Poor education or poor survey? 

  The results of the test conducted in three subjects -- environmental studies, 
mathematics and language 
   
  BY NILESH KHANDEPARKAR
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PANJIM: A survey conducted by the National Council of Educational Research and 
Training (NCERT) and released recently, paints the state's education sector in 
poor light. However, the NCERT study has not taken into account a crucial 
factor -- referred to by educationists as the 'Transition Period' or the 
'Switchover Effect'. 
What this essentially means is the shift students have to make from the 
vernacular medium to English, when they pass Std IV and seek admission to Std V.

The results 
The NCERT conducted its survey, for the academic year 2005-06, in April 2006 
and involved a sample size of 1,231 Goan students studying in Std V. The 
results of the test conducted in three subjects -- environmental studies, 
mathematics and language -- reveals a mean percentage of 35.60 percent in 
environmental studies, 30.48 in mathematics and 44.68 percent in languages. 

Questions raised about the survey 
But, is it right to paint the state education sector in poor light merely on 
the basis of a random survey conducted by the National Council for Educational 
Research and Training (NCERT)? And that too, on a miniscule sample? Moreover, 
what is the quality of the sample in question?

Figures at a glance
As per the statistics available with the Directorate of Education for the year 
2006-2007, a total of 436 middle schools - both in the aided category and 
government schools -- function in the state. In this case, schools imparting 
education for Std V, VI and VII are categorised as Middle Schools. 
Contrast this with the size of the sample in question -- 28 of North Goa and 30 
of South Goa making a total of 58 schools examined in the NCERT survey. The 
1,231 students who appeared for the test comprised a tiny portion of the 
overall figure of 19,000 students studying in Std V. What's worse -- the 
schools so selected are predominantly from rural areas -- the ratio being 3:1 
in favour of schools in rural areas.

More details of the survey 
"The survey was conducted by the State Council of Educational Research and 
Training (SCERT) on behalf of the NCERT. The survey format, response sheets, 
pupils/teachers questionnaires were sent by them. NCERT identified the sample 
for the survey as also the location of the schools while using the random 
sampling procedure in this exercise," says the Joint Director of SCERT Santosh 
Amonkar.

Where the survey falters 
Many things have been given the go-by when the NCERT embarked on the task of 
conducting this survey. One, while Std V is counted among the middle school 
level in Goa, the central level includes it in its Primary category and therey 
clubs it alongwith Std I to IV.

The most important factor 
Two, in so far as Goa is concerned, it is faced with a unique situation. In the 
rural areas of the state, it is a common practice for students to learn with 
vernacular languages -- Marathi or Konkani -- as their medium of instruction 
from Std I to Std IV. The switchover from vernacular to English as the medium 
of instruction inevitably takes place when the student passes Std IV and seeks 
admission to Std V.
That's when one experiences a drastic drop in the passing percentages which has 
a cascading effect on the individual performance as well as the overall result 
of Std V. 
This 'Switchover Effect', in bureaucratic parlance, is referred to as the 
'Transition Period'. Billed by eminent educationist as the most important 
factor, this has not been factored in into the NCERT survey.
"The shift from vernacular medium to English is one factor for the poor 
results. To that extent, the question paper itself may not have been to the 
expected level of the students," says Director of Education Dr Celsa Pinto.

No-Detention Policy
The third reason, according to Dr Pinto, is, what she calls, the lack of 
ability of our students studying in Std I to Std IV to imbibe language and 
mathematical skills. 
"This is due to the No-Detention Policy wherein no formal assessment is 
conducted at the end of each Standard," she informs.

The sample size
Fourth, the sample size does not reflect the ground reality. Just 1,231 
students from North and South Goa were tested from a total of 19,000 students 
appearing for Std V.

