Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Students struggling to read in Indian languages: report

A longitudin­al study of two districts in Maharashtr­a and Karnataka has revealed that students are unable to read gradelevel passages in the regional languages due to lack of languagesp­ecific pedagogica­l tools

- Sarah Zia sarah.z@htlive.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Azim Premji University and Tata Trusts recently announced the findings of a three-year long study focusing on literacy habits of students reading in vernacular languages. The findings of the report titled ‘Literacy Research in Indian Languages’ (LiRIL) were released recently in Mumbai.

The study focused on students in grade I-III and mapped their progress as they were promoted to the next class to ensure consistenc­y in the cohort. The research was carried out in Yadgir and Palghar districts in Karnataka and Maharashtr­a respective­ly where two different kind of curricula were followed – activity-based in Karnataka and text-book based in Maharashtr­a.

The study assessed the ability of students to recognize characters in the local languages and while students could recognize the root alphabet (moolakshar­as), they struggled to identify the compound character formed by joining a maatra to the root character. While 32% students in Palghar could recognize the compound character, only 22% in Yadgir could recognize the same.

“Often, poor learning outcomes are attributed to lack of diversity in curricula, this research shows that even an activity-based curriculum couldn’t help the students as the teachers were ill-prepared and lacked the pedagogica­l tools required to teach Indian languages,” said Shailaja Menon, principal investigat­or of the project and faculty member, Azim Premji University. “Indian languages can be complex and lack of data on teaching challenges in this area leads to teacher training not being attuned to Indian peculiarit­ies.”

Learning outcomes at primary levels first came into prominence with the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) which mapped students’ ability to do basic mathematic­al calculatio­ns and reading abilities.

Menon explains that this study employed mixed methods including gathering quantitati­ve data, interviews with teachers, classroom observatio­ns, case-study interactio­ns with students from socially disadvanta­ged groups as well as curriculum analysis. “Discussion­s around poor learning outcomes have been ad-hoc and focused on broader factors such as teacher absenteeis­m and not on specific challenges within a classroom even when the teacher is present,” she adds. “What students learn and how they engage in a classroom is also based on their socio-economic background­s.”

“Given that many of these students came from disadvanta­ged background­s, managing attrition within the cohort was the key challenge as sometimes long-term migration in search of better opportunit­ies meant that the student would move to another school,” explains Amrita Patwardhan, Head – Education & Sports, Tata Trusts.

According to Menon, meaning making is a high order thinking skill that students will achieve after being able to identifyin­g and learning the letters. “However, teachers spent most of their time on just identifyin­g the letter which is a low order thinking skill that they could not move to the next complex stage of combining letters to form words and make meanings,” she says.

One of the main concerns flagged by the report is that early literacy is a rather new area for research with very little or negligible focus on early literacy in Indian languages. Further, curriculum materials cannot exist in isolation from effective pedagogica­l tools, the report adds. The complexity of decoding and comprehend­ing Indian scripts has not been fully captured by the current curriculum and that remains a major challenge.

TEACHERS SPENT MOST OF THEIR TIME ON INCULCATIN­G LOW ORDER THINKING SKILLS

 ?? MinT/phoTo ?? ▪ Often, poor learning outcomes are attributed to lack of diversity in curricula
MinT/phoTo ▪ Often, poor learning outcomes are attributed to lack of diversity in curricula

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