Local initiative key to quality education: Akshay Mangla
Interview with Assistant professor, Harvard Business School
Aditi Phadnis  January 9, 2016 Last Updated at 21:46 IST

Akshay Mangla, assistant professor, Harvard Business School, who has
studied education and the role of the state in India, tells Aditi Phadnis
how the government needs to change the way it looks at the delivery of
education

You have carried out a study of comparative models for the delivery of
primary education in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. Tell us what you've
found. What works and what doesn't?

My research identifies distinct bureaucratic cultures across these two
states. I refer to these as "bureaucratic norms", unwritten rules that
influence how officials behave and interact with citizens. In Himachal
Pradesh (HP), public agencies exemplify a deliberative model, meaning that
they encourage discussion and collective problem-solving across the
hierarchy. By contrast, state agencies in Uttarakhand are
legalistic,reinforcing rules, procedures and hierarchies, often in a
top-down fashion. Field-based evidence shows that deliberative agencies in
HP implement primary education more effectively. Local officials have the
discretion to adapt policies according to the needs of different regions.
For example, they can modify the school calendar based on local weather and
harvest conditions. This determines whether students can attend class and
prepare for examinations. Further, the planning process in HP is highly
participatory. State planners elicit input not only from departments but
also from a broad network of non-governmental agencies, women's groups and
other civic bodies, which are often closer to the ground. Finally,
deliberative agencies help sustain participation from local communities,
another critical factor in the comparative success of primary education in
HP. When state officials enjoy the freedom and support to work with
parents, schoolteachers and other stakeholders, they can address problems
more effectively.

In Uttarakhand, by contrast, local officials are averse to taking
independent initiative. They wait for orders to come from above and they
regard women's groups and other civic bodies with suspicion. Local
communities receive little support from state officials when they need it.
As a result, parents often get discouraged when they approach the state,
which undermines collective action.

Ultimately everything depends on the quality of bureaucrats. You say the
state agencies in HP tend to attract higher quality personnel. What does HP
do right and what can other states do to attract a similarly high quality
of personnel?

Let me clarify two things. First, I am not suggesting that bureaucrats in
HP are intrinsically "good" or more motivated than their counterparts in
Uttarakhand. One can find committed officials in both states. Further,
because state civil services have similar procedures for recruitment and
promotion, one should not expect bureaucrats in HP to be of an inherently
higher quality than those in Uttarakhand. Rather, the distinct norms that
they are socialised into, while on the job, heavily influence their
behaviour and shape how they understand and carry out their everyday duties.

Second, bureaucracies do not operate in a political vacuum. Public
institutions evolve over time, often in response to their social and
political environment. Political leadership in HP played a constructive
role, especially in the initial stages of state formation. The political
class relied on the bureaucracy to obtain fiscal resources from the central
government, which facilitated the dispensation of patronage and provision
of public goods. Bureaucratic initiatives were supported by the political
class and then further reinforced by the local community. One must not
overlook the fact that the hill region has relatively inclusive caste and
gender norms, especially in comparison to the Gangetic plains.

And in the case of Uttarakhand...?

Uttarakhand shares a similar social fabric, yet the primary education
system fares much worse. Political leadership in Uttarakhand offered little
vision for developing the hill region, even after its separation from Uttar
Pradesh. This pattern has historical antecedents. At independence,
Uttarakhand was far more literate than HP. Communities in both the Garhwal
and Kumaon regions had a long history of collective action. However,
political leaders got strong incentives to leave their hill constituencies
behind and seek power in Lucknow. The need to govern from afar reinforced
legalism in the bureaucracy, which helped maintain stability and law and
order. The bureaucracy learnt to thwart local demands, which it continues
to do today. The lesson here is that bureaucracy matters, particularly at
the local level. But for a culture of deliberation to take root inside the
state, concerted effort is also needed from the political class.

You emphasise the external environment that pressures the state to produce
results. Bihar has created a similar external environment: 50 per cent
reservation for women in local bodies that appoint para-teachers, intense
monitoring of their performance, a huge hike in their salaries… How do you
assess the Bihar experiment, given the abysmal results in terms of quality?

The Bihar experiment is among the most interesting in India. The state saw
a major turnaround under Nitish Kumar, who put forward a developmental
vision. His government greatly expanded access to primary schooling and
helped raise attendance through schemes such as providing free bicycles to
girls. Quality initiatives were taken with inputs from Pratham, Azim Premji
Foundation and other organisations. From the outside, it appears that the
state did everything right. As you point out, however, the quality of
education remains abysmal. To understand why, one has to look inside the
state. First, reforms were introduced from above, with little input from
the lower-level bureaucracy. Institutional changes such as enhanced
monitoring of para-teachers remained legalistic in nature. Local officials
were asked to conduct inspections but were rarely consulted. Instead, they
were pressured to apply rules and directives from above. Children enrolled
in Bihar's government schools are largely first generation learners. The
issue of how to connect their parents to the school system received little
attention. The emphasis on legalism did have some merit. Bihar faced
massive problems of law and order. Policy reforms to encourage
rule-following were probably needed at that stage. Now that basic order has
been restored, the question is how to move to the next stage and for reform
institutions to carry out more complex tasks, like the delivery of quality
education.

Having legislated the Right to Education (RTE), the challenge for India now
is to deliver not just scale but also quality in primary education. With
your extensive study, do you think this is doable?

To my mind, there is no paucity of laws and regulations governing the
education sector in India. Missing are the capabilities of the state to
effectively implement these laws. The notion that national legislation such
as the RTE Act will fill the gap in learning by imposing uniform standards
on infrastructure and other inputs seems mistaken. Educating children
requires the joint initiative of schoolteachers, communities and the local
administration. It cannot be prescribed from New Delhi. Both state and
non-state local bodies need far greater autonomy and flexible resources to
govern education themselves, along with routine guidance and oversight of
learning outcomes to use their powers wisely. To that end, investment in
school administration and local capacity-building is one place for the
state to play a constructive role; the promotion of educational research
and dissemination of successful models is another. A repository of best
practices can be assembled for schools to learn from and adopt according to
their needs. The state can also do a far better job of harnessing civic
partners and the private sector in education. At present, private schools
either grow unchecked or else face suffocating regulation, a suboptimal
state of affairs. By promoting local initiative and innovation, quality
education is possible in India. For this to happen, we must rethink the
role of the state in education.

source
http://www.business-standard.com/article/opinion/local-initiative-key-to-quality-education-akshay-mangla-116010900716_1.html

IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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