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Improving rural education can be a game changer
India’s high youth population won’t be of help to the economy if universal education is not achieved all over India.

- India is relatively young as a nation with around 28 million youth population being added every year.
- In 2020, the average age of an Indian is expected to be 29 years, while it will be 37 for China and 48 for Japan.
India Today Web Desk New Delhi May 21, 2019
Education in India has improved dramatically over the last three decades. Schools have become accessible to most children; both student enrollment and attendance are at the highest level.
The RTE Act guarantees a quality education to a wider range of students than ever before. However, challenges in teaching and learning outcomes across all regional, cultural and socioeconomic subsets prevent us from harnessing the true potential of vast human resource and keep the country educationally backward.
One of the biggest concerns is to make the present generation learners future-ready. India is relatively young as a nation with around 28 million youth population being added every year. In 2020, the average age of an Indian is expected to be 29 years, while it will be 37 for China and 48 for Japan.
However, India’s high youth population won’t be of help to the economy if universal education is not achieved all over India.

Improving education is a critical area of investment and can be a game changer to achieve sustained economic growth by tap into its young workforce. The weak foundation in primary education derails the lives, careers, and productivity of millions of our citizens. With 65 per cent of the population residing in rural India, education in rural belt truly deserves much more attention.
Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) shows that even though the 
number of rural students attending schools is rising, but more than half
 of the students in fifth grade are unable to read a second grade text 
book and are not able to solve simple mathematical problems. Not only 
this, the level of math and reading is further declining.
Some of the
 major problems that plague the rural education system in India are 
related to both quality and access of teaching learning facilities and 
basic infrastructure. While dearth of teachers, teacher absenteeism and 
poor quality of teaching are directly affecting the learning outcomes, 
poor and inadequate infrastructural facilities in terms of classrooms 
and benches, blackboards, playgrounds, toilets, water, etc, also hamper 
the delivery of quality education and make the school unattractive to a 
child.

The foundation to turn India into a strong nation has to be laid down at primary and rural levels and so the quality of education right from the beginning should be excellent. A complete reform in education system is required which should start from policies which promote talent in teaching system. Teachers are the backbone of education.
All efforts should be made to hire the best teachers, keep them 
engaged and motivated, reduce their absenteeism by making them more 
accountable and provide regular in-service training and capacity 
building to upgrade their skills.
To improve the student’s attendance
 in the schools, especially in villages, the school curriculum should 
involve extracurricular activities and fun-learning exercises. Education
 and text books should be made interesting. Textbooks related to their 
culture, their traditions and values should also be there so as to 
create their interest in studies.
The reasons behind so many drop-outs in spite of free education should be found out as this is a hurdle on the road to progress.
Sensitizing
 parents to make them understand the importance of education would 
certainly be helpful. This can be done through skits, street plays and 
holding meetings with the parents on a quarterly basis to make a student
 excel in his life. Emphasis should be given to educating a girl.
Though girl education has improved in our country a lot has to be done in this sector.
In
 this digital era when technology is touching every aspect of society 
and changing it dramatically, rural education can also greatly benefit 
from appropriate use of technology. Smart Classrooms which facilitate 
online teaching create extended classrooms for interactions and 
discussions. An expanded option is to record classroom courses in a real
 time and use it for teaching the students who cannot attend the 
classes. Rural education needs e-learning technologies. Apart from this,
 audio and video conferencing should be made part of the education 
system in rural India.
Teachers at the schools are not well equipped with the gadgets. So teachers should be given printers, laptops, for giving notes and notices to the students. By using technology the problem of unqualified teachers can also be solved. Dropout rates have reduced to a great extent wherever digital and computer-aided education has been introduced in rural schools.

Several initiatives in public private partnerships are playing 
significant role in making rural India tech savvy and in providing 
better education. These efforts have given positive results. We have to 
take proper remedial measures with a sense of urgency and create better 
learning environments for rural children so that they are able to 
participate in nation building process and reap the full potential of 
our demographic divided.
Authored article by Dr Neelam Gupta President and CEO AROH Foundation
Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/education-today/featurephilia/story/improving-rural-education-can-be-a-game-changer-1530761-2019-05-21
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