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IslamabadOur children have been
misinformed for decades due to
absence of a clear vision in the
national text book curriculum,
observed Amir Riaz, the author of the
research report titled What are we
teaching to our children? The report
launch coupled with a discussion on the
national curriculum was held in
Islamabad on Wednesday by ActionAid
Pakistan and its local partners, to
coincide with the Teachers Day.
Factual blunders and confusing ideas in
the text books were pinpointed in the
Report, which is the result of a survey
of 34 Punjab Textbook Boards Urdu,
English, Social Studies and Islamiyat/
Ethics text books being taught at
Class-I to X level.
In a way that was both mocking and
surprising, Riaz identified a series of
mistakes that range from overall
wrong information, misinformation and
lack of most recent information.
These mistakes are creating
confusion, widening rural-urban divide
besides causing biases at cultural,
communal, sectarian and gender
levels.
Highlighting multiple lacunas and
anomalies in the syllabus designed for
students from grade one to ten, the
speakers stressed for the need to
purge the curriculum of all sorts of
discrimination, glorification of war, as
well as gender, urban and cultural
biases. Among the speakers were
Aamir Riaz, author; Samina Imtiaz,
Executive Director PEAD Foundation;
Dr Afzal Babar, President Private
Schools Networks; Ahmed Saleem,
Senior advisor SDPI and Dr Tariq
Mehmood, Deputy Education Advisor,
National Curriculum Wing.
Students of Karlot Residential College
were also present at the seminar.
Talking to Pakistan Observer, Numair
Hafeez, a 10th grade student said that
it is our misfortune that we are being
taught decades-old curriculum which
has no practical implementation in
todays technological world.
Samina Imtiaz, speaking at the
seminar, deplored that the text books
recommended for both public and
private schools were devoid of content
to assist students in critical thinking.
The textbooks are based on the past
history and do not ask the students to
look on present and into the future.
Dr Afzal Babar told that publishers
usually do not take into Pakistans
local context while publishing our text
books because there is no check and
balance system. He added that it is
the sole responsibility of government
to oversee whether the curriculum was
designed in context of Pakistan.
In a multimedia presentation, Riaz
informed that all the 34 books had
871 lessons, while only 11 per cent
content was related to peace and
tolerance. He added that in the
Punjab text book, there were only 35
lessons out of 871, that contained
information about Punjab, which was
less than five per cent. There are
overall 90 lessons introducing and
promoting scientific achievements and
very few lessons, 35 in all, which were
based on information about developed
nations, Muslim world and South Asia.
misinformed for decades due to
absence of a clear vision in the
national text book curriculum,
observed Amir Riaz, the author of the
research report titled What are we
teaching to our children? The report
launch coupled with a discussion on the
national curriculum was held in
Islamabad on Wednesday by ActionAid
Pakistan and its local partners, to
coincide with the Teachers Day.
Factual blunders and confusing ideas in
the text books were pinpointed in the
Report, which is the result of a survey
of 34 Punjab Textbook Boards Urdu,
English, Social Studies and Islamiyat/
Ethics text books being taught at
Class-I to X level.
In a way that was both mocking and
surprising, Riaz identified a series of
mistakes that range from overall
wrong information, misinformation and
lack of most recent information.
These mistakes are creating
confusion, widening rural-urban divide
besides causing biases at cultural,
communal, sectarian and gender
levels.
Highlighting multiple lacunas and
anomalies in the syllabus designed for
students from grade one to ten, the
speakers stressed for the need to
purge the curriculum of all sorts of
discrimination, glorification of war, as
well as gender, urban and cultural
biases. Among the speakers were
Aamir Riaz, author; Samina Imtiaz,
Executive Director PEAD Foundation;
Dr Afzal Babar, President Private
Schools Networks; Ahmed Saleem,
Senior advisor SDPI and Dr Tariq
Mehmood, Deputy Education Advisor,
National Curriculum Wing.
Students of Karlot Residential College
were also present at the seminar.
Talking to Pakistan Observer, Numair
Hafeez, a 10th grade student said that
it is our misfortune that we are being
taught decades-old curriculum which
has no practical implementation in
todays technological world.
Samina Imtiaz, speaking at the
seminar, deplored that the text books
recommended for both public and
private schools were devoid of content
to assist students in critical thinking.
The textbooks are based on the past
history and do not ask the students to
look on present and into the future.
Dr Afzal Babar told that publishers
usually do not take into Pakistans
local context while publishing our text
books because there is no check and
balance system. He added that it is
the sole responsibility of government
to oversee whether the curriculum was
designed in context of Pakistan.
In a multimedia presentation, Riaz
informed that all the 34 books had
871 lessons, while only 11 per cent
content was related to peace and
tolerance. He added that in the
Punjab text book, there were only 35
lessons out of 871, that contained
information about Punjab, which was
less than five per cent. There are
overall 90 lessons introducing and
promoting scientific achievements and
very few lessons, 35 in all, which were
based on information about developed
nations, Muslim world and South Asia.