Education
© UNICEF India |
Girl in classroom |
Despite a major improvement in literacy rates during the 1990s, the
number of children who are not in school remains high. Gender
disparities in education
persist: far more girls than boys fail to complete primary school.
The literacy rate jumped from 52 per cent in 1991 to 65 per cent
in 2001. The absolute number of non-literates dropped for the first time
and gross enrolment in Government-run primary schools increased from
over 19 million in the 1950s to 114 million by 2001.
90 million females in India are non-literate But 20 per cent of
children aged 6 to14 are still not in school and millions of women
remain non-literate despite the spurt in female literacy in the 1990s.
Several problems persist: issues of ‘social’ distance – arising out of
caste, class and gender differences – deny children equal opportunities.
Child labour in some parts of the country and resistance to sending
girls to school remain real concerns.
© UNICEF India |
Girl at school |
School attendance is improving: more children than ever
between the ages of 6 and 14 are attending school across the country.
The education system faces a shortage of resources, schools, classrooms
and teachers.
There are also concerns relating to teacher training, the quality of
the curriculum, assessment of learning achievements and the efficacy of
school management. Given the scarcity of quality schools, many children
drop out before completing five years of primary education; many of
those who stay on learn little.
Girls belonging to marginalised social and economic groups are more likely to drop out of school at an early age.
With one upper primary school for every three primary schools, there
are simply not enough upper primary centres even for those children who
complete primary school. For girls, especially, access to upper primary
centres becomes doubly hard.
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