In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey

IndiaGuy

Senator (1k+ posts)
NEW DELHI: India took another step towards universal elementary education last year, with 96.5% of all children aged 6-14 years being enrolled in schools, an extensive private audit has revealed. NGO Pratham`s Annual Survey of Education Report says the proportion of girls in the age group of 11-14 years too increased to 94.1% although quality of education remained a big concern.

The survey, the only private audit of elementary education in the country, found an increase of half a percentage point in enrolment over 2009. But it said there was an overall decline in students` ability to do basic mathematics and only 53.4% of children in Class V could read Class II level textbooks.

Teacher attendance also showed consistent decline which could be one of reasons for a big increase in enrolment in private schools and tuitions. Bucking the trend was Punjab, where students showed an exceptional improvement in mathematical ability.

Overall, Bihar emerged as a star performer with steady improvement in enrolment. Enrolment of boys in the state was 95.6% and that of girls 95.4%. In 2006, 12.3% of boys and 17.6% girls in Bihar were out of school.

Among states continuing to return poor numbers in girl`s education, Rajasthan had 12.1% girls aged 11-14 years out of school and Uttar Pradesh 9.7%. In both states, there has been no change in the percentage of out-of-school girls.

The survey conducted in all the districts of the country shows a large number of schools in the country fulfilling norms laid down in the Right to Education Act.

At the same time, the report showed a big increase in enrolments in private schools from 21.8% of all school-going children in 2009 to 24.3% last year. The trend has been holding since 2005. Southern states have more students going to private schools. In Andhra Pradesh, enrolment increased from 29.7% in 2009 to 36.1% while in Tamil Nadu it jumped from 19.7% to 25.1%. Kerala had 54.2% of children in private schools, up from 51.5% last year, and Karnataka 20% (16.8% in 2009).

Among northern states, enrolment in private schools grew rapidly in Punjab from 30.5% in 2009 to 38% in 2010.

Mathematics proved to be a big bugbear for students across the country. The proportion of Class I students who could recognize numbers fell from 69.3% in 2009 to 65.8%. Barely 36.5% of Class III students could handle two-digit subtraction problems, as compared to 39% in 2009. The proportion of children in Class V who could do simple division dropped from 38% to 35.9%.

Notably, Punjab bucked the trend. While 56.3% of students in Class II in the state could recognize numbers one to 100 in 2008, the figure jumped to 70.4% in 2010. Similarly, the proportion of Class IV children who could do subtraction went up from 66.9% in 2008 to 81.4%.

In Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana and Rajasthan, there was a perceptible rise in the proportion of children studying in Class I who could recognize letters.

West Bengal led in private tuitions with the survey showing more than 75% of Class V students in government schools going to private tutors. In Bihar, the proportion was 55.5% and in Orissa, 49.9%.

A positive feature of the report was the increasing number of five-year-olds in school. Nationally, it increased from 54.6% in 2009 to 62.8%. Karnataka emerged as an big achiever on this score with enrolment of five-year-olds jumping from 17.1% in 2009 to 67.6% in 2010. Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Assam also showed healthy increases in enrolment.

Read more: In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-Survey/articleshow/7288637.cms#ixzz1B2qrFsku


Source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...s-go-to-school-Survey/articleshow/7288637.cms
 

pakistan_pak

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey Read more: In India, 96.5% kids go to school

NEW DELHI: India took another step towards universal elementary education last year, with 96.5% of all children aged 6-14 years being enrolled in schools, an extensive private audit has revealed. NGO Pratham`s Annual Survey of Education Report says the proportion of girls in the age group of 11-14 years too increased to 94.1% although quality of education remained a big concern.

The survey, the only private audit of elementary education in the country, found an increase of half a percentage point in enrolment over 2009. But it said there was an overall decline in students` ability to do basic mathematics and only 53.4% of children in Class V could read Class II level textbooks.

Teacher attendance also showed consistent decline which could be one of reasons for a big increase in enrolment in private schools and tuitions. Bucking the trend was Punjab, where students showed an exceptional improvement in mathematical ability.

