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Bangladesh is making a serious attempt to improve its schools

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Bangladesh is making a serious attempt to improve its schools

It hopes to move away from rote learning and towards actual learning
20211113_ASP004_0.jpg


Nov 13th 2021

Few in bangladesh would deny that their country has had remarkable success at getting kids into classrooms. Four decades ago less than a third of children finished primary school. Today, 80% do. Before the pandemic, more Bangladeshi girls than boys attended high school. In India and Pakistan, the reverse is true.


Improving the quality of education has proved trickier. More than half of Bangladeshi ten-year-olds in school are not proficient in reading, according to the World Bank, and more than a quarter of those aged between 15 to 24 are not in education, employment or training. A year and a half of pandemic-related school closures have made matters worse.

In some respects, unimpressive outcomes have not held back Bangladesh. The economy has been growing at an annual rate of 6% for the past decade, reaching 8% before the pandemic. The two main drivers of growth, the garment industry and remittances from overseas Bangladeshi workers, have boomed. But that is because labour is plentiful and cheap, not because it is skilled. Bangladeshi labourers in the Gulf often earn less than their Indian brethren. Garment workers in Dhaka, the capital, toil for lower wages than rivals in China.

Sustaining growth will rely on moving from cheap to skilled labour, says Hossain Zillur Rahman of the Power and Participation Research Centre, a think-tank in Dhaka. “Those skills need to be created now,” he says. The government is shaking up the curriculum as a way to achieve that. The plans, which are due to be implemented by 2025, focus on shifting away from mindlessly memorising textbooks and regurgitating them during exams and towards building useful skills. All exams will be scrapped until third grade. Year-end public exams, which start in secondary school, will wait until tenth grade. Before that, students will be assessed on their knowledge and ability throughout the year.

The new curriculum, which comes after years of consultation, including with employers and workers, is designed to address the mismatch between education and the skills required in the economy, says Mohibul Hasan Chowdhury, the deputy minister for education. A choice of two vocational subjects from such options as woodwork, graphic design, car mechanics, child care and plumbing will be mandatory for high-schoolers. The government also plans to open more technical universities.

Though many education experts are in favour of the change, some worry parts of it amount to trying to run before learning to walk. How can coding be taught well when “we cannot ensure numeracy and literacy”, asks Niaz Asadullah, an economist who focuses on education inequality at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur.

Moreover, he says, tens of thousands of madrasas, which are unaffected by the changes, have no government oversight and teach little beyond the Koran.
Nor does changing the curriculum solve many of the other problems underlying Bangladesh’s poor learning outcomes, says Mr Asadullah. Teachers are poorly paid, inadequately trained and too few in number. Bangladesh has among the largest class sizes in the region, with one teacher to 45 pupils in secondary school.

Worse, the system is riddled with corruption. Many teachers bribe their way into staying in cities, ensuring that remote regions get fewer teachers. Appointments at all levels are often based on political influence or bribery, according to Transparency International, an advocacy group. Certificates are handed out on a similar basis. The bribe needed to secure a head-teacher job can be 1m taka ($11,660).

Public funds flow less easily. At 2.1% of gdp, Bangladesh spends less on education than any other South Asian country, and falls well short of the 4-6% recommended by unesco, the un body responsible for education among other things. Mr Chowdhury says that a chunk of education spending comes from different ministries, and so is unaccounted for in this figure.

As a result of all this, many of the curriculum changes introduced over the past decade are yet to be implemented. The recently announced reforms are “on the positive trend”, says Mr Rahman. But only if they actually happen.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline "Levelling up"
 
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A choice of two vocational subjects from such options as woodwork, graphic design, car mechanics, child care and plumbing will be mandatory for high-schoolers. The government also plans to open more technical universities.

Well more vocational subjects need to be introduced as choices.

In the US (also Germany) high-schools (9,10,11 and 12th grade) they have metal shop and wood shop that teach welding and woodworking skills at a minimum.

In Germany. the less academic students are separated at the 9th grade to follow only vocational apprenticeship training with skilled artisans, no point in teaching advanced math to kids who will not become professors.

 
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Well more vocational subjects need to be introduced as choices.

In the US (also Germany) high-schools (9,10,11 and 12th grade) they have metal shop and wood shop that teach welding and woodworking skills at a minimum.

In Germany. the less academic students are separated at the 9th grade to follow only vocational apprenticeship training with skilled artisans, no point in teaching advanced math to kids who will not become professors.

I think we should follow the German model in BD. Not all people in any country are equally meritorious, yet the parents in BD want their untalented kids to become engineers, doctors or scientists.

This practice and the mindset should be discouraged. Not all are born with equal talent. Germany allows only the talented ones to move up to the High Schools and a limited ones to the Universities.

All other go through a kind of vocational institutions where they learn the necessary tools and become highly acclaimed groups of workers, not always blue color, but also white color.

