schools and it is surprisingly increased to 70.  The chart given below gives the details of decade-wise number of State Government schools established in the district before its merger in Indian Union.



The establishment of schools after 1975 AD got fillip when Sikkim is merged in Indian Union. The highest numbers of school are established in the decade of 1976-85 AD. Almost 42% of the total schools of the district at present are established within this decade. This is considered as the most fertile period in the history of Education of the district. The schools established in this decade are with proper mapping and planning and many of these schools are, at present, upgraded to higher schools. The table given below throws the light on decadal establishment of schools in the district after 1975:

Decadal Establishment of State Government Schools in South Sikkim District after 1975

Decade
Numbers of School established
Percentage
Remarks
Upto 1975
80
34
There are 237 State Government Schools in the district at present. The percentage is calculated on 237.

1976-1985
94
40
1986-1995
36
15
1996-2005
14
06
2006-2012
13
05
Source: DISE

The above table shows that 157 schools are established in the district after 1975 which is about 66% of the total state government schools of the district at present. The table also shows that maximum numbers of schools were established between 1976 and 1985 and there is gradual saturation in subsequent decades.

Regarding the establishment of private schools in the district, the district has no traces of evidence private schools before the merger of Sikkim in Indian Union barring some of the community managed unaided schools. The available records reveal that the establishment of private schools started only after 1975 AD. A table is given below to show the decadal growth of private schools in the district.

Establishment of Private schools in South Sikkim District on Decadal Basis

Decade
Numbers of School established
Percentage
Remarks
Upto 1975
0
0
As above, the total number of Private Schools in the District is 124 and the percentage is calculated on 124.

1976-1985
4
03
1986-1095
22
18
1996-2005
63
51
2006-2012
35
28
Source: DISE

The given table shows that the establishment of private schools was the highest during the decade 1996-2005 AD. The trend of establishment of private schools is fast growing. The trend of enrolment is also going high in private schools showing remarkable decline in the enrolment of government schools. The decline in trend during 2006-2012 is due to the criteria mandated by the RTE Act for starting of private schools.


The above chart indicates that the establishment of the government schools began to decline after 1985 and on the contrary, establishment of private schools got its tempo after the same year. The logic behind the establishments of government schools are for the provision of schooling access to the children of different habitations as per the norms of neighbourhood mapping. However, the establishment of private schools is the indication of educational awareness and the attainment of affording capacity of civil society on education of their children.


Involvement of Community and PRIs in School Management
The involvement of community in schooling process in Sikkim started when the community thought about the formal education of their children. It was the community who voluntarily came forward to start the schools in the rural Sikkim. They contributed land, constructed school buildings and managed the salary of community appointed teachers. These schools were called Committee Schools as these schools were managed and run by the Committee.

Contrary to present form of School Management Committee, there were clear cut division of responsibilities between the teacher and the school committee. No teachers were given any portfolio in the school committee and had no saying in the school managements.  They were solely given the responsibility of curricular works of the school. Any person having command over the people of the village or respected by the people of the village were made presidents of the school committees. The presidents of the committees were considered important persons bearing sole powers and they were the steering bearer of the school developments. The structure of the school committee was very simple consisting of only 4-5 members. The post of President was the important post and one treasurer called khajanchi worked under the president. The work of the khajanchi was to keep the accounts and records of the assets of the committee.  Very often khajanchi had the duty to visit the parents’ houses to collect monthly parental contribution for the payment to the teachers.

The curriculum of these community-run schools was very simple. “Thulo Barnamala”, a book (primer) written by Kashi Bahadur Shrestha, was the only book for class I, which consist of alphabets, number charts, simple addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. The medium of the instruction was Nepali and the board was ‘West Bengal Board of Secondary Education’ for matriculation. The schools were like present single teacher school, mostly having one teacher appointed by the school committee. As decided by the committee, the children used to give rice, cereals, salt, oil, vegetables etc. to the teacher called “Masterji” as monthly fees.