The medium of instruction
Fifth, in many other states, the NCERT conducted these tests in the 
vernacular/local language which was the students' medium of instruction. "In 
Rajasthan, the test was conducted in Hindi. Likewise, in Nagaland, it was 
conducted in their medium of instruction. But, wherever the medium of 
instruction is in English, the tests were also conducted in English," adds 
Amonkar. 

An improved performance 
It is understood that the aforesaid NCERT survey -- referred to as the Mid-Term 
Achievement Survey(MAS) -- conducted in the year 2005 is a follow-up on another 
such survey conducted by the NCERT is the year 2001-02 which was then termed as 
the Base Line Achievement Survey(BAS). 
Interestingly, Goa shows an improvement between 6 to 10 percent in MAS over the 
BAS conducted in the year 2001-02. Along with Goa, four other states also share 
this honour -- Gujarat, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka and Kerala. 
Among the front-runners are only two states -- Himachal Pradesh and Uttar 
Pradesh - while the progress of the remaining states hovers between 0 to 5 
percent, reveals MAS, Chairman of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, Pandurang Nadkarni, 
informed.

Remedies to fight the problem
The Education Department plans to adopt a two-pronged strategy to fight this 
anomaly. Quoting the Deputy Director of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), Nagaraj 
Honnekeri, the Director of Education Dr Celsa Pinto said the SSA has entered 
into an MOU with Setu Navnirmiti -- an NGO -- to enhance mathematical skills of 
students studying in Std I to Std IV in Sanguem taluka. 
"The Evaluation Test will be conducted in March. If successful, this project 
will be replicated in other talukas. It includes training of teachers and they 
have been supplied a kit to be used in each school. This project has worked 
well in Maharashtra," she added.

Quality Improvement Programme
The Education Department has also entered into an MOU with Bharatiya Jain 
Sanghatana. A three year project, it aims at covering all schools in Goa under 
a Quality Improvement Programme. The salient features of this programme are as 
follows: Accreditation of schools, capacity building through programmes with a 
view to give a direction to life. It includes aptitude testing to enable 
students choose a stream after Std X.

NCERT still on the job
Perhaps, what could deliver accurate or acceptable results to educationists is 
the ongoing survey conducted by the NCERT on similar lines for Std VII. 
"Currently, the NCERT is conducting a survey for students of Std VII," informs 
Amonkar. Once the results are out, it may well put to rest the ongoing 
controversy -- ironically pinned on the 'Switchover Effect' or the 'Transition 
Period' . 
........
BOX
Figures at a glance
Nature of sample: Students studying in Std V tested
Sample Size: 1,231 students
Schools: 28(North Goa), 30(South Goa) -- Total 58
Total no of schools at Middle School level -- 436
Total no of students(studying in Std V): 19,000
Ratio of schools selected: 3:1 (Rural:Urban)

The existing education system in Goa
Primary level: from std I to std IV
Middle school level: from std V to std VII
Secondary school level: from std VIII to std X
Higher secondary level: std XI and std XII

The education system followed by NCERT
Primary level: from std I to std V
Upper Primary level: from std VI to std VIII
Secondary level: std IX and std X
Senior secondary level: std XI and std XII 
........
EOM 


  
 
  On 2/29/08, Miguel Braganza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:     Poor education or 
poor survey? 
PANJIM: A survey conducted by the National Council of Educational Research and 
Training paints the state's education sector in poor colour. However, it has 
not taken into account a crucial factor - referred to by educationists as the 
"Transition Period" or the "Switchover Effect".
What this essentially means is the shift students have to make from vernacular 
medium to English, when they pass Std IV and seek admission to Std V. The 
survey conducted in April 2006 involved a sample size of 1,231 Goan students 
studying in Std V. The results of the test conducts in three subjects - 
environmental studies, mathematics and language - reveals a mean percentage of 
35.60 pc, 30.48 pc and 44.68 pc respectively. Is it right to paint the state 
education sector in poor light merely on the basis of a random survey conducted 
by NCERT, and that too, on a miniscule sample? [Nilesh Khandeparkar, GT] 






       
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