Indian Govt Schools Revival: Mission Impossible?

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Indian Govt Schools Revival: Mission Impossible?


Indian Govt Schools Revival: Mission Impossible?

The previous generation experienced the best education from government schools, where they had the best teachers and school campuses with an amazing atmosphere that no current-gen kid can understand, even if someone explains it.

Back then, the relationships between teachers, students, and their families were entirely different. For many students, a teacher was almost like a God or Guru in their hearts.

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But slowly, as every sector changed and upgraded, the education sector saw a rapid shift, and now everything is just commercial.

Every government talks about reviving the educational sector, as we saw with Jagan and now with the TDP; Telangana is no different.

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Is it practically possible to revive the government school system?

The realistic answer is NO.

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The reason is simple and straightforward: parents themselves are not willing to send their kids to government schools. It’s a cultural shift in the mindset of parents, and they have moved on from government schools.

Even today, according to the latest government statistics, AP government high schools have one teacher for every 10 students, and in primary schools, there is one teacher for every 15 students. This is a very good ratio and does not need any change.

But the problem is students—there are no students going to government schools, yet the government is spending up to 90,000 rupees on each student per year, including all expenses as per their usual protocols. Such is the sad state.

To summarize, it is practically impossible to revive this system, which is not even in public demand. This is not just true for Andhra Pradesh, but also for Telangana and other states in India.

Reviving government schools issue is mostly used by politicians, but in public, it is least bothered or debated; that’s where it is killed.



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