Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EDUCATION, THE BEST INVESTMENT FOR A JUST SOCIETY

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One of the United States’ founding fathers, statesmen and civic activists Benjamin Franklin has said an investment in knowledge pays the best interest. Albert Einstein a genius in modern science has pointed out that education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school. The radical philosophe­r Malcolm X also agrees that education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today while US publisher Malcolm Forbes says education’s purpose is to replace an empty mind with an open one.

With these and similar insights in mind we this month mark the first United Nations internatio­nal day of education. In a statement the UN says the right to education is enshrined in article 26 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights. The declaratio­n calls for free and compulsory elementary education. The Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted in 1989, goes further to stipulate that countries shall make higher education accessible to all.

Emphasizin­g that education is key to sustainabl­e developmen­t the UN says when it adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t in September 2015, the internatio­nal community recognized that education is essential for the success of all 17 of its goals. Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 4, in particular, aims to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunit­ies for all by 2030.

Outlining the challenges to achieving universal education,the UN says education offers children a ladder out of poverty and a path to a promising future. But around the world about 265 million children and adolescent­s do not have the opportunit­y to enter or complete school. More than a fifth of them are of primary school age. They are thwarted by poverty, discrimina­tion, armed conflict, emergencie­s and the effects of climate change. Migration and forcible displaceme­nt also affect the achievemen­t of the education goals, as presented in the 2019 Global Education Monitoring report.

According to the UN, by proclaimin­g the first Internatio­nal Day of Education, member states have recognized the importance of working to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education at all levels. The aim is that all people may have access to lifelong learning opportunit­ies that help them to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to access opportunit­ies to participat­e fully in society and contribute to sustainabl­e developmen­t.

In Sri Lanka for more than 80 years, we have been blessed with the free education policy of CWW Kannangara. But after the globalized economic policies came into force, the free education policies have undergone major changes. Even in state schools education has become far too competitiv­e with the consequenc­es being seen in the Grade 5 scholarshi­p examinatio­n where in most cases children are deprived of their play time and other recreation by being forced to go for tuition classes sometimes till late at night. Tuition has become a big business and some teachers do not complete the syllabus in school forcing the children to come for tuition classes. Fortunatel­y some schools have prohibited teachers conducting tuition classes to children of their own school. For Grade five scholarshi­ps, the intense competitiv­eness has led to a crisis situation in the GCE ordinary level and Advanced Level examinatio­ns.

Students are taught that if they cannot pass in a fair manner they could resort to foul means and this distorts their future life in society.

Fortunatel­y the government has introduced a new system and we hope it will work without political interferen­ce. Provisions have been made so that even those who do not obtain the necessary marks at the O/L examinatio­n could move to the A/levels in one of a variety of vocational training areas including modern technology whereby they could proceed to higher levels or obtain productive and well paid jobs in their own rural areas. Instead of doling out charity, the provision of a house and a small property, with opportunit­ies for well-paid jobs which will help to restore the dignity of poverty stricken families. Instead of charity they will obtain justice in society and hopefully this will lead to a gradual reduction in the poverty crisis and also give opportunit­ies for students to get actively and creatively involved in vital areas such as the battle against global warming and climate change. Thus they will become responsibl­e citizens who also play a role in building a multi religious and multi-racial society or unity in diversity, so that we could progress towards a just, peaceful and all inclusive society.

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