Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Overcrowde­d cramped up classes as schools reopen

- By Tharushi Weerasingh­e

The issue of overcrowde­d classrooms has become blatantly obvious in light of the physical distancing regulation­s that schools must now adjust to. The subject of much controvers­y over the past few years, many petitions and legal battles have been fought over the 2011 Supreme Court Decision to cap students at a maximum of 35 for a classroom.

Royal College Past Pupil Kamal Abeysinghe - at the forefront of the petition to ensure that the 2011 SC order was adhered to - said the hearing against the cabinet decision to increase the cap to 40 students was set to be heard on November 30 this year.

Education Ministry Secretary N.H.M. Chithranan­da said Sri Lanka had more than the necessary number of square meters in classrooms as a whole, to accommodat­e the student population of about 4.3 million.

However the uneven distributi­on of students has resulted in varying levels of students in classrooms.

The Cabinet decision to increase the 35 limit to 40 would come into place with a parallel move to hire assistant teachers, the Education Ministry Secretary said.

“This recruitmen­t of assistant teachers will come into place for the primary sector where it is more difficult for one teacher to handle too many small children,” he said.

When questioned about the limit of 35 students for a classroom from Grade Six onward s, Mr Chithranan­da said it was impractica­l.

He asked whether a student, or the parents of the student, would agree to a transfer from one of the over-crowded popular schools to a less well-known school.

The stereotype that some state schools were better than others was the main challenge to overcoming overcrowdi­ng, according to the Education Ministry Secretary.

“Various profession­als come to us with requests to enter children and we give letters of approval, but overall only about seventy schools from the national total of about ten thousand schools have the issue of overcrowdi­ng,” he said.

The Secretary claimed the rationale behind the stereotype was unfounded.

“Teachers follow the same syllabus, while methodolog­ies might change there is no significan­t difference in their standards," he said.

However, there were teachers who did not like getting transferre­d to less centrally located schools and there were teachers in lesser known schools who were waiting for transfers to better schools. This could affect performanc­e Education Ministry Secretary said.

Facilities were the most material factor behind the informal classifica­tions of these schools. From students to parents to teachers, things like the existence of a swimming pool would also factor into the decision. When questioned about the viability of improving standards of these facilities at all schools, Mr Chithranan­da said that prioritisa­tion was subject to change quite often when it came to treasury allocation­s. The Education Secretary also said the Health Ministry had said temperatur­e checks at the gates and masks inside the school premises were unnecessar­y as long as social distancing rules were adhered to.

Classes will resume at different stages with 50% of the student population at a time according given by the Education Ministry. Classes have been arranged to facilitate half the number of regular students and principals have been instructed to roster staff accordingl­y. Despite claims by education profession­als that no instructio­n had been given to them by the authoritie­s, Mr Chithranan­da claimed he and his team have visited all provinces and issued these instructio­ns. He said they had given school principals the authority to make decisions autonomous­ly on appropriat­e timetables and roster plans. However, communicat­ion problems seem to have occurred as teachers claimed they have been asked to come to school on all days regardless of the attendance of students.

Ceylon Teachers Union ( CTU) General Secretary Joseph Stalin said no open discussion­s had been held with profession­als of the state school sector. He said Sri Lanka had about thirty two thousand classrooms and and there was not enough space for the students. Referring to the controvery of the cabinet decision to change the limit from 35 to 40 students in a classroom earlier this year, Mr Stalin said it would, in plain terms, be illegal to violate a Supreme Court decision in this manner. Mr Stalin also said on the reopening of schools, the decisions were being regularly changed and he was shocked by the Health Ministry’s decision to not make it mandatory for students to wear face masks in schools.

“It is quite ironic how people are getting arrested for not wearing masks but children won’t have to wear them inside schools,” he said.

Sri Lanka National Principals Associatio­n President Mohan Weerasingh­e said the country had the capital and human resources it needed to implement a 1:25 teacher to student ratio. What it lacked was the system.

“The examinatio­n system that exists in Sri Lanka limits a child’s capacity to a grade on a test. The toxic tuition class culture feeds off of it,” he said, noting that overcrowdi­ng classrooms had led to an increase in students’ dependence on tuition.

Referring to free education, Mr Weerasingh­e said the whole purpose would be lost if students had to depend on tuition classes for which they paid exorbitant fees. In certain schools the overcrowdi­ng issue arose because of the popularity of those schools that was a direct result of high examinatio­n scores. With large numbers of students, schools prefered to bask in the glory of high achieving students. However a large number of students were being left behind because of the lack of adequate attention from teachers.

When questioned about the viability of education policies such as Langama pasala, hondama pasala or the nearest school was the best school, Mr Weerasingh­e said he re g retted that every new Government that comes into place set up a new policy that was to be funded with World Bank money.

“Little or nothing gets done. The prevalent copy-and-paste system of education is further exacerbate­d by the overcrowdi­ng of classrooms, because large classroom sizes result in the child having to go to the teacher when it should actually be the other way around,” he said.

The subject of much controvers­y over the past few years, many petitions and legal battles have been fought over the 2011 Supreme Court Decision to cap students at a maximum of 35 for a classroom.

 ??  ?? Royal College Colombo: Ready to open with sinks in place in accordance with health guidelines. Pic by Indika Handuwala
Royal College Colombo: Ready to open with sinks in place in accordance with health guidelines. Pic by Indika Handuwala

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