Secondary
Education Commission (1952-53)
The Secondary Education commission
known as Mudaliar Commission was appointed by the government of India in term
of their Resolution to bring changes in the present education system and make
it better for the Nation. Dr. A. Lakshmanswami Mudaliar was the Vice-Chancellor
of Madras University.
Recommendation #
1. Organisational Pattern of Secondary Education:
1. The
commission recommended the following new educational structure for secondary
education after 4 or 5 years of primary or Junior Basic Education
(i) A middle or
Junior Secondary or Senior Basic stage which should cover a period of 3 years;
(ii) A Higher
Secondary stage which should cover a period of four years.
2. Abolition of
Intermediate Classes:
The commission
recommended for abolition of intermediate classes. The senior intermediate
class (XIIth class) should be combined with the degree class and the junior
intermediate class (XIth class) with the high school class.
3.
Diversification of Courses:
For
diversification of courses, multi-purpose schools should be established as
agricultural schools, technical schools, commercial schools etc., to enable the
students to acquire education according to their interests, aims and diverse
abilities.
4. Stress on
Agricultural Education in Rural Schools:
Special
facilities should be provided for agricultural education in rural schools.
Horticulture and Animal Husbandry as allied subjects of the agriculture should
also be taught.
5. Technical
Education:
(i) Technical
schools should be set up in large numbers either separately or as part
multi-purpose school and these schools should be located near industries and
should function in close co-operation with the industry concerned.
(ii) Suitable
legislation should be passed making it compulsory for the industry to provide
facilities to students for particular apprenticeship training.
(iii) Industrial
Education Cess should be levied and the” proceeds of this Cess should utilized
for the development of technical education.
6. Other Type of
Schools:
(i)Public schools should continue to exist for
sometime say for about five years. During this time, organization of these
public schools should be in consonance with the general pattern of education.
(ii) A number of
residential schools should be established more particularly in certain rural
areas to provide greater opportunities for teacher–pupil contact and for
development recreational and extra-curricular activities.
(iii) A large
number of schools should be established to meet the needs of handicapped
children.
7. Education of
Girls:
The commission
did not like having a different type of education for girls. But it recommended
for the study of Home Science in all girls’ schools. State Govt. should make
effort to open girl schools wherever there is demand for them.
8. Study of
Languages:
(i) Three languages
should be taught in the schools. The medium of instruction at the secondary
stage should be either the mother tongue or the regional language.
(ii) At the
middle school stage, every student must be taught at least two languages. Hind
and English should be taught after the junior basic stage of education on the
condition that no two languages should be introduced in the same year. At the
high school a higher secondary stage, the student must be taught at least two
languages, one of which being the mother tongue or the regional language.
(iii) Hindi
should be made a compulsory subject of study in the school course due to the
following reasons; Official language of the centre, languages of
correspondence, an means of promoting national unity and integrity.
(iv) English
shall be the compulsory subject of study at the secondary stage in all the
state due to the following reasons: widely known among the educated, means of
national unity, useful in international sphere and harmful effect due to
exclusion of English.
9. The centre
should assume certain amount of direct responsibility for the contemplate
reorganization of secondary education and give financial aid for the purpose.
Recommendation #
2. Organisation of Secondary School Curriculum:
1. At the Middle-School
stage, the curriculum should include:
(i) Languages,
(ii) Social
Studies,
(iii) General
Science,
(iv)
Mathematics,
(v) Art and
Music
(vi) Craft and
(vii) Physical
Education.
2. At the High
school Pre Higher Secondary stage diversified courses of instruction should
provide to the students and curriculum would be of two types:
(i) Core
curriculum, which is common for all the students, includes language. General
Science, Social Studies and Craft.