In Germany, everyone earns high living wages and lives a very good life. Because they produce more with the help of machines and tools, therefore, they get high salaries.
 
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Bangladesh certainly making the right moves for sure - and there are serious lessons for the "deep Pakistan establishment".

Hopefully Bangladesh can close down all of the madrasas and get everyone into the official eduction systems that will give them a real chance at opportunities and become productive citizens.
 
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Bangladesh certainly making the right moves for sure - and there are serious lessons for the "deep Pakistan establishment".

Hopefully Bangladesh can close down all of the madrasas and get everyone into the official eduction systems that will give them a real chance at opportunities and become productive citizens.

The madrasa system isn't all that bad except for a few backward village ones. Many madrasa graduates go onto secular education and are well aware of the need for it.
 
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The madrasa system isn't all that bad except for a few backward village ones. Many madrasa graduates go onto secular education and are well aware of the need for it.

Exactly, they fill a gap. I think Madrassa teachers have specific requirements and the Alem, Kamel and Fadel curriculums have been extensively revised and regulated. Same for Hindu and Buddhist religious schools ("Tol", "Pathshala" or "Vidyapith" as they are known).
 
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Bangladesh certainly making the right moves for sure - and there are serious lessons for the "deep Pakistan establishment".

Hopefully Bangladesh can close down all of the madrasas and get everyone into the official eduction systems that will give them a real chance at opportunities and become productive citizens.
Thanks for the correct suggestions. I wish BD to follow them.

The Madrassah system is a menace to the country. Students there learn a few good things, but they mostly learn superstitions that we term religious learnings. I have seen mothers telling that the parents earn Paradise if their children go to Madrassahs. What a superstition???

I fully disapprove the continuation of the Madrassahs. It is a drag on the society.
 
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Thanks for the correct suggestions. I wish BD to follow them.

The Madrassah system is a menace to the country. Students there learn a few good things, but they mostly learn superstitions that we term religious learnings. I have seen mothers telling that the parents earn Paradise if their children go to Madrassahs. What a superstition???

I fully disapprove the continuation of the Madrassahs. It is a drag on the society.

@bluesky bhai great point, but govt. will probably not discontinue Madrassah system because they want to appease Islamic political parties.

Abolishing Madrassahs completely will bring out protesters to the streets saying "Bangladesh is turning Hindu" etc. etc. Eventually funding from the govt. will be reduced (it already is) and foreign funding (by Saudi mostly) will also be reduced and these schools will be better monitored and managed.

Look at how many illegal mosques/madrassahs have been built on govt. lands, some are partially blocking streets in Dhaka. Govt. cannot even demolish them without fear of mass reprisals.


But secular education curriculum changes seems to have paid off somewhat for females (aged 15 and up), as can be seen from some figures from 2019, but we can't stop now...

20210327_ASC297_0.png
 
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Madrassa has it place but it is limited by budget and dumb scholars. it should be mix of everything until you reach uni level. for e.g survival preppier training, agriculture, horse riding, bow and arrow sports, basic first aid training, math, languages, cupping, history, cadet, learning halal slaughter and hygiene, environment cleanliness etc. its a long journey.
oh i miss out radio communication training.
 
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Madrassa has it place but it is limited by budget and dumb scholars. it should be mix of everything until you reach uni level. for e.g survival preppier training, agriculture, horse riding, bow and arrow sports, basic first aid training, math, languages, cupping, history, cadet, learning halal slaughter and hygiene, environment cleanliness etc. its a long journey.
oh i miss out radio communication training.
I think a normal curriculum as it is in non-Madrassah schools/ institutions should be introduced plus a few subjects on religion. Some of the subjects can be the selective ones out of a few optional subjects to suit one's choice.

All the Mullah teachers except those who will be teaching theological subjects should be retrenched. They are very ignorant without any knowledge even on religion. They just parrot what they learned.

@Bilal9
 
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I think a normal curriculum as it is in non-Madrassah schools/ institutions should be introduced plus a few subjects on religion. Some of the subjects can be selective ones out of a few optional subjects to suit one's choice.

All the Mullah teachers except those who will be teaching theological subjects should be retrenched. They are very ignorant without any knowledge even on religion. They just parrot what they learned.

@Bilal9

i think mulla should have phd in religion combined philosophy, history ad one phd in a totally diff subject.
then again education is luxury, with all those rishwat quality must be rockbottom.
third world school ios more torture center where you interrogated by teacher and then beaten.
 
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Bangladesh is making a serious attempt to improve its schools

It hopes to move away from rote learning and towards actual learning
20211113_ASP004_0.jpg


Nov 13th 2021

Few in bangladesh would deny that their country has had remarkable success at getting kids into classrooms. Four decades ago less than a third of children finished primary school. Today, 80% do. Before the pandemic, more Bangladeshi girls than boys attended high school. In India and Pakistan, the reverse is true.


