Saturday, October 27, 2012

on FB -Reform the system of Examination : stall student suicides

Reform the system of  Examination : stall student suicides


This article suggests some  essential modifications in our present method of examination. The alarming number of exam-induced suicides is the biggest justification for these reforms.It is an important argument here that actually carrying out these modifications is not a very difficult task as these reforms can be carried out on modular basis and takes advantage of facilities offered by computers. Most importantly, any investment in Human Resource Development will pay far richer dividends hence we should be spending more efforts on carrying out these reforms.



In government parlance, the erstwhile Department of Education was renamed the Department of Human Resources. We however, have not yet started treating our masses as resources; we neither bother about their deployment nor about how to use them for further improving the resources for example, how to utilize them for reducing illiteracy. Among the many possible reforms that are called for, I treat reforms in the system of examination as most easily doable with an ingenious application of tools made available to us by the present day technology. The reform suggested here will take care of the regularly occuring, scandalous and disheartening aspect of question-papers being leaked.

Our present system of examination has evolved by keeping printing technology at the center of all logistic solutions. This is essentially a centralised system in its character. With the increasing number of children to be examined every year, the load on this centralised system is very heavy. It is necessary to change our examination pattern to bring in decentralisation by replacing the printing technology with computer technology. For this, it will be essential to prepare a question bank in the computer on different subjects and for different levels. This process has already begun on a small scale in some places. The Indian students taking the GRE examination for selection to American or other foreign universities have already been adapted to computer-based on-line examination. I am, however not suggesting wholescale but only one-third modification, I am restricting computers only to one part – that of generating a question paper while arguing that the children will continue to answer questions by traditional method – by writing and not on-line. And the process of evaluating will also remain traditional. It is only the process of preparing question-paper where quick change can be brought about.

Once school boards or universities have such a question bank, where computer memory is the store house for all questions and has the details of the levels and marks allocated to each of those questions, the computer can churn out various question papers in various combinations. It can take out desired number of copies, depending upon the number of children expected for examination. Thus taking out the question paper right at the time of examination without any breach in secrecy becomes possible; and this makes the process leak proof..

   Shifting from printing technology to computer technology will save tremendous amount of time for a very large number of teachers and administrative staff in the school boards or colleges or universities. This time and manpower resource can then be utilised for bringing in qualitative improvements in other areas, for example in evaluating the question paper.

Switch over to computerised question bank and churning out question papers directly from it is highly facilitated if the number of children per examination is less. Rather than all the children taking examination in the same subject on the same date and time, we should encourage children to take the examination according to their convenience. Let a child decide what subject, what level and when she/he wants to finish the examination. Examination centers can be opened in many places where children can come according to their convenience, let us say once in two months and take the examination in the subject and for the level of their choice.

It is important not to make it compulsory for the children to take the examination in all the subjects in the same month or in the same year. A child may be allowed to take examinations in different subjects and for different levels in different years. This means that the number of examinees per subject per course per year  will be much fewer than the present number of examinees who all have to go together for yearly examination. Hence, the teachers who are evaluating the answer papers will also do far better justice in their evaluation.

Such a system in which the computer will be containing question bank and will itself create the question paper has two advantages. Firstly, it will the reduce the menace of copying. The staff --teaching or non-teaching – that has the tendency to declare strike right in the nick of examination time thus putting the children and parents in a tense situation, will no longer do so. The system will avoid the need of transporting so many question papers to so many examination centers – which inter-alia requires a very meticulous planning and keeps the staff under tension for having to maintain the secrecy and sanctity of question papers.

It is pertinent to also speak of one related reform that I consider equally urgent. The present system under which attendance by a school or college is compulsory and a student is required to have specified minimum attendances must be stopped or at least be reduced sizably. Students unable to attend schools must not be debarred from taking examination. They should be allowed to take examination and prove their own ability and level even without formally sitting through the classes in school or college. There is a reason for advocating in favour of this informality. 

The advantages of formal schooling system have been well-discussed in past and suffice to recount three important advantages.i) The system allows a large number of students to pass through the same pattern of education and thus reduce the time and staff spent by the society for producing a standardised batch of educated children upto a certain levelii) Different experts can sit together from time to time and discuss the changes needed in the curriculum and the reasons thereof. They can discuss the  need as well as methodology for  introducing new modern subjects. Thus there is a continuous updating of the syllabus handled by the experts.iii) Formal education allows children to mix with the other children of different age groups.

Despite these three advantages the formal system cannot be the only right and insurmountable system. My above-suggested change in the pattern of schooling and examination appears not to have this advantage although it will promote self study. We have to think of such other systems, if we are careful about those that are per force remaining out of the system of formal education – and their number is staggeringly high. The suggested reform, specifically the reform of allowing the children to miss their school or colleges but still allowing them to take the examination or enter and exit any formal stream of schooling at their convenience is the major diversion from present system and is with merit. Our present illiteracy in the country is nearly 45%  but the whole picture is not even this green. Out of the 100 students enrolled at standard 1, only 70 reach to the  level of standard 5 and only 30 to the level of standard 9. Thus drop out rate comes to 30% upto 4th and 70 % upto 8th satndard. This worsens as we proceed further.  This speaks volumes of different inadequacies of our formal system of education that required compulsory attendance in schools. We can immediately do away with this requirement.  The control is further tyranical because once a child opts for informal system (such as open school for 10 th standard) he is not allowed regular University admission and must opt for open University such as IGNOU.

        Let us consider these cases:a) A child who has to earn his bread by working in hotel or by any other type of child labor. such a child cannot attend school in our formal system of education.b) A genius who wants to use much more time in developing his ability for international sports competition and whom the parents also want to encourage but are bogged down by the formal system of education which requires that this child must leave aside her/his abilities and must attend the required school hours and days without which there will be no scope allowed for improving his educational abilities by joining the formal system of education at a later day.c) Consider the case of children who are interested in trekking, understanding environment, forest, wild life, touring world wide etc. They want to spend much more time in these activities and can take out only less time for studying a subject. If they want to get themselves evaluated in the present system of education so that in later years they may enter the formal system, then today’s system does not allow it.

       If the above three categories of children are allowed to prove their capacities and abilities by adequate reforms in our present system, then nearly 50% more children would benefit tremendously just by getting such an opportunity of evaluation of their own study and the flexibility of entering into formal system whenever they so desire.

       One more reform is equally urgent. Children who are not satisfied with the evaluation and the marks must be allowed some chance of satisfying themselves that their evaluation was broadly proper. When this is not allowed, as under the present system, it leaves a feeling of unfairness and injustice in the minds of the children. We cannot expect that while growing up and becoming adult citizens, they would have any respect for the concepts of justice and fair play.

        Yet another urgently needed reform is to allow children to write the examination in their own mother tongue rather insisting that the examination for 11th standard and above (especially in the subjects of science, engineering etc.) must be written in English language. This is a major reason for a large number of brilliant students to miss out their chance and feel frustrated and such frustration once again leads to a wastage of valuable human resources.-
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