(ii) In addition
to the core curriculum every student has to take three subjects at the higher
stage out of the following seven groups:
1. Humanities
(classical language, History, Geography, Economics and Civics, Psychology and
Logic, Mathematics, Music, Domestic Science),
2. Science
(Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Geography, Mathematics. Physiology and Hygiene
not to be taken with Biology),
3. Technical
Applied Mathematics and Geometrical Drawing, Applied Science, Elements of
Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering),
4. Commercial
(Book Keeping, Commercial Practice, Commercial Geography. Short-hand and
Type-writing),
5. Agricultural
(General Agriculture, Animal Husbandry, Horticulture and Gardening,
Agricultural Chemistry and Botany),
6. Fine Arts
(History of art, Drawing and Designing, painting, Modeling, Music, Dancing),
7. Home Science
(Home Economics, Nutrition and Cooking, Mother Craft and Child Care, Household
management and Home Nursing).
(iii) Besides
the above, a student may take at his option one additional subject from any of
the above groups.
(iv) The
diversified curriculum should begin in the second year of the High School or
Higher Secondary stage.
Recommendation #
3. Text Books:
(i) With a view
to improving the quality of text books prescribed, a high power text books
committee should be constituted.
(ii) The
committee should have the following functions : to prepare a panel of expert
reviewers, to appoint expert committees, to invite experts, to co-operate with
similar committee, to arrange for the publication, to maintain a fund, to grant
suitable honoraria to authors and to utilize the balance of funds for different
purposes.
(iii) The text
books committee should lay down clear criteria for the type of paper, illustration,
printing and format of the books.
(iv) The Central
Government should set up a new institution to develop training in the technique
of book illustration.
(v) The central
and state governments should maintain libraries for improving of book illustrations.
(vi) Single text
book should not be prescribed for every subject of study. A reasonable number
of books conforming to the standards laid down should be recommended.
(vii) In case of
languages, however, definite books should be prescribed for each class to
ensure proper gradation.
(viii) No book,
prescribed as a text book or as a book for general study, should contain any
passage or statement which might offend the religious or social
susceptibilities of any section of the community or might indoctrinate the
minds of the young students with particular political or religious ideology.
(ix) Frequent
changes of textbooks and books prescribed for study should be discouraged.
Recommendation #
4. Methods of Teaching:
The commission
believed that even the best curriculum and the most perfect syllabus remains
dead unless quickened into life by the right method of teaching and the right
kind of teacher. The methods should be dynamic and scientific.
The following
recommendations were made:
(i) The methods of
teaching aim at inculcating desirable values and proper attitudes habits of
work in the students besides imparting knowledge.
(ii) The methods
of teaching should help the students for attachment to work.
(iii) The
emphasis in teaching should shift from verbalism and memorization to learn
through purposeful, concrete and realistic situations. For this purpose, the
principle “Activity Method” and “Project Method” should be followed in
practice.
(iv) Methods of
learning should enable the children to apply practically the knowledge gained
in the classroom to various problems confronting them.
(v) Methods of
teaching should provide ample opportunities for students to develop clear
thinking and clear expression both in speech and writing.
(vi) Emphasis
should be given on acquiring knowledge through personal efforts and initiative
and training the students in the techniques of study.
(vii) A well
thought out attempt should be made to adopt methods of instruction to the nee
of individual students as much as possible so that dull, average and bright
student’s may all have a chance to progress at their own pace.
(viii)They
should be given adequate opportunity to work in groups and to carry out group
projects and activities to develop the qualities for group life and
co-operative work.
(ix)In order to
popularize progressive methods of teaching, ‘Experimental’ and ‘Demonstration’
schools should be opened.
(x)
Co-curricular activities should form an integral part of education.
(xi) Library,
class library and subject library should be utilized for promotion of study
habit
Recommendation #
5. Discipline:
(i) The
education of character should be envisaged as the responsibility of all
teachers.
(ii) In order to
promote discipline, personal contract between the teacher and the pupil should
be strengthened, and the pattern of self-government with observance of code o
conduct should be introduced in all schools.
Recommendation #
6. Moral and Religious Education:
The commission
realized that religious and moral instruction plays an important part in the
promotion of character. Religious instruction in schools may be given only on a
voluntary basic and after the regular school hours. Such instruction should be
confined to the children of the particular faith concerned and be given with
the consent of parents and the management.
Recommendation #
7. Guidance and Counselling:
(i) Educational
guidance should receive much greater attention on the part of educational authorities.
(ii) Guidance
service should be the work of various personnel’s like parents, teachers,
headmasters/headmistress, and principals.
(iii) In order
to broaden the pupil’s understanding of the nature, scope and significance of
the occupation or industries, film should be prepared to show the conditions of
industrial, technical, agricultural or vocational aspects and this should be
supplemented by actual visits.
(iv)The services
of trained guidance officers and career masters should be made available
gradually and in an increasing measure to all educational institutions.
(v)There should
be opening up training centres in different regions for training of guidance
officers and career masters to which each state may send a number of teachers
and other suitable persons for training.
(vi) A Central
Research organisation may be established for carrying out research in
educational guidance and for the preparation of tests with particular reference
to Indian conditions and the needs of pupils.
(vii) In every
state there should be a Bureau of educational and vocational guidance to plan
and co-ordinate various activities which have been recommended as above.
Recommendation #
8. Supervision and Inspection:
(i) The true
role of an inspector should be to study the problems of school and view them
comprehensively in the context of educational objectives, to formulate
suggestion for improvement and help the teachers to carry out his advice and
recommendations,
(ii) Special
Inspectors should be appointed to inspect the teaching of special subjects like
Domestic
Science, Art, Music etc.,
(iii) In
addition to direct recruitment, inspectors should also be drawn from:
(a) Teacher’s of
ten years experience.
(b) Headmasters
of High Schools, and
(c) Duly qualified
staff of training colleges who may be allowed to work as such for a period of
three to five years.
The duties of
inspectors should be administrative and academic. The former related to the
annual inspection of records, accounts, office routine etc. For this purpose he
must have assistance of a competent staff.
The latter
duties are to choose teachers to visit schools in the company of the inspector
and to spend two or three days with the staff to confirm about library and
laboratory facilities, the curriculum and the organisation of extra-curricular
activities.
Recommendation #
9. Organisation and Administration:
(i) The Director
of Education should be the officer mainly responsible to advise the minister
regarding the spread of education.
(ii) A committee
should be constituted both at the centre and in each state in order to discuss
how best the resources of the department could be pooled for the furtherance of
education of all types.
(iii) There
should be coordinating committee consisting of the departmental heads concerned
to consider methods of improvement and expansion in the fields of education.
(iv) There
should be a Board of Secondary Education consisting of not more than 25 members
with the Director of Education as its chairman. A sub-committee of the Board
should deal with the conduct of examination.
(v) There should
be a Teacher’s Training Board for supervising and training of under-graduates.
(vi) There
should be another Board, namely Central Advisory Board of Education to function
as a coordinating agency to consider all India problems concerning education.
(vii) State or
provincial Advisory Boards should be constituted on similar basis in each state
to advise the Department of Education on all educational matters.
Recommendation #
10. Health and Physical Education:
(i) A properly
organised medical service should be available in all states.
(ii) A thorough
medical examination of all pupils and necessary follow up and treatment, where
necessary, should be carried out in all schools.
(iii) Some of
the teachers should be trained in the first aid and general principles of
health.
(iv) Proper
nutritional standards should be maintained in the hostels and residential
schools.
(v) The school
should assist, where possible, in the maintenance of sanitation of the area,
(v) Physical
activities should be made to suit the individual.
(vi) All
teachers below the age of 40 should actively participate in many of the
physical activities of students.
(vii) The
training in physical education should be comprehensive enough to include all
aspects of health education.
(viii) The
existing facilities for training of teachers of physical education should be
expanded by increasing the seats in the existing colleges,
(ix) Full
records of physical activities of students must be maintained.
Recommendation #
11. Improving the Systems of Examination and Evaluation:
I. The number of
external examinations should be reduced.
II. There should
be minimization of subjectivity by introducing objective tests of attainment
and by changing the type of questions.
III. Cramming
should be discouraged and rational understanding should be encouraged.
IV. It is
undesirable to set two papers of 03 hours duration each on one day and the same
day.
V. In order to find
out the pupil’s all round “progress, a proper system of school records should
be maintained for each and every pupil.
VI. In the final
assessment of the pupils due credit should be given to the internal tests and
the school records of the pupils.
VII. The system
of symbolic rather than numerical marking should be adopted for evaluating and
grading the work of the pupils in external and internal examinations and in
maintaining the school records. A five point scale may be used: A (excellent),
B (good), C (fair and average), D (Poor), E (very Poor).
VIII. There
should be only one public examination at the completion of secondary school
course.
IX. The system
of compartmental examination should be introduced at the final public
examination.
X. A candidate
who has passed the examination and wishes to qualify in any additional
subject(s) may appear at a subsequent examination.
XI. The
certificate awarded should contain the results of the school tests in subjects
as well as the gist’s of the school records besides the results of the public
examination in different subjects.
Recommendation #
12. Teacher Education:
1. There should
be only two types of institutions for teacher training.
(i) For those
who have taken the school Leaving Certificate or Higher Secondary School
Leaving Certificate, for whom the period of training should be of two years;
and
(ii) For
graduates for whom the training may, for the present, be of one academic year,
but extended as a long-term programme to two academic years.
2. Graduate
teacher training institutions should be recognized by and affiliated to the
universities which should grant degrees, while the secondary grade training
institutions should be under the control of a separate Board appointed for the
purpose.
3. The teacher
trainee should receive training in one or more co-curricular activities.
4. Importance
should be attached to teaching practice in schools.
5. During the
period of training all the pupil-teachers should be given suitable stipend by
the state.
6. The training
colleges should, as a normal part of their work, assist to the in-service
teacher training by providing the following:
(i) Refresher
courses,
(ii) Short
intensive courses in special subjects,
(iii) Work-shop,
(iv) Seminars
and
(v) professional
conferences.
7. Training
institutions should be in close with the Department of Education and the
schools.
8. For research
work in all aspects of Pedagogy, every training college should have under its
control an experimental or demonstration school.
9. Recruitment
to training colleges should be carefully made so as to admit only those who
hold the highest promise of becoming successful teachers.
10. The
selection of students for teacher training may be made some months in advance
of the opening of the course. The period of training may be increased to a
minimum of 180 days by eliminating the number of unnecessary holidays.
11. The
commission strongly advocates residential type of training colleges for all
students. All these colleges should provide adequate residential facilities to
cultivate community life and foster self-reliance.
12. In order to
meet the shortage of women teachers, special part-time training courses should
be provided.
13. The normal
period of probation for a trained teacher should be one year.
14. Teachers
possessing same qualifications and performing same work should be treated alike
as far as salary is concerned.
15. The system
of triple benefit scheme, i.e. Pension- Cum-Provident Fund-Cum-insurance scheme
should be introduced in all States.
16. Arbitration
Boards of committees should be set up to look into the appeals of teachers.
17. The
superannuation age should he 60 for physically fit and competent teachers with
the approval of the Director of Education.
18. The children
of teacher should be given free education throughout the school stage.
19. Through a
system of co-operative house building societies, teachers should b>e
provided with quarters so as to enable them to live near the school.
20. The practice
of private tuition by teachers should be abolished.
Recommendation #
13. Management of Schools:
(i) The managing
Boards of all schools should be registered and should consist of a limited
number of persons with headmaster as an ex-officio member.
(ii) No member
of the Board should directly or indirectly interfere with the internal
administration of the school.
Recommendation #
14. School Building and Equipment:
(i) The open
spaces available in cities must be conserved and be utilized as playground by
groups of schools.
(ii) Normally,
in designing buildings for schools, care should be taken to see that an area of
not less than 10 sq. ft. is provided per student in the class room.
(iii) The
optimum number of boys to be admitted to any class should be 30 and the maximum
should not in any case exceed 40; the optimum number in the whole school should
be 500 while the maximum should not exceed 750.
Recommendation #
15. Hours of Working and Vacation:
1. As a rule the
total number of working days in a school should not be less than 200, the
working hours per week should be at least 35 periods about 45 minutes each; the
schools should work regularly for 6 days in the week. One of the days being a
half day when the teachers and students might meet informally and work together
on various extra-curricular and social projects.
No comments:
Post a Comment