Improving the quality of education has proved trickier. More than half of Bangladeshi ten-year-olds in school are not proficient in reading, according to the World Bank, and more than a quarter of those aged between 15 to 24 are not in education, employment or training. A year and a half of pandemic-related school closures have made matters worse.

In some respects, unimpressive outcomes have not held back Bangladesh. The economy has been growing at an annual rate of 6% for the past decade, reaching 8% before the pandemic. The two main drivers of growth, the garment industry and remittances from overseas Bangladeshi workers, have boomed. But that is because labour is plentiful and cheap, not because it is skilled. Bangladeshi labourers in the Gulf often earn less than their Indian brethren. Garment workers in Dhaka, the capital, toil for lower wages than rivals in China.

Sustaining growth will rely on moving from cheap to skilled labour, says Hossain Zillur Rahman of the Power and Participation Research Centre, a think-tank in Dhaka. “Those skills need to be created now,” he says. The government is shaking up the curriculum as a way to achieve that. The plans, which are due to be implemented by 2025, focus on shifting away from mindlessly memorising textbooks and regurgitating them during exams and towards building useful skills. All exams will be scrapped until third grade. Year-end public exams, which start in secondary school, will wait until tenth grade. Before that, students will be assessed on their knowledge and ability throughout the year.

The new curriculum, which comes after years of consultation, including with employers and workers, is designed to address the mismatch between education and the skills required in the economy, says Mohibul Hasan Chowdhury, the deputy minister for education. A choice of two vocational subjects from such options as woodwork, graphic design, car mechanics, child care and plumbing will be mandatory for high-schoolers. The government also plans to open more technical universities.

Though many education experts are in favour of the change, some worry parts of it amount to trying to run before learning to walk. How can coding be taught well when “we cannot ensure numeracy and literacy”, asks Niaz Asadullah, an economist who focuses on education inequality at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur.

Moreover, he says, tens of thousands of madrasas, which are unaffected by the changes, have no government oversight and teach little beyond the Koran.
Nor does changing the curriculum solve many of the other problems underlying Bangladesh’s poor learning outcomes, says Mr Asadullah. Teachers are poorly paid, inadequately trained and too few in number. Bangladesh has among the largest class sizes in the region, with one teacher to 45 pupils in secondary school.

Worse, the system is riddled with corruption. Many teachers bribe their way into staying in cities, ensuring that remote regions get fewer teachers. Appointments at all levels are often based on political influence or bribery, according to Transparency International, an advocacy group. Certificates are handed out on a similar basis. The bribe needed to secure a head-teacher job can be 1m taka ($11,660).

Public funds flow less easily. At 2.1% of gdp, Bangladesh spends less on education than any other South Asian country, and falls well short of the 4-6% recommended by unesco, the un body responsible for education among other things. Mr Chowdhury says that a chunk of education spending comes from different ministries, and so is unaccounted for in this figure.

As a result of all this, many of the curriculum changes introduced over the past decade are yet to be implemented. The recently announced reforms are “on the positive trend”, says Mr Rahman. But only if they actually happen.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline "Levelling up"
Very very nice. Just one word of advice: stay away from taking sides and wars.
 
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I think a normal curriculum as it is in non-Madrassah schools/ institutions should be introduced plus a few subjects on religion. Some of the subjects can be selective ones out of a few optional subjects to suit one's choice.

All the Mullah teachers except those who will be teaching theological subjects should be retrenched. They are very ignorant without any knowledge even on religion. They just parrot what they learned.

@Bilal9

Yes true but has to be done slowly. Hujurera kheipa geley oshubidha assey.
 
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I think we should follow the German model in BD. Not all people in any country are equally meritorious, yet the parents in BD want their untalented kids to become engineers, doctors or scientists.

This practice and the mindset should be discouraged. Not all are born with equal talent. Germany allows only the talented ones to move up to the High Schools and a limited ones to the Universities.

All other go through a kind of vocational institutions where they learn the necessary tools and become highly acclaimed groups of workers, not always blue color, but also white color.

In Germany, everyone earns high living wages and lives a very good life. Because they produce more with the help of machines and tools, therefore, they get high salaries.

The model is the same in Switzerland too, or let's say in most European welfare state. Its an excellent method to ensure low unemployment, more societal engagement and lower crime. An apprentice directly out of high school who trained in a special field for 3 years will find employment soon and make at the bare minimum 3.5k CHF (~ 3 lakhs taka).

However, the problem that would surface in Bangladesh is that the income would not be enough to survive in an increasing inflationary state + no guarantee of jobs. Even now, people with proper jobs considered to be middle class have difficulties in making ends meet. Let alone the ones who are in vocational studies.

The government needs to ensure jobs for these people and provide enough to sustain themselves. That is the only downside and probably the biggest issue. Other than that, its a good plan.
 
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