Students use empty rice sacks as desks at their school in Lahtora village in the state of Bihar, India, in December 2007. (Ruth Fremson/The New York Times)

Push for education yields little for India's poor

LAHTORA, India: With the dew just rising from the fields, dozens of children streamed into the two-room school in this small, poor village, tucking used rice sacks under their arms to use as makeshift chairs. So many children streamed in that the newly appointed head teacher, Rashid Hassan, pored through attendance books for the first two hours of class and complained bitterly. He had no idea who belonged in which grade. There was no way he could teach.

Another teacher arrived 90 minutes late. A third did not show up. The most senior teacher, the only one with a teaching degree, was believed to be on official government duty preparing voter registration cards. No one could quite recall when he had last taught.

"When they get older, they'll curse their teachers," said Arnab Ghosh, 26, a social worker trying to help the government improve its schools, as he stared at clusters of children sitting on the grass outside. "They'll say, 'We came every day and we learned nothing.' "

Sixty years after independence, with 40 percent of its population under 18, India is now confronting the perils of its failure to educate its citizens, notably the poor. More Indian children are in school than ever before, but the quality of public schools like this one has sunk to spectacularly low levels, as government schools have become reserves of children at the very bottom of India's social ladder. The children in this school come from the poorest of families — those who could not afford to send away their young to private schools elsewhere, as do most Indian families with any means.

India has long had a legacy of weak schooling for its young, even as it has promoted high-quality government-financed universities. But if in the past a largely poor and agrarian nation could afford to leave millions of its people illiterate, that is no longer the case. Not only has the roaring economy run into a shortage of skilled labor, but also the nation's many new roads, phones and television sets have fueled new ambitions for economic advancement among its people — and new expectations for schools to help them achieve it.

That they remain ill equipped to do so is clearly illustrated by an annual survey, conducted by Pratham, the organization for which Ghosh works. The latest survey, conducted across 16,000 villages in 2007 and released Wednesday, found that while many more children were sitting in class, vast numbers of them could not read, write or perform basic arithmetic, to say nothing of those who were not in school at all. Among children in fifth grade, 4 out of 10 could not read text at the second grade level, and 7 out of 10 could not subtract. The results reflected a slight improvement in reading from 2006 and a slight decline in arithmetic; together they underscored one of the most worrying gaps in India's prospects for continued growth.

Education experts debate the reasons for failure. Some point out that children of illiterate parents are less likely to get help at home; the Pratham survey shows that the child of a literate woman performs better at school. Others blame longstanding neglect, insufficient public financing and accountability, and a lack of motivation among some teachers to pay special attention to poor children from lower castes. "Education is a long-term investment," said Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the deputy chairman of the Planning Commission and the government's top policy czar. "We have neglected it, in my view quite criminally, for an enormously long period of time."

Looking for a Way Up

Arguments aside, India is today engaged in an epic experiment to uplift its schools. Along the way lie many hurdles, and Ghosh, on his visits to villages like this one, encounters them all. The aides who were hired to draw more village children into school complain that they have not received money to buy educational materials. Or the school has stopped serving lunch even though sacks of rice are piled in the classroom. Or parents agree to enroll their son in school, but know that they will soon send the child away to work. Or worst of all, from Ghosh's perspective, all these stick-thin, bright-eyed children trickle into school every morning and take back so little. "They're coming with some hope of getting something," Ghosh muttered. "It's our fault we can't give them anything."

Even here, the kind of place from which millions of uneducated men and women have traditionally migrated to cities for work, an appetite for education has begun to set in. An educated person would not only be more likely to fetch a good job, parents here reasoned, but also less likely to be cheated in a bad one. "I want my children to do something, to advance themselves," is how Muhammad Alam Ansari put it. "To do that they must study."

