Saturday, July 14, 2012

Why BMC plans to get private trusts to run its schools?

Dear Vinay,

This may be one of the rare new ideas that has come from BMC. In spite
of spending hundreds of crore rupees on education by BMC municipal
schools have failed to give proper education to the poor.Many schools
have no water, no benches, no black boards and no urinals. Many years
ago, I remember, one of Municipal Commissioner had invited corporates
to adopt the municipal schools but the response was little. Now that
there is more awareness about the social responsibility of the
corporate sector, this may be right time time for such an initiative.

The government schools have failed almost everywhere including USA and
UK. In USA, parents, mostly Chinese and Indian, like to live in places
where schools teach properly, and the parents interact and assist the
schools in their activities.

There is an interesting report in the Economist ( of London) about the
charter schools under the headline, Charting a better course, ( July
7,2012) in USA. The charter schools are publicly funded but
independently managed. According to the report, the charter schools
have been successful because they offer freedom to shape the school to
the pupils, rather than the other way round. Schools can change the
length of the school day, fire bad teachers,and spend their money as
they wish. At Harpest Prep the school year is continuous, with short
and relatively frequent bursts of holidays, because that keeps
learning on track and kids out of trouble. However, there is a proper
mechanism to supervise these charter schools. Each class is examined
every six or seven weeks. The teachers are also monitored.There are
5,600 charter schools with 2m students in 41 of the 50 states of USA.
In Washington DC 44 percent of the students attend the charter schools
while it is 4 percent country-wide.Though the overall picture is
positive,the results have been mixed.

Of course, BMC need not copy this experiment, it can certainly ask the
corporates to run it efficiently. The bureaucrats and teachers have no
managerial experience, and there is no motivation to teach. The
corporates have to give them dignity and motivate them as the
architects of the future of this country.

July 13, 2012.

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