Sunday, August 28, 2016

The Quantification of Private Education in Pakistan

Earlier this month, when the Cambridge O/A Level results were announced in different parts of the world including Pakistan, I was curious to know my own students’ results for the course I taught them. I use the word curious instead of nervous or excited because I strongly believe that grades are not a determinant of success, and have always exhorted this idea to my students. However, this is not a value that most of my colleagues share, or one that I grew up with as an O-Level student ten years ago.
During my school years, the education system and society of which I was a part (and still am) constantly drilled a very rigid notion of success in students, which was that success equals to amassing an impressive amount of material wealth, and that academic excellence achieved from the top institutions is the only route to success. Ten years down the lane, the situation is very much the same. I understand that such materialistic values come from being part of an increasingly consumerist society, but in our race to outdo each other, we as a society seem to have forgotten the basic purpose of acquiring an education, which is to become better human beings.
Generally speaking, we as parents and teachers belonging to privileged socio-economic backgrounds seem to be obsessed with our children’s grades in school, as if a mere grade or percentage will determine whether the child is a success or failure in life. I blame this partially on our national trait of possessing a dichotomous thinking; of seeing things only in terms of black and white. Thus, an A grade means your child will excel in all areas of life, whereas a B grade or lower means the child is just average- she/he will survive, but barely. Needless to say, there are countless examples of individuals who belonged to the latter category in school and later on excelled in their personal and professional lives.
With Pakistan’s economy becoming increasingly capitalist in nature, it seems justified that for students, getting good grades is essential for survival of the fittest. After all, we are living in the modern age (or postmodern, or transmodern-whatever you want to call it), and modernity functions through the logic of separation. Thus, it seems justified to divide and determine students’ intellectual abilities through the grading system But what about those individuals who cannot excel academically? I am referring in particular to students with special physical and learning needs who are made to go through the same standardized exams as other students. The only exception is that these students are given a little extra time to complete their papers, which really does not make the examination procedure an easier one for most of them. So are we, as educational institutions, predetermining such students’ futures by labeling them as failures and as dysfunctional members of society? What is needed in our institutions (particularly the education sector) is a humbling of capitalist modernity. Universality, advancement, progress and development are all part of the rhetoric of modernity- but all of these are carried out at the expense of dismissing and showing disdain for those who cannot perform to the best of society’s expectations of them.
It is safe to say that students these days are schooled to mimic the performance of the educational institution itself, which is mostly about competition (with other private schools to secure the top place) , with very little focus on imparting basic human values such as respect, compassion, honesty and being helpful and supportive. How is it then that a child can make friends at school when she/he is constantly preached by their teachers and parents that they should treat all their classmates as ‘competition’? How can a relationship based on competition be a truly honest and amiable one? As responsible teachers and parents, we need to explore how we can correct this problem within the academia. As institutions, we need to move away from the cult of the self or the obsession with individualism, and move towards forming a communal self. By this I mean that the school must organize itself as a community that inculcates communal values in its students rather than simply teaching them to compete with each other to get the highest grades. Only then can we actually progress as a society which produces good Samaritans who take responsibility for strengthening their society’s social institutions.


The writer is a teacher of O-level sociology at a renowned school in Karachi.