*Class act* A K Gupta

 Attendance is high in afternoon schools

*Elite schools lend campuses to poor children*

Every noon a merry bunch of children from low-income colonies of Jamshedpur
cross the Subernarekha in a boat to study at the elite Carmel Junior
College. They get dedicated teachers, books and a clean campus without
paying exorbitant fees. Some even get vocational training. Five private
schools in Jamshedpur have opened up their campus to 8,000 underprivileged
children after a little persuasion by the East Singhbhum Jharkhand Education
Project (jep).

Just a couple of years ago these children would loiter around in their *
basti*s the whole day, occasionally attending the government schools. Even
jep did not foresee that it would bring about a turnaround on this scale
when in 2004 it proposed an evening school for underprivileged children at
Jesuit-run Loyola School because of the paucity of land and soaring prices
of raising infrastructure in the posh city.
  jep's programme coordinator Jayant Mishra was quick to realize that he
needed to work on the lines of private-public partnership to cut the cost.
If he could motivate 45 private schools in Jamshedpur to open their doors to
educate the poor residents of the posh city, it would save the project a
major part of the expenditure.

Initially, jep motivated private schools to provide their infrastructure for
a few hours. But nothing much changed until the project prepared a blueprint
and presented it before the schools along with modest sops and assurances. The
blueprint mentioned that private schools' classes get over by afternoon. "We
needed the infrastructure for just four to five hours for the children from
*basti*s. We offered to give an honorarium to teachers and textbooks,
stationeries and midday meal to children," says Mishra. "We asked for a
partnership for a social cause, and they agreed after much convincing."

There was another hurdle in the literacy drive. It had little resources to
track slum children. This became easy with the help of unicef. "We asked the
administration to provide us statistics on the urban poor. Once we got the
figures we sent out a team of volunteers to identify the children. We found
that rickshaw pullers, auto drivers, hotel workers, domestic helps and
labourers were eager to get their children educated. We identified over
10,000 such children," says Sukanya Balasubramanian, education officer,
unicef, Jharkhand.

The strategy was an instant hit. Imposing buildings of private schools
became a huge attraction for poor children. Soon schools started recognizing
extraordinary children in afternoon classes. Kerala Samajam Model School
transferred some of the bright students to its main English school. It even
waived off their fees and gave scholarships. "Two girls, daughters of maids,
who were given scholarship, topped our school. We enroll around 5,000
underprivileged children. They work and also study," says Vijyam Kartha,
director of the Kerala public chain of schools.

According to unofficial estimates, this unique experiment has saved
jeparound Rs 7 crore by opening afternoon schools in Carmel Junior
College,
Kerala Samajam Model School, dbms English School, Delhi Public School and
Loyola School. Students also get to participate in city-level contests.
Students of Loyola School's afternoon classes won three prizes in the
inter-school contest Horlicks Wiz-kids. The students are also getting jobs
as office and courier boys, and are being trained to become electricians and
drivers, as in Loyola School. Carmel School is giving vocational training to
girls in tailoring and making baskets and beads ornament.

"This school is much better compared to my previous government school. Here
we have good teachers, books are supplied on time, toilets and classrooms
are clean. In our previous school, toilet was makeshift and class lectures
not that serious. We want to enroll for a polytechnic course after passing
out from here," say Hirok Mahato and Somen Mardi of Loyola School.

In afternoon schools, the dropout rate is low and the attendance of students
and teachers high. Project officials think the private-public partnership
should be on a bigger scale to improve the state's dismal literacy rate.
"The World Bank rated Jharkhand as the worst state in the world for having
the highest absenteeism rate of teachers. Its report put us in an
embarrassing situation," says jep director Rajiv Ekka. "We are planning more
such partnerships to boost literacy rate in Jharkhand."

The Union human resource development ministry has issued a directive to
other states to follow the jep's East Singhbhum model and unicef has
accepted it as one of the best practices in the education sector. The state
capital Ranchi is trying to emulate the model. It plans to introduce the
concept of afternoon schools in six private schools. That's a bench-thumping
proposal.

http://www.downtoearth.org.in/full6.asp?foldername=20080731&filename=news&sec_id=50&sid=31

Reply via email to