The camera team from the television channel
arrives at the school gate. There are three teachers, but no children to teach.
They ask where are the children? This is a school, right? And, it isn’t a
holiday, right?
The teachers are flustered. It’s obvious
they haven’t faced the camera, in their lives, so far. They stammer and mumble that
all the children have gone to a wedding. So the school is empty and the
teachers have nothing to do. All the children have gone to a wedding? So how
many children do you teach here? Five? Yes, five! Three teachers for five
students? Yes, you are right!
That’s the state of Kerala’s public schools
today according to a report in the television channel Asianet. In public
schools funded by the government there are no students to teach because all the
students have to gone to private schools. The government pays the teachers an
atrocious salary (by city standards) to do nothing. A teacher gets around Rs
15,000 when they join. And they get a big pension – half of their salary – when
they retire.
The reason is that the standard of teaching
in public schools in Kerala is abysmally low. Teachers don’t bother and the
children don’t care. Parents who send children to these schools are the poorest
and the reason they send children here is because they get a good mid-day meal
with rice, vegetable, and egg. Besides, the teachers arrange to bring children
to school by sending their own cars. They also offer enticements like uniforms,
bags, books, umbrellas for free. Because, if these five children don’t show up
in school, their jobs are gone. They may be transferred to somewhere worse than
the boondocks.
This is how education works in Kerala, the
100 per cent literate state. So, why don’t they improve the standard of
education in public schools? Who is bothered, as long as Gulf income is there,
who cares? Now with all oil at a new low when the Gulf workers return, imagine
the situation.