After Sikkim’s merger in Indian Union, almost all these community-run schools were taken over by the government as formal schools. The management of the school was entrusted to the school-heads and slowly the communities were ignored in the management of schools. In late 1990s, after the panchayat election of 1997 which was conducted on the line of the Seventy-Third Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992, the matter of inclusion of PRIs in the School Management Committee of elementary schools became mandatory in the district. Before this, the PRIs were rarely included in the School Managing Committees. In March 2000, the Director of Education served a Circular vide No. 541/Est/Edn dated 15.3.2000, just after the reopening of the schools for the academic session 2000-01, regarding the constitution of School Management Committee in the schools upto Junior High School level under the chairmanship of concerned school heads. The circular reads like “… The school managing committee under the chairmanship of the primary/JHS (Junior High School), Headmaster would include the local panchayat, a member of the block panchayat, teachers’ representatives and two parents’ representatives as member… This form of school managing committee should beset up in the secondary and senior secondary schools, wherein the Principal/Headmaster will be the chairman and a member of the Zilla Panchayat will be co-opted along with other school committee members as in Junior High Schools to help the administration of the school,” which gives idea about the structure of the school management committee.  However, there was no special mention of the inclusion of women, Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe in the School Management Committee.

The Circular has also the mentions of responsibilities of School Management Committee in two spheres viz Administrative and Academic. The responsibilities mentioned in the circular were as under:
  1. Administrative:
a.      Attendance and punctuality of teachers and students.
b.     Maintenance of discipline in the school. Ensuring proper turnout of the students in the school uniforms.
c.      Maintenance and repairs of the schools and its compound.
  1. Academic:
a.      Maintenance of teachers’ diary.
b.     Timely completion of the syllabus within each semester.
c.      Ensuring homework is given and checked by the teachers.
d.     Extra classes be organized for weak students.
 
Another beautiful aspect of the circular was the instructions incorporated in it. The instructions can be summarized as under:
a.      SMC meets once in a month to discuss administration and review the activities organized in the school
b.     The school heads will submit quarterly reports of SMC meetings including the proposals for improvement of school functioning, requirement of furniture, maintenance of school building, vacancies of teaching and non-teaching staff.
c.      The school heads try to inculcate in the teachers and students civic sense by getting the school campus cleaned on regular basis.
d.     The school heads and teachers educate the children the social obligations by looking after all public property and developmental schemes undertaken in their areas by the government.
e.      One period a week could be set aside for extra-curricular activities (Co-scholastic activities)

However, none of the above statement has mentions about the role of the PRIs in the school management committee. This shows that the organization was reluctant to involve PRIs in the management of the school education.

The next panchayat election was conducted in October 2002. After this election another development has happened in the composition of school management committee of elementary schools as it was instructed that the chairman of school management committee should be the member of PRIs and the school head remain as member secretary of the committee. 

The latest change in the composition of School Management Committee took place after the enactment of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 in the State. The Human Resource Development Department, Government of Sikkim served a Circular vide Ref. No. 721/l/SPO/SSA/HRDD; dated 27/05/2011 directing the elementary schools to reconstitute the school management committee as per the composition norms laid by the Act. The Circular has mentioned that the constitution of School Management Committee is compulsory in every school, other than unaided schools and to be reconstituted in every two years. It reads the following for the composition of new School Management Committee:

1.     75% of the strength of School Management Committee (SMC) shall be from amongst parents or guardians of children;
2.     Remaining 25% of the strength of the School Management Committee (SMC) shall be from among the following persons, namely
a)     One-third of members from amongst the elected members of Local Authority, to be decided by the Local Authority;
b)     One-third members from amongst teachers from the school, to be decided by the teachers of the school;
c)     Remaining one-third from amongst local educationist whose children are in the school, to be decided by the parents in the committee;
3.     50% members in total shall be female
To manage its affairs, the School Management Committee shall elect a Chairperson and Vice Chairperson from among the parent members. The Head of the School or where the school does not have a school head, the senior most teacher of the school, shall be the ex-officio member-convener of the School Management Committee. The School Management Committee shall meet at least once in a month and the minutes and decisions of the meetings shall be properly recorded and made available to the public. 


