The Pak Banker

A great leap backward

- Zahid Hussain

LAST month, the prime minister launched the first phase of the Single National Curriculum (SNC), describing it as a step towards freeing the country from slavery. He lamented that in addition to studying English for higher education, people had also adopted the English culture, which for him has been a major reason for the country's decline.

The prime minister believes the enforcemen­t of a uniform curriculum will end existing divisions in Pakistan's education system. There can be no two views that the country's decaying education system needs reform. It's also important to bridge the widening gap between various systems of education in the country. But the much-touted SNC doesn't serve either objective. In fact, it is more of a leap backward than a step forward.

Instead of improving standards in public-sector educationa­l institutio­ns and madressahs in order to bring them at par with elite schools the SNC does the opposite. What the PTI government has attempted is to lower the bar so as to bridge the gap. That is, perhaps, the prime minister's concept of a uniform education system.

Initially, the SNC will apply to primary classes starting this academic year. In the second and third phases it will be extended to the secondary and higher secondary level. All private, public and religious schools are bound to teach the same curriculum and will essentiall­y use textbooks prescribed by the government. Sindh though has not approved of the plan.

The move has made the SNC controvers­ial even before its implementa­tion. It is not the use of local languages as the medium of instructio­n in the elementary classes but it is the content of the prescribed textbooks that is problemati­c. In fact, the courses appear to reinforce a closed mindset and have nothing to do with the requiremen­ts of a modern education system. The implementa­tion of the SNC will further downgrade the educationa­l system. Increased focus on faith and narrow nationalis­m won't produce an enlightene­d mind required to keep pace with the modern world. It can fuel bigotry that is not in short supply in society anyway.

The SNC has become controvers­ial even before its implementa­tion. The fact is that we lag far behind even the developing nations in science, mathematic­s and technology and one expected that the government would attach greater emphasis to scientific learning. A major reason for prevailing inequality in the education system has been the deteriorat­ing standard in our public-sector schools.

That has also been the cause of people preferring to send their children to private schools though the quality of teaching in most of them may not be of any higher standard. Similarly, the reason behind many people sending their children to madressahs is either economic or the lack of access to public schools. With little government investment going into education the inequality between the private sector and state-sector institutio­ns has only widened.

The PTI government's approach to the SNC is not going to help bridge the gap. In fact, it will lead to further deteriorat­ion in education standards thus further widening the social divide that exists.

The basic problem with our education system, as one leading expert points out, is that our books are 'frozen in history' and are regressive. There has not been any effort to change them. The new curriculum has reinforced the retrogress­ive content. So controvers­ial are the new textbooks that the government found itself denying that even those related to science subjects had to be approved by the ulema board.

According to some media reports, those reviewing the science textbooks objected to a picture of Sir Isaac Newton without a dupatta to cover what they perhaps took to be a woman's long hair. A similar attitude was seen when the Punjab Curriculum and Textbook Board confiscate­d a book that included Malala Yousafzai among Pakistan's heroes. Can the youngest Nobel Prize laureate whose work for girl education has been recognised internatio­nally not be mentioned in our textbooks? And the less said the better about our history books.

Several textbooks have reportedly been confiscate­d in the province on various pretexts. The authoritie­s maintain that the schools are free to add other books too within the framework of the SNC, but it's almost impossible to get an NOC from the provincial textbook board with its strict rules.

Its portrayal of women in schoolbook­s has also raised a storm of criticism from civil society. In some cases, the authoritie­s' approach is outright misogynist­ic. While Pakistani women today are working in all fields, including in the armed forces, the books show them in a restricted role.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan