Making teachers specialists
It is very hard to find any country that by design keeps the subject
knowledge bar as low as India
If you haven’t already done it, then try
teaching a child who is in Grades 5 to 8. Pick any topic, say volcanoes. Driven
by the child’s curiosity and your own desire for her to learn, the conversation
will quickly go deeper and broader than the notion of mountains spewing very
hot, molten stuff. For example, you will talk about why is the stuff molten;
what makes the core of the Earth hot; why don’t we have volcanoes all over the
Earth; has it always been like this; what are the other ways rocks are formed.
For such a conversation to happen, many
conditions must be met, e.g. a relationship of trust between you and the child,
you need to be observant of the child’s emotional state and knowledge levels,
and be patient. Let’s focus on one condition: you yourself need to understand
all these things related to volcanoes, i.e. have “subject knowledge” on
volcanoes. If your subject knowledge is deep and broad, and mine is shallow and
limited, the child wouldn’t learn much from a conversation with me, but could
learn with you.
Let’s call such deep and broad knowledge,
good knowledge of the subject. It’s easy to appreciate that if we want the
child to have good knowledge of any subject, the teacher must have better (i.e.
deeper and broader) knowledge of the same subject than what we are expecting
the child to develop. This is not in any way a contentious issue in education;
there is ready agreement on this basic notion. With this background, let’s look
at India’s school education.
To be a teacher for Grades 1 to 8 in India, a
diploma in education (DEd) is the basic qualification. These norms on
qualifications and all other aspects of teacher education are governed by the
National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE). The entry to a DEd programme is
after passing Grade 12. It is a two-year programme, and doesn’t have anything
to do with subject knowledge of the future teacher. Its curriculum is designed
for other educational aspects, e.g. child development, sociological issues of
education, pedagogy.
The implication is that by design the
teachers who teach students up to Grade 8 are expected to have subject
knowledge at the level of Grade 12. There are many other deep flaws in the
design and functioning of our teacher preparation system, but let’s just focus
on this one aspect of subject knowledge.
Is Grade 12-level knowledge good enough to
teach up to Grade 8? Is that knowledge adequately better (using the terminology
of the example of volcanoes)? While there may not be a complete consensus on
this matter, the overwhelming majority in education would say that the minimal
subject knowledge requirement to teach up to Grade 8 is an undergraduate-level
education.
It is very hard to find any country that by
design keeps the subject knowledge bar as low as us. Most countries expect an
undergraduate-level education in subjects, while their specific designs of the
teacher preparation programmes may differ.
Till now, we have only talked about the flaw
in the design of the system; now let’s look at the reality. We are quite
familiar with the very inadequate learning levels of our schools. It’s with
this low subject knowledge, even by school standards, that many of our
elementary school teachers operate. It’s no surprise that you can find teachers
in Grade 8 who don’t have subject knowledge that you would expect in a Grade 6
student. You see this reflected everywhere where teachers’ subject knowledge is
assessed, e.g. the percentage of teachers qualifying through the central and
state teacher eligibility tests (TETs) is routinely between 2% and 10%.
Teachers who teach Grades 9-12 are expected to have a bachelor’s of education
and an undergraduate degree in a relevant subject; some teachers in Grades 1-8
also have undergraduate degrees.
However, the quality of our undergraduate
education is (in my estimate) worse than our school education. So, an
undergraduate degree hardly seems to matter.
Let me point out three things. One, the
motivation and engagement of teachers is a completely different aspect, but
which is often affected negatively by a lack of subject knowledge. Two, there
are many other capacities that are required to be an effective teacher, not
only subject knowledge. Three, given that we are talking about eight million
teachers, for sure there are some teachers who have good subject knowledge,
i.e. there are large variations around a low mean.
Three things that are in progress must be
deepened and expanded to address this situation. Teacher appointments, both in
private and public schools, must be contingent on qualifying through (improved)
TETs. Investment must be increased in effective in-service support for existing
teachers on subject knowledge. The design of teacher preparation must be
changed such that all teachers go through a five-year integrated programme on
subjects and teacher education. NCTE has already taken steps in this direction
and the Prime Minister has endorsed this idea publicly. However, given the
entrenched interests in the 16,000-odd existing teacher education institutions,
this will need some doing.
Source
| Daily News Analysis | 23 July 2015
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