The Circular also has the mentions about the functions of the School Management Committee. The excerpt from the Circular is given below:

The School Management Committee shall perform following functions:
a)     Monitor the working of the school;
b)     Identify the needs, prepare, recommend and monitor the School Development Plan;
c)     Monitor the utilization of grants received from the appropriate Government or Local Authority or any other source;
d)     Communicate in simple and creative ways to the population in the neighbourhood of the school, the rights of the child as enunciated in the Act; as also duties of State Government, Local Authority, school, parent and guardian;
e)     Ensure the enrolment and continued attendance of all the children from the neighbourhood in the school;
f)      Bring to notice of the Local Authority any deviation from the rights of the child, in particular mental and physical harassment of children, denial of admission, realizing capitation fee/donation from students.  
g)     Ensure that no teacher shall engage himself or herself in private tuition or private teaching activity;
h)    Ensure that a teacher appointed shall perform the following duties:
i.                 maintain regularity and punctuality in attending school;
ii.               conduct and complete the curriculum specified by the State Academic Authority;
iii.             complete entire curriculum within the specified time;
iv.              assess the learning ability of each child and accordingly supplement additional instructions, if any, as required;
v.                hold regular meetings with parents and guardians and apprise them about the regularity in attendance, ability to learn, progress made in learning and any other relevant information about the child.
i)      Monitor the identification and enrolment of, and facilities for learning by disabled children, and ensure their participation in, and completion of elementary education;
j)      Monitor the implementation of the Mid-Day Meal and quality of education in the school;
k)     Prepare an annual account of receipts and expenditure of the school.

This is the first Circular served by the department which has clear mentions about the roles and functions of School Management Committee. In addition, the Secondary and Senior Secondary Schools having elementary classes should have separate School Management Committee for elementary level as per the composition norms laid by the RTE Act.

It has been found in various researches that the active involvement of community (parents) and PRIs (Local Authority) in school management increases the efficiency of the school. There are lots of examples in the district how community contributed to schools. The community and PRIs have constructed buildings to meet up shortage of classrooms, constructed playground, pavilion, footpaths, engaged volunteer teachers during the shortage of teachers in the school, donated land for school establishment, donated materials like cements, rods, etc. for school repair, etc. On the other hand, it is also important that the school should welcome and encourage their involvement in school management. The community hardly refuses to be the part of school management because they know that their children are being benefitted because of their involvement. However, the school needs to make them feel how their contributions have increased the school performance like increase in children’s attendance and punctuality in the class, increase in children’s achievement levels, increase in children’s retention in the school, increase in participation of girl children in school, etc. The most important point is that the degree of their contribution depends on the accessibility provided by the schools for their involvement in school management.  

References:
1.      Government of India (2009). The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009. New Delhi.
2.      Government of Sikkim (2006). The Sikkim Panchayat Manual – A compilation of Notifications relating to Panchayats in Sikkim 1993 – 2006. Gangtok: Rural Development Management and Development Department. 
3.      Government of Sikkim. (2010). The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Rules, 2010. Gangtok: Human Resource Development Department.
4.      Government of Sikkim. Annual Work Plan & Budget (2003 to 2012). Namchi: Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, Human Resource Development Department, South Sikkim. 
5.      Government of Sikkim. Circulars. Gangtok: Human Resource Development Department.
6.      Government of Sikkim. Reports generated by DISE (District Elementary System for Education) (2003 to 2012). Namchi: Human Resource Development Department.
7.      Mahajan, Baldev; Majumdar, Shrilekha & Agnihotri, DC, (1995) Educational Administration in Sikkim (Structures, Processes and Future Prospects), New Delhi, National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration.
8.      Thulung,Prem. (1998). Sikkimma Shikshako Vikas (Sanchhipta Parichaya), Namchi: Prem Thulung, Thulung House, Boomtar Namchi.

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