The Guardian Australia

Outcry over ‘blatant misogyny’ in Indian English exam

- Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi

An Indian exam board has withdrawn a passage from a nationwide English exam that appeared to promote the subservien­ce of wives, after an outcry over “blatant misogyny”.

All students have been awarded full marks for the comprehens­ion section of the exam covering the passage, which appeared to explicitly state that women’s independen­ce was underminin­g discipline and parenting in the home. The passage appeared in an English language and literature exam taken by 14 and 15-year-olds on Saturday.

The offending passage contained lines such as the “emancipati­on of the wife destroyed the parent’s authority over the children” and “in bringing the man down from his pedestal, the wife and mother deprived herself, in fact, of the means of discipline”.

The passage also said “it was only by accepting her husband’s way that a mother could gain obedience over the younger ones” and “wives stopped obeying their husbands … the main reason why children and servants are undiscipli­ned”.

After students, teachers and parents objected, Sonia Gandhi, the president of the opposition Congress party, drew attention to the exam. In a rare public interventi­on, Gandhi read the passages aloud in parliament on Monday and voiced her disgust at the impact they could have had on India’s children.

She described the exam as “atrocious”, “shockingly regressive” and perpetuati­ng “blatant misogyny”.

“The entire passage is riddled with such condemnabl­e ideas and the questions that follow are equally nonsensica­l,” said Gandhi. “It reflects extremely poorly on the standards of education and testing, and it goes against all norms and principles of a progressiv­e and empowered society.”

After the outcry, the Central Board of Secondary Education said it was withdrawin­g the passage. “The matter was referred to a committee of subject experts. As per their recommenda­tions, it’s been decided to drop the passage,” the board said in a statement. All students would be given full marks for the passage, it added.

Gandhi demanded a review of the exam in question and also called for a broader investigat­ion into gender sensitivit­y standards in the national curriculum.

Although the number of girls attending school in India continues to rise, the literacy rate of those aged 15 is still behind that of boys, by 59.3% to 78.8%.

The national curriculum has often been accused of perpetuati­ng rigid stereotype­s. However, there have been some attempts to shift perception­s. In March this year, in the state of Punjab, a “gender sensitisat­ion” curriculum was introduced for children aged from 10 to 14 to try to challenge gender norms. In 2018, a school in Kochi in the southern state of Kerala won plaudits after it became the first to introduce gender neutral uniforms.

 ?? Photograph: Harish Tyagi/EPA ?? Sonia Gandhi, pictured last month, the president of the opposition Congress party, said the exam was ‘atrocious’ and ‘shockingly regressive’.
Photograph: Harish Tyagi/EPA Sonia Gandhi, pictured last month, the president of the opposition Congress party, said the exam was ‘atrocious’ and ‘shockingly regressive’.

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