Back to top
Home  >  Asia - Pacific

Latest News

Stephen Hird/Reuters
A British Airways passenger jet crash-landed just short of a runway at London's Heathrow airport on Thursday, plowing a way across open grassland before skidding to a halt when it hit the tarmac.
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, discusses the week in world news.
Alison Smale, the IHT's managing editor, discusses events in the world this week.
Alison Smale, the IHT's managing editor, discusses the climate change conference, the U.S. National Intelligen...
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, on climate change reports, Pakistan, Danish elections and more.
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, on Pakistan, the Mideast peace process, oil prices and more.
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, discusses the week in world news.
The opening of the UN General Assembly, Ahmadinejad's visit to New York, the unrest in Myanmar, and other wor...
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, discusses the week in world news.
The IHT's managing editor, Alison Smale, discusses the week in world news.
Sarkozy's blunt statement on Iran, Gonzales' resignation and more in this week's report with Alison Smale.
The week in world news, as discussed by Alison Smale, the managing editor of the International Herald Tribune.
Alison Smale, the International Herald Tribune's managing editor, discusses the week in world news.
Alison Smale, the IHT's managing editor, discusses the week in world news.
Alison Smale, the IHT's managing editor, discusses the week in world news.
Alison Smale, managing editor of the International Herald Tribune, looks at the events occurring worldwide thi...
Alison Smale, managing editor of the International Herald Tribune, looks at the events occurring worldwide thi...
Alison Smale, managing editor of the International Herald Tribune, looks at the events occurring worldwide thi...
Alison Smale, the IHT's managing editor, discusses the Paris Air Show, trouble in the Middle East and tension ...
Alison Smale, Managing Editor of the International Herald Tribune, discusses upcoming world events.
Alison Smale, managing editor of the International Herald Tribune, discusses the G8 summit.
Prisoners in Cebu found internet celebrity after their dance routine to 'Thriller' got over 10 million views.
Of all the illegal activities that animate the capital, one stands out: elephants sauntering down the city's s...
A look at the coveted and oddly-named seasonal specialty in Hong Kong.
Munizeh Sanai, a radio DJ in Karachi, talks about the country's unrest.
Cheap Chinese motorcycles have changed the lives of poor villagers in Laos.
G. P. Sawant talks about his 25 years in his now-dying business of letter-writing.
Fish farms providing most of the world's farmed seafood now extend along China's entire coast and inland as we...
Japan stocks weaken as investors weigh chances of stagflation in United States.
Part 4: An interview with Xang Yang
Part 3: An interview with Xang Yang
Part 1: An interview with Xang Yang
Kite flying, a national pasttime banned by the Taliban, is back in full force in Afghanistan.
A symbol of health and longevity, the giant Yangtze soft-shell turtle is on the verge of extinction.
Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif returned to Pakistan after eight years to a hero's welcome.
The "hidden dangers" of the project to those living around the dam are now coming to light.
Pakistan's president, General Pervez Musharraf, talks about the state of emergency, upcoming elections and Ben...
The travelers aboard this train share a common dream - to find fortune in Mumbai.
The former prime minister speaking on Friday about Islam and democracy in Pakistan.
Protesting lawyers in Pakistan challenge Musharraf and the state of emergency.
Farmers in Northern Afghanistan are replacing poppy fields with another illicit crop: cannabis.
Chinese chemical companies selling uncertified drug ingredients were present at the world's largest trade show...
An exclusive interview with two alleged foreign jihadists in Afghanistan.
An exclusive interview with two alleged foreign jihadists in Afghanistan.
The author talks about the seedy Bangkok districts that inspired his series of popular detective thrillers.
With less than a year before the games begin, the city is being given a 20 billion euro facelift.
Afghanistan's only golf course is the result of one man's dream nudged closer to reality.
Sit down to traditional Chinese cuisine served in elegant restuarants with gorgeous antiques and quality servi...
Many Palestinians in the Nahr el-Bared camp in Lebanon are in no mood for the Muslim holy month.
Despite NATO's efforts, Taliban fighters have returned to a strategic area they occupied in southern Afghanist...
Is the cost of economic growth in China offset by the massive destruction to the environment?
Examining Bush's take on Vietnam and whether it is a strong argument against withdrawal from Iraq.
Taliban dominate Pakistan's border regions
Political uncertainty as Pakistan celebrates 60 years of existence.
Two distance runners talk about their preparations for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
Iraqi exiles celebrate their Asia Cup win.
Cambodian villagers remember life under the Khmer Rouge regime.
Many Koreans believe that traditional customs and culture are best preserved in shamans.
The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan is a blurry one, for political reasons.
Recovering from an economic crisis, Indonesia is striving to take full advantage of its resources.
Women journalists in Afghanistan face life-threatening obstacles.
The dire predictions for post-handover Hong Kong did not come to pass and the city has done well. But hopes fo...
One of the major changes since the handover has been more mainland Chinese immigrating to Hong Kong. When they...
The insurgency in Burma has launched an anti-drug campaign targeting traffickers and soldiers.
Rajagopa, nicknamed the modern-day Gandhi, leads a peaceful march to highlight the plight of India's tribal gr...
Students from the Red Mosque Koranic school in the Pakistani capital Islamabad are waging a campaign against �...
A clandestine trip into the jungles of Southern Burma.
A look at U.S. efforts to foster democracy in Indonesia. A Times documentary on Islam and Indonesia debuts Apr...