Overall, Bihar emerged as a star performer with steady improvement in enrolment. Enrolment of boys in the state was 95.6% and that of girls 95.4%. In 2006, 12.3% of boys and 17.6% girls in Bihar were out of school.

Among states continuing to return poor numbers in girl`s education, Rajasthan had 12.1% girls aged 11-14 years out of school and Uttar Pradesh 9.7%. In both states, there has been no change in the percentage of out-of-school girls.

The survey conducted in all the districts of the country shows a large number of schools in the country fulfilling norms laid down in the Right to Education Act.

At the same time, the report showed a big increase in enrolments in private schools — from 21.8% of all school-going children in 2009 to 24.3% last year. The trend has been holding since 2005. Southern states have more students going to private schools. In Andhra Pradesh, enrolment increased from 29.7% in 2009 to 36.1% while in Tamil Nadu it jumped from 19.7% to 25.1%. Kerala had 54.2% of children in private schools, up from 51.5% last year, and Karnataka 20% (16.8% in 2009).

Among northern states, enrolment in private schools grew rapidly in Punjab — from 30.5% in 2009 to 38% in 2010.

Mathematics proved to be a big bugbear for students across the country. The proportion of Class I students who could recognize numbers fell from 69.3% in 2009 to 65.8%. Barely 36.5% of Class III students could handle two-digit subtraction problems, as compared to 39% in 2009. The proportion of children in Class V who could do simple division dropped from 38% to 35.9%.

Notably, Punjab bucked the trend. While 56.3% of students in Class II in the state could recognize numbers one to 100 in 2008, the figure jumped to 70.4% in 2010. Similarly, the proportion of Class IV children who could do subtraction went up from 66.9% in 2008 to 81.4%.

In Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana and Rajasthan, there was a perceptible rise in the proportion of children studying in Class I who could recognize letters.

West Bengal led in private tuitions with the survey showing more than 75% of Class V students in government schools going to private tutors. In Bihar, the proportion was 55.5% and in Orissa, 49.9%.

A positive feature of the report was the increasing number of five-year-olds in school. Nationally, it increased from 54.6% in 2009 to 62.8%. Karnataka emerged as an big achiever on this score with enrolment of five-year-olds jumping from 17.1% in 2009 to 67.6% in 2010. Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Assam also showed healthy increases in enrolment.

Read more: In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey - The Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-Survey/articleshow/7288637.cms#ixzz1B2qrFsku


Source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...s-go-to-school-Survey/articleshow/7288637.cms


oH REALLY .................IS THIS YOU EDUCATIONAL STANDARD????????????????????FREIND ITS BETTER TO BE UNEDUCATED THEN TO JOIN INDIAN SCHOOL I AM AFRAID.
 

famamdani

Minister (2k+ posts)
first please answer how much populatin in indian Punjab how much % from of all India...................................????
 

adnan_younus

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
@Pakistan_pak
Lalu yadavs turn over of indian railways is taught as a case study in harvard university USA... u r the reason pakistan is down.. kuch parh likh lo aur pakistan ke liye kaam karo... takey kee aqal aur batein chand kee...

Pakistan Zindabaad Pervez Musharraf Zindabaad
 

IndiaGuy

Senator (1k+ posts)
Re: In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey Read more: In India, 96.5% kids go to school

you are right. See below and tell me where is pakistan..

COMPARATIVE LITERACY STATISTICS

ABOUT 35% OF WORLD'S ILLITERATE POPULATION IS INDIAN AND, BASED ON HISTORIC PATTERNS OF LITERACY GROWTH ACROSS THE WORLD, INDIA MAY ACCOUNT FOR A MAJORITY OF THE WORLD'S ILLITERATES BY 2020.

The table below shows the adult and youth literacy rates for India and some neighboring countries in 2002. Adult literacy rate is based on the 15+ years age group, while Youth literacy rate is for the 1524 years age group (i.e. youth is a subset of adults.
Country
Adult Literacy Rate
Youth Literacy Rate
China
93.3% (2007)
98.9% (2004)
Sri Lanka
90.8 (2007)
98.0
Burma
89.9% (2007)
94.4% (2004)
Iran
82.4% (2007)
95% (2002)
World Average
84% (1998)
88% (2001)
India
66.0% (2007)
82% (2001)
Nepal
56.5 (2007)
62.7
Pakistan
54.2 (2007)
53.9
Bangladesh
53.5 (2007)
49.7
 

Star Gazer

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
With 450 million untouchables who live on the fringes of indian towns and villages, where they are not allowed to drink water from the same well.
Please explain how did you reach this conclusion? Untouchables are humans in your counting ? or you forgot to count them as humans after all they are not living like humans, so I suppose it is easy to forget.
 

