Reckoning Education
as an industry
Vanam Jwala
Narasimha Rao
The Hans
India (17-08-2017)
Four decades ago, when I was working as a Librarian
in BHEL (Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited) Higher Secondary School in
Hyderabad, my colleague teachers tried to form themselves into an Association
and register with the Registrar of Trade Unions as a Trade Union. They however were
told by the concerned authorities, that, education does not come under industry
as per the Industrial Disputes Act and hence they cannot do so. The reason given was, staff working in the
Educational institutions cannot be described as ‘workmen’.
In another instance, teachers working in
the same school which was run on the pattern of Kendriya Vidyalayas (Central
Schools) and was affiliated to Central Board of Secondary Education and managed
by BHEL-a reputed Government of India Public Sector Undertaking were denied
facilities like gratuity, Leave Travel Concession, Bonus and other such
benefits on par with the rest of employees of that Industrial undertaking on
the grounds that Educational institution is not an industry.
The teachers’ competence is restricted
to what may be done in school. Work and
leisure are alienated from each other as a result; the spectator and the worker
alike are supposed to arrive at the work place all ready to fit in to routine
prepared for them.
In one of the Supreme Court Judgments
(Bangalore Water Supply and Sewage Board vs. A. Rajappa and others, 1978, AIR)
Mr. Justice Krishna Iyer observed that “Why is it strange to regard education
as an industry, its respectability, it’s lofty character, it’s professional
stamp”?
Then touching the aspect of “workmen” he
commented that “Two reasons are given to avoid the conclusion that imparting
education is an industry. The first
ground is that teachers are not workmen by definition. Perhaps they are not, because teachers do not
do manual work or technical work. We are
not too sure whether it is proper to disregard, with contempt, manual work and
separate it from education, nor … has education to be excluded…”
School is the world’s fastest growing
labor market. The engineering of
consumers has become the economy’s principal growth sector. As production costs decrease in rich nations,
there is an increasing concentration of both capital and labor in the vast
enterprise of equipping man for disciplined consumption. During the past decade
capital investments directly related to the school system rose even faster than
expenditure for defense.
Thus the “learning industry” is moving
to the centre of the national economy.
Schools combine the expectations of the consumer expressed in its claims
with the beliefs of the producer expressed in its ritual.
Mr. Justice Krishna Iyer, in the same
judgment observed elsewhere that:
“In Gandhi’s India, basic education and
handicraft merge and in the latter half of our century, higher education
involves field studies, factory training, house surgeoncy and clinical
education and sans such technological training, and education in humanities,
industrial progress is self-condemned.
If education and training are integral to industrial and agricultural
activities, such services are part of industry even if highbrowism may be
unhappy to acknowledge it... Education is the nidus of industrialization and
itself is an industry. Mahatma Gandhi’s
dictum is “work is worship”. Gandhi and
Zakir Hussein propagated basic education which used to work as modus operandus
for teaching. We have hardly any hesitation in regarding education as an
industry”.
With the introduction of 10 plus 2 plus
3 pattern of education couple of decades ago, which emphasizes “vocational
courses” at the 10 plus 2 stage and when “socially useful productive work” was
made part of the syllabus using work as “modus operandus” for teaching, then as
held in the judgment education should be declared as an industry.
Schools and other educational
institutions sell curriculum - a bundle of goods, made according to the same
process.
The distributor-teacher delivers the
finished product to the consumer-Pupil, whose reactions are carefully studied
and chartered to provide research data for the preparation of the next model.
The result of the curriculum production
process looks like any other modern staple.
It is a bundle of planned meanings, a package of values and a commodity
whose “balanced appeal” makes it marketable to a sufficiently large number to
justify the cost of production. Consumer
pupils are taught to make their desires conform to marketable values. Thus they are made to feel guilty if they do
not behave according to predictions of consumer research by getting the grades
and certificates that will place them in the job category they have been led to
expect.
Distinguished economists all over the
world have accepted that growth of human knowledge through formal educational
process helps in the development of the economy of a country. Then there cannot be a doubt as to “education
is wealth or not”.
We see in most of the countries a major
part or substantial portion of the nation’s income is utilized on
education. During the present decade
there is an increase in the expenditure on schools and on higher learning.
In actual sense and in real forms,
education is an industry relying more on labor than on capital and thus it uses
a high proportion of qualified manpower available. If we add those engaged in full time teaching
to those in full time attendance, we realize that this so called superstructure
has become society’s major employer.
Now the question raised is “what is the
return”? Since profit motive is one of
the conditions to be an industry.
If anyone takes up a project and
conducts a research and undertakes to obtain statistical data – which can
easily be done – then, the life time earnings of those educated individuals,
either by way of savings from their salaries or business profits or otherwise,
and compare the same with their investment for getting their education which
qualified them to earn, the difference, which in industrial terms, is known as
profit, perhaps will be more than that of any industry.
But the difference here is, both the
individual and the community, through their services gain this profit, as is
not in the case of an accepted industry.
Students also see their studies as the investment with the highest
monetary return, and nations see them as key factor in development.
A model society would never follow the
idea that education had no economic benefit, because the extra skills and
abilities resulting from education, would still yield out comes that are
beneficial to the community. There is a
benefit to the individual and also to the community.
Mr. Justice
Krishna Iyer said the same thing in his Judgment that “so long as services are
part of the wealth of national, educational services are wealth and are industrial”. He added that: “A man without education is a
brute and nobody can quarrel with the preposition that education in its
spectrum is significant services to the community. Education is a service to the community and
hence industry”.
No comments:
Post a Comment