What's new

Pakistan's Education system | Reforms & Upgrades.

Urdu is dying.

This example is a clear evidence of it. Funny isn't it.

It is not just this oath, people in our country are getting more and more reluctant to abandon one of the greatest gift of God. I am sure everyone feels the same way if they observe things.

45.gif
Pakistan Khappay Khappay Khappay!! :D
 
. .
@Leader
I liked what I read in here...
Dubai engineer building a future for Pakistan village | GulfNews.com
Comes close to how Imran Khan's charitable organization works. IMO.:)

you know what this is great, but this is suppose to be done by the govt, the guy without a second thought is doing great job, he is helping his villagers which is commendable. but how this service is going to continue after he is gone? some financial circle must be established to make charitable work go on. the same is with Shaukat khanam cancer hospital, its half budget is still depending on the donors. still not a trust, so is the namal college. if someday I am to establish such an institution which I will, I need to ensure that it must be financial sound, once its established, it should not depend on donations.

but none the less, obviously, no matter what the size of the work, mr saeed hayat is doing a great job.
 
.
Related with education in a way. We have parallel systems running in our country, and alot of people from the O/A level stream regard Urdu as a lowly language. Language of the poor, and prefer talking in that stylized English to pose themselves as more modern and seemingly more educated.

I've seen the Urdu Syllabus for Urdu in O levels. It's not that Urdu is considered a lowly language, the thing is, children are basically being forced into memorizing stories of Urdu poets, and Urdu writers and when they ask "Why is this important?", teachers just scold them.
If we want Urdu to become popular then we must be a little less firm in how we teach children. Language is creative, almost spiritual in my opinion. Children should be allowed to explore and develop in their own time instead of being forced to analyse writers and poets who they detest.
 
.
I've seen the Urdu Syllabus for Urdu in O levels. It's not that Urdu is considered a lowly language, the thing is, children are basically being forced into memorizing stories of Urdu poets, and Urdu writers and when they ask "Why is this important?", teachers just scold them.
If we want Urdu to become popular then we must be a little less firm in how we teach children. Language is creative, almost spiritual in my opinion. Children should be allowed to explore and develop in their own time instead of being forced to analyse writers and poets who they detest.

You are right.
 
.
January 18, 2014

UAE starts seven educational projects in Pakistan

249488424.jpg


$14.4m programme includes three colleges and four vocational and rehabilitation centres for women

The UAE Pakistan Assistance Programme (UAE PAP) has started the implementation of seven educational projects, including three colleges and four vocational and rehabilitation centres for women at a cost $14.4 million (Dh52.9 million).

The move follows the directives by President His Highness Shaikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan to support the Pakistani people and contribute to the development of the education sector.


The UAE PAP said the new projects are part of the second phase ordered by the UAE President and being followed up by General Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, and Shaikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Presidential Affairs and Board Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (ADFD), to contribute to the development of infrastructure in Pakistan.

The UAE PAP’s administration said that the educational projects would provide an appropriate education environment, adding that the three colleges cost $12.4 million. They offer study programmes in fields of medicine, engineering and computing. Meanwhile, the new four vocational and rehabilitation centres for women at cost $2 million will provide training for women in crafts, sewing, the beauty industry, wax, cooking and first aid. The four centres are financed by the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development.

UAE starts seven educational projects in Pakistan | GulfNews.com
 
. .
April 26, 2014


UAE Project opens Jahanzeb College


UAE Project to Assist Pakistan inaugurates re-constructed Jahanzeb Post Graduate Degree College

Under the directives of President His Highness Shaikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan to support Pakistan’s educational system, the UAE Project to Assist Pakistan has officially inaugurated the Jahanzeb Post Graduate Degree College (JPC), the oldest educational institution in Malakand, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan, marking the completion of the reconstruction of the institution at a cost of $1.209 million.

The UAE Project to Assist Pakistan (UAE. PAP), in collaboration with Pakistan Army, reconstructed JPC, which was established in 1952 to grant degrees in 7 disciplines, and it accommodates 300 students. JPC was rebuilt on an area of 3,577 square meters to house modern academic departments. The facility has a main lecture auditorium, 10 classrooms, 4 laboratories, 16 teaching and administrative staff offices and an administration building.

In his remarks at the inauguration ceremony, General Raheel Sharif, Chief of Staff of the Pakistan Army (COAS) thanked Shaikh Khalifa for his constant support for Pakistan through his generous humanitarian initiatives which have their focus on human development and contribute to efforts to boost several sectors such as education, healthcare, water, transport and road networks.

He affirmed that the people of Pakistan will always remain grateful for the genuine humanitarian attitudes of Shaikh Khalifa who spares no efforts to support the humanitarian causes of the people of Pakistan at times of crisis.

The initiatives of Shaikh Khalifa, added General Sharif, contributed to the development of areas hit by earthquakes and floods and backed the Pakistani government’s efforts to alleviate the suffering of the poor and the underprivileged.

For his part, Eisa Abdullah Al Basha Al Nuaimi, UAE Ambassador to Pakistan, hailed the humanitarian approach of the UAE under the leadership of Shaikh Khalifa which aims at giving support to fraternal and friendly countries through development projects in sectors such as education, healthcare, transport, water and others.

UAE Project opens Jahanzeb College | GulfNews.com
 
.
Schools under watch


Will the Independent Monitoring Unit help improve attendance and performance of teachers and education administrators in KPK?



The Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government has launched an Independent Monitoring Unit (IMU) to improve attendance and performance of teachers and education administrators in the province. The IMU has been established under a three-year project funded by the UK’s Department for International Development. Rs500 million have been allocated for the initiative this year and more funds will be set aside for it in the next budget(s). The project will be extended if found useful after a third-party verification. Rs100 million have also been earmarked for establishing a third-party monitoring mechanism.

Muhammad Atif Khan, Provincial Minister for Elementary and Secondary Education (E&SE) Department, says 475 IMU monitors — 303 men and 172 women — have been appointed on merit for boys and girls schools respectively. They receive a fixed pay of Rs30,000 a month. Male monitors have been given motorcycles with Rs10,000 fuel allowance.

Each KP district has been divided in groups, each consisting of up to 60 schools and every monitor is responsible for visiting all the schools in his group. He/she has to visit a school at least once a month.

On the terms of references (ToRs) and standard operating procedure (SoP) of monitors, the minister says they are basically real-time data collectors and transmitters. “They have been trained for the purpose. They will collect, physically verify and send immediately data on the attendance of teachers, enrolment/dropout rate of students, needs and deficiencies of teachers and other school paraphernalia etc.”

The monitors will also collect data on the inspection of officers to schools, the distribution of free textbooks, stipends to the female students and the parents-teachers’ council (PTC) and other school funds. He says monitors have been given smart-phones with a proper format for feeding data and a general packet radio system (GPRS) to collect and transmit real-time data of/from the concerned schools to the IMU head office in Peshawar.

Asked what measures have been taken to guard against the misuse of powers by monitors, Khan says, “The monitors have been trained to be polite to principals/teachers, not to indulge in reasoning and avoid meddling in the teaching learning process. Their performance will also be monitored and action will be taken if any genuine complaints come to surface against them. The IMU is independent of the department’s control. They have to submit data immediately from the school they visit. This has been done to save the system from data/record-tampering.”

The KP Chief Minister, Pervez Khattak, recently issued directives of handing over the monitoring of all hospitals and basic health units to the IMU. But the system has been put in place in the education department only. The IMU has been empowered to monitor only schools in the public sector while education offices and private schools are still out of its ambit.

It is hoped the IMU will help pinpoint “ghost schools and proxy teachers” (the IMU, as reported, has detected 12 proxy teachers, four women among them, in government schools in Buner district recently), improve teachers’ attendance and make it easy/possible to take action against the corrupt and negligent elements in the department.

Most of the principals and head-masters of the E&SE Department support the initiative. They say teachers’ attendance and punctuality have improved significantly ever-since the launch of the IMU.

Mumtazuddin, a principal of a government higher secondary school, is all praise for the IMU. He says the IMU is a sort of an external counter-check upon the internal supervision system of the department. External or a third-party check, he says, is done everywhere in the world. “Officers fail to visit schools even in years. With teachers and internal monitors (administrative officers) mostly shirking responsibilities, the IMU is the need of the hour,” he says.

“Intra-district shuffling of monitors is being carried out every month to prevent the problems/dangers of familiarity/rapprochement between teachers and monitors. These dangers could be further minimised by inter-district shifting of monitors,” according to another principal.

Some teachers support the move: “One of the biggest problems is the flawed monitoring system. Exceptions apart, our departmental monitoring system is too politicised, powerless and under-funded. One hopes the IMU will be kept safe from political interference, corruption, and data-delaying/tampering for whatever reasons. Much will depend also on whether its recommendations will be executed,” a teacher says.

But some term it ‘an unwarranted and inapt’ move that would ultimately bring little/no change. They say schools and teachers are monitored by head masters, and inspected by cluster heads, district education officers, directors, local bodies members, national and provincial assemblies’ members and chairman and members of the PTCs.

“There was no need to establish the IMU. Rather, the government should have strengthened/empowered the internal monitoring system. Schools should be left to the district education officers. Principals and officers should be empowered and political intervention in appointments and postings should be eliminated. Good administrators could do wonders,” says a teacher.

“Principals and administrators would also definitely give good results if facilities like smart-phones with GPRS connection and powers are provided to them and they are also made to report their inspection report immediately. Biometric attendance system at schools can also improve teachers’ punctuality. But teachers’ performance also needs to be improved. Principals should be explicitly authorised to hire new teachers from PTC or other school funds,” he argues.

Another teacher complains that earlier principals/headmasters and the district officers used to report on deficiencies and requirements of teachers, chairs, desks, books and other basic facilities regularly but these were scarcely fulfilled. Now monitors do the same, but will the government act upon their reports/recommendations? Khan responds the government will ensure speedy action on their reports and recommendations concerning administrative and financial matters and will allocate resources.

Khan says: “Rather it is a quest for excellence. Why would one have gone for this if the earlier internal monitoring system had been successful during the last 65 years? Our history proves and no one can contest that it has failed to deliver and that a change was needed.”

Another teacher, wishing anonymity, says: “The monitors visit a school once or twice a month. What if a teacher, who is otherwise punctual and dutiful, is on-leave or late on the monitor’s arrival date(s). Won’t that cause a negative and wrong perception about him in the IMU system?” He adds: “Educational monitoring is too technical a job to be left to inexperienced monitors. This is bound to fail.”

The KP E&SE Department possesses over 168000 employees with 133750 sanctioned and 119274 functional teachers who teach 3.9 million students in 28472 total and 27975 functional government primary, middle, high, and higher secondary schools.

It means a monitor will check around 250-280 teachers and 58-60 schools. The monitor-employee ratio will be 1:350 if education offices also come under their oversight.

Besides weak monitoring mechanism, crowded classrooms, indifference of teachers and administrators and political interference, lack of basic facilities at schools is a big problem. Over 20 per cent of the functional public schools in KP still have no boundary walls, 30 per cent no water supply, 42 per cent no electricity and 16 per cent no toilets facilities.


Schools under watch | TNS - The News on Sunday


the website will be up in two days:

Tameer-e-School - Coming Soon
 
.
KPK forms TEVTA with foreign collaboration
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) government established Technical Education & Vocational Training Agency (TEVTA) to streamline technical and vocational education and training (TVET) in the province on Sunday.

Setting up this new body is part of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf-led (PTI) government’s ongoing reform agenda, being implemented in different public sector organisations to improve the quality of service delivery.

To make the delivery of the TVET linked to the market needs, the KPK government has also appointed known industrialist NaumanWazir as its first chairperson. The newly appointed chairperson presided over a one-day consultative workshop with the heads of the technical training institutes from all over KPK, where the future plans for the TEVTA were discussed at length.

The TVET Reform Support Programme, co-funded by the European Union, Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Pakistan and the Federal Republic of Germany and implemented by Deutsche Gesellschaft fürInternationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, provided the technical assistance for the session.

KPK forms TEVTA with foreign collaboration | Pakistan Today
 
. .
Urdu is dying.

This example is a clear evidence of it. Funny isn't it.

It is not just this oath, people in our country are getting more and more reluctant to abandon one of the greatest gift of God. I am sure everyone feels the same way if they observe things.

45.gif

What if one side is not good in Urdu and the other side is not good in English , in this case what will be the language of the oath? Sign language?

In my view the language of correspondence (Written or spoken) in all government departments inside Pakistan should be only Urdu. Just by implementing this single thing, imagine how many jobs will be created for translators in Pakistan as all foreigners in Pakistan have to get docs translated into Urdu from an authorized translator. For any transaction like marriage certificates or power of attorneys etc…..

Also our passports and NICOP should have the holders details in both Urdu and English and not just English.

The media has a big part to play in bring back Urdu by appointing linguistics to check the news / reports before a broadcast. People say there are some modern words which have no Urdu equivalent, well There was a time when Urdu was formed from scratch using Arabic and Persian and Turkish words, why not use the same strategy again? A language can keep up with the modern era provided an institution is made to enhance the develop the language with time and also steps should be taken to make sure such institutions are doing their job properly.
 
.
I spoke to a friend of mines in :pakistan:. He said if the education was taught in Urdu it would be more beneficial.
 
. .

What KPK Govt has done for Education? Listen Atif Khan Education Minister

Key Points of KPK Education Minister Atif khan Interview

- 107 new schools will be made in this year , 70% of the schools will be of girls
- 1000 community schools will be functional in a month or two .
- 80 Caror has been allocated for teacher training .
- Allocation of the largest budget for education in the history of KPK & Pakistan ( According to Per Capica )
- 1500-2000 stipend will be given to female students in KPK
- Best Monitoring system for schools and teachers attendance has
been introduced in KPK using the latest technology (Andriod Apps).
- Bio Metric system has started working in education offices in KPK to check the attendance
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom