education in nepal

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Education In Nepal Nepal is now officially the poorest country in Asia. The government has only been active in the field of education for the past 50 years. Before that, the status quo thought it unwise to educate the masses. Even today, its focus is still on school buildings. Teachers, teaching materials and the quality of teaching are for the most part outside the scope of the government’s policy. In Nepal, education in the rural areas still and foremost takes the form of rote learning. The teacher talks (with a load voice, usually to scream therefore better describes the vocal activity of a Nepali teacher) and the students listen and repeat. The teachers try to drill knowledge into young brains, with the help of a bamboo stick or heavy ruler if needed. There is no learning through playing or learning through doing; no activities, neither single nor in small groups; no stage of practicing or producing anything with the knowledge acquired. Today, in rural Nepal, the approach is clearly teacher oriented. Our vision, conversely, is child oriented; we look at education through the eyes of the child. Children need an affectionate and inspiring environment in which they can develop fully and become who they really are— beautiful children of Mother Earth. Some of the current issues in the primary education in Nepal:

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Education In NepalNepal is now officially the poorest country in Asia. The government has only been active in the field of education for the past 50 years. Before that, the status quo thought it unwise to educate the masses. Even today, its focus is still on school buildings. Teachers, teaching materials and the quality of teaching are for the most part outside the scope of the government’s policy. 

In Nepal, education in the rural areas still and foremost takes the form of rote learning. The teacher talks (with a load voice, usually to scream therefore better describes the vocal activity of a Nepali teacher) and the students listen and repeat. The teachers try to drill knowledge into young brains, with the help of a bamboo stick or heavy ruler if needed. There is no learning through playing or learning through doing; no activities, neither single nor in small groups; no stage of practicing or producing anything with the knowledge acquired.

Today, in rural Nepal, the approach is clearly teacher oriented. 

Our vision, conversely, is child oriented; we look at education through the eyes of the child. Children need an affectionate and inspiring environment in which they can develop fully and become who they really are—beautiful children of Mother Earth.

Some of the current issues in the primary education in Nepal:Parents are too poor to pay the costs of better educationMany parents, although still not all, see the importance of better education. However, they cannot afford to send their children to private schools. At village schools we see many children without books, notebooks or even pencils.

Children do not have access to drinking water at every schoolSummers are long and really hot in Nepal. Moreover, many school buildings have a tin roof underneath of which temperatures rise to a maximum. Without drinking water children fail to concentrate. Especially in the nursery and kindergarten classes, where it is allowed, we often see children sleeping with their heads on their desks.

Children are undernourished and thus lack the energy to concentrate for longer periods of time.Nepal is the poorest country in Asia and most children do not get enough to eat,

let alone enough of the nutrients that they need. At home they usually get a meager portion of vegetables, and they very rarely eat more than one piece of fruit a week, if even that. The lack of vitamins is obvious. Moreover, many children do not bring an adequate lunch to school and we see children having barely a handful of popcorn to get them through a day at school that lasts from 10 am to 4 pm. Let’s not forget that some of these children have to walk half an hour or more before to even arrive at school.

Additionally, the same goes for teachers. Many teachers only drink water or tea during lunch break and clearly cannot possibly give their students their best during the last 3 or 4 periods of the day. A hungry teacher becomes irritated more quickly and will thus reach for his stick more quickly. 

Children are being beaten in every school in rural Nepal every day Because of their poor concentration—due to the lack of sufficient water and food, as well as the absence of interesting classes—teachers often feel the need to use aggressive methods like a bamboo-stick to keep children’s attention in class. 

Furniture is very uncomfortableSchool furniture is usually very old, used, worn and torn. Children sit on straight hard wooden benches, without backrests, at 4 or even 5 students on a 6 foot bench. How can they possibly sit comfortably on this for 7 or 8 class periods a day? 

Schools lack materials to teach in creative, interesting ways.Village schools often have only a blackboard and some pieces of chalk as material for a teacher to run the class. 

Teachers lack training to teach in interactive ways that stimulate the children.If a school does not have a large range of diverse materials, it can only compensate for this by a teacher with a range of diverse techniques like having children come to the blackboard and write or draw something, play hangman, do a guessing game with drawn pictures on the board, make groups and do role-plays, have sing-a-longs, etc. But probably not a single teacher in rural Nepal has ever seen any of these techniques being displayed in practice. How, then, can they apply them?

Children are not creativeWhen given a sheet of white paper and some color pencils in class most children will just stare at their blank sheet for many minutes. Then finally one child starts

to draw a flower or maybe a Nepali flag. At the end of the class period we surely end up with at least 20 flowers or 20 flags.