Star Gazer

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
@Pakistan_pak
Lalu yadavs turn over of indian railways is taught as a case study in harvard university USA... u r the reason pakistan is down.. kuch parh likh lo aur pakistan ke liye kaam karo... takey kee aqal aur batein chand kee...

Pakistan Zindabaad Pervez Musharraf Zindabaad

Harvard university to aur bhi bohat kuch parhati hai.
Sahi kaha, Pakistan Zindabad!
 

saudiking

Voter (50+ posts)
Its a good news, human resource is the best and most important resource any country can have.......... Education should be India's 1st preference.
 

pakistan_pak

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: In India, 96.5% kids go to school: Survey Read more: In India, 96.5% kids go to school

you are right. See below and tell me where is pakistan..

Comparative literacy statistics

about 35% of world's illiterate population is indian and, based on historic patterns of literacy growth across the world, india may account for a majority of the world's illiterates by 2020.

The table below shows the adult and youth literacy rates for india and some neighboring countries in 2002. Adult literacy rate is based on the 15+ years age group, while youth literacy rate is for the 15–24 years age group (i.e. Youth is a subset of adults.
Country
adult literacy rate
youth literacy rate
china
93.3% (2007)
98.9% (2004)
sri lanka
90.8 (2007)
98.0
burma
89.9% (2007)
94.4% (2004)
iran
82.4% (2007)
95% (2002)
world average
84% (1998)
88% (2001)
india
66.0% (2007)
82% (2001)
nepal
56.5 (2007)
62.7
pakistan
54.2 (2007)
53.9
bangladesh
53.5 (2007)
49.7
.............................................a big fart on this fraud.
 

famamdani

Minister (2k+ posts)
you have no idea what you are talking about...

why you dont give the ans.....................how much population ( in %) Punjab from all of india......................when u have ans...........then its easy to belive on your survey pls..if u dont mind......................
 

PAINDO

Siasat.pk - Blogger
The table below shows the adult and youth literacy rates for India and some neighboring countries in 2002. Adult literacy rate is based on the 15+ years age group, while Youth literacy rate is for the 15–24 years age group (i.e. youth is a subset of adults.
Country
Adult Literacy Rate
Youth Literacy Rate
China
93.3% (2007)
98.9% (2004)
Sri Lanka
90.8 (2007)
98.0
Burma
89.9% (2007)
94.4% (2004)
Iran
82.4% (2007)
95% (2002)
World Average
84% (1998)
88% (2001)
India
66.0% (2007)
82% (2001)
Nepal
56.5 (2007)
62.7
GREAT PAKISTAN
500.50 (2020)
99.90 (2007)
70.20(2002)
Bangladesh
53.5 (2007)
49.7
 

cefspan

Minister (2k+ posts)
@Pakistan_pak
Lalu yadavs turn over of indian railways is taught as a case study in harvard university USA... u r the reason pakistan is down.. kuch parh likh lo aur pakistan ke liye kaam karo... takey kee aqal aur batein chand kee...

Pakistan Zindabaad Pervez Musharraf Zindabaad

Thats right , lALU PARSAD yadav has got authenticity and genuineness , and enough guts to allow people to laugh at him.
 

IndiaGuy

Senator (1k+ posts)
But you got the drift!

Do you know that India's constitution is written by Dalit called Dr. Ambedker and We have 47% reservation for BC ( backward class) and EBC ( Economical backward class in education and all government sector. Dalits are much bater shape in than any other class in India Today.
 

Star Gazer

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Do you know that India's constitution is written by Dalit called Dr. Ambedker and We have 47% reservation for BC ( backward class) and EBC ( Economical backward class in education and all government sector. Dalits are much bater shape in than any other class in India