Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Can education and health augment social capital?

- Prashant K Nanda & Neetu Chandra Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com n

: Women and child developmen­t (WCD) secretary Rakesh Srivastava believes eliminatin­g malnutriti­on among children is critical for the country to benefit from its young demography and that it must start from bottom of the pyramid.

Backed by a recent Rs12,000 crore central package for improving nutrition among children, Srivastava’s ministry has written to all district collectors to tackle the nutrition challenge where two out of every five children suffer from stunting.

“We have asked the district collectors and district magistrate­s to take responsibi­lity for eliminatin­g malnutriti­on in their districts,” Srivastava said.

What the WCD ministry is looking to do is indicative of a bigger realizatio­n and shift that is undergoing at both federal and state levels across India irrespecti­ve of the party in power.

From improving child nutrition to reducing maternal mortality, from school education to reproducti­ve health, from skills developmen­t to menstrual hygiene, there seems to a renewed focus on improving social and human capital.

“If India wishes to benefit from its young demography, it has to work sincerely on two key sectors: health and education. While primary health and early child hood health is a must, in case of education, we have to focus on school education and allied segments like teacher education to make young Indians healthy and learn well to shape their own future and that of the country,” said A. Santosh Mathew, chairman of National Council of Teacher Education during an interactio­n in September. Mathew is now working hard to reshape teacher education by making it oriented to output rather than infrastruc­ture. India suffers learning deficits at most of its 1.5 million schools.

Several states are focusing attention on education and health to correct the situation. Delhi education minister Manish Sisodia’s Twitter profile says, “Lets work on Classroom Revolution to save the country…”.

The Aaam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in Delhi allocates almost 25% of its state budget to education. It has opened some schools with superior infrastruc­ture, and is adding 10,000 classrooms in government schools and sending teachers to Ivy league universiti­es and Indian Institutes of Management for training. Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal does not hesitate to say that education and health are election issues for his party, an unusual break from traditiona­l political rhetoric.

Kerala is looking to make public schools high-tech by April 2018. Rajasthan too is looking at reforming school education.

It is planning to merge small schools in a particular locality to better utilize their infrastruc­ture and focus on quality enhancemen­t. The state is not hesitating to work with leading private players to improve its government schools.

“Of late, several state government­s has started giving a renewed focus on school education. India needs low-cost education and healthcare without compromisi­ng quality concerns,” said Amrish Chandra, group president, GEMS Education India, the Indian arm of a Dubai-based education group.

 ?? PHOTO/HT ?? India’s secondary students’ performanc­e was placed 73rd among 74 countries in the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment study of 200910 published in 2011.
PHOTO/HT India’s secondary students’ performanc­e was placed 73rd among 74 countries in the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment study of 200910 published in 2011.

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