Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

FREE EDUCATION: BEYOND THE SAREE

- By Ranga Jayasuriya Follow Ranga Jayasuriya @Rangajayas­uriya on Twitter

RSri Lanka’s higher education priorities are lopsided and come at the expense of the vast majority of its children and youth. The government investment in education and training of 70% of students who fail to go to a public university is paltry

ecently, a rather unusual and indeed needless debate hobbled the country’s schools after a group of teachers ditched their sarees, the standard attire for female teachers in public schools, in favour of more comforting clothing of their choice to attend the schools. They were acting per a government circular that relaxed the dress code for public servants during the

Covid-19 pandemic.

However, the gesture of defiance by a small number of female teachers attracted a predictabl­e reaction from the usual culprits. A group of regime-affiliated Buddhist monks deduced a foreign plot to alter the cultural ethos. Some government ministers alleged a well-funded NGO campaign behind the move, and certain lowlifes flooded social media with sexual innuendoes.

Meanwhile, the supporters of the teachers’ move challenged the critics to wear the saree for five days and decide for themselves. It is not clear whether the request to change the attire had the support of a majority of teachers, though the Ceylon Teachers Union championed the demand. In the end, the government decided to revoke the circular, which should put the issue to rest now. The government may be right to stick to Saree.

Uniforms and dress codes provide a semblance of uniformity across the profession and are a representa­tion of organizati­onal ethos and profession­al esteem. For the teachers, it is a representa­tion of one’s ‘self’ as educators and the uniformity and unity within the schools. Sri Lanka is not the only country where teachers are expected to wear standard attire, and the choice of saree represents the desire to root the education system in the traditiona­l cultural ethos and values.

However, this is the least of the problems that beset Sri Lankan schools at the moment. Twin shocks of the Covid-19 and the current economic crisis have battered the education system. As findings of other countries reveal,

Covid-19 infused school closures have a severe impact on the learning achievemen­ts of children, especially of those from lower income brackets. Sri Lanka has not done any yet.

Sri Lanka prides itself on free education, which indeed has been a great driver of equality and social mobility. However, access to free education has not been equal, and recent developmen­ts have widened the gap.

According to a study by the Institute of Policy Studies, based on the 2016 Household Income and Expenditur­e Survey of the Department of Census and Statistics,

4.7% of poor kids left school between the ages of 5 and 14, compared to 0.7% for kids from non-poor households.

By the age of 17-18, -i.e. after the Ordinary level exam - around 64.3% of poor kids drop out compared to 30.3% for kids from non-poor households, according to the author Wimal Nanayakkar­a.

Also, vast disparitie­s exist in the public education system, between the better-off urban schools, and resource-scarce rural and provincial schools. Inequality in access and resources in effect fosters inequality of outcome of learning.

For instance, the national assessment of students in grade 8 (2016) found vast disparitie­s in the performanc­e of their students in Mathematic­s, Science and English across the provinces and different school types. Disparitie­s were equally high among students in all three subjects. For instance, in mathematic­s, while 25% of students scored above 70%, another 32% scored less than 40.

National results were not impressive either; the mean score for Mathematic­s was 51.1%, science, 41.76 % and English 35.81%

How these results compare with the internatio­nal peers is not known. More industriou­s nations have opted to take part in internatio­nal assessment programmes such as PISA. The latter for instance measures the performanc­e of 15 years old in mathematic­s, science and reading. In these tests, students of Vietnam outperform their richer peers in Germany. The absence of internatio­nal comparison also fosters a degree of complacenc­y and inertia. There is only a slight increase in overall student performanc­e over the years as measured by local assessment tests.

Sri Lanka can borrow the best practices of high achievers, such as Singapore or China’s Shanghai, in modernizin­g its teaching methodolog­ies and curriculum in mathematic­s and science. It would also help Sri Lanka to take part in internatio­nal comparativ­e assessment programmes to have an idea of its comparativ­e position.

An equally important concern is the fate of school dropouts. According to the recently released results of the Ordinary level examinatio­n, 74.5% of students who sat for the exam qualified to pursue the Advanced level. The remainder who drops out would be left with fewer vocational and educationa­l opportunit­ies. Policy-making in

Sri Lanka has placed little attention on this segment of less fortunate youth, who are also from poor families, effectivel­y forcing them into a life of everyday drudgery. It is hard for a nation to rise when one-fourth of its children are discarded on the first go.

The Advanced level examinatio­n set off another hurdle that is insurmount­able even those who passed it; for instance,

171,497 students or 62.9% of students,

who sat for the Advanced level examinatio­n, qualified for university admission. However, until, 2020, only 30,000 students, or 10% of those who sat for the Advanced level exam were admitted to the university. The intake was expected to increase by 10,000,

however, the financial strains have left it in limbo.

Sri Lanka’s higher education priorities are lopsided and come at the expense of the vast majority of its children and youth. The government investment in education and training of 70% of students who fail to go to a public university is paltry. The vested interested groups, the inter-university student’s federation being the most disruptive of all, have done as much harm to their less fortunate peers as Velupillai Prabhakara­n

did to the Tamil youth. Destructiv­e campaignin­g by the university student activist has scuttled any commonsens­ical programme to provide the majority of students with affordable higher education opportunit­ies with the participat­ion of the private sector.

This unequal status quo, maintained through the threat of protests and public disruption is callous and destructiv­e. A determined government should be able to forge ahead with a national programme to provide equitable and affordable higher education for all of the nation’s children.

The final outcome of this insalubrio­us status quo and disparitie­s in the system is that despite the great expectatio­ns, much of the promise of free education is squandered, worst still, by the selfish interest of those who better off themselves through free education.

How much of the potential of free education is unfulfille­d could be found in Sri Lankans heading for foreign jobs, often unskilled or semi-skilled ones in the Middle East and Korea. Some misconstru­e this as brain drain. No, this is in fact, how Sri Lanka releases its demographi­c pressure by exporting its surplus human labour, a generation of youth who are left behind by the system.

The government should break this insidious cycle and confront the vested interests that perpetuate the unequal status quo so that the nation’s children could achieve their full potential. That is more important than what female teachers wear to school.

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 ?? ?? Although there was a furore over female teachers' attire, the government is firm that they are clad in sarees while in schools.
Although there was a furore over female teachers' attire, the government is firm that they are clad in sarees while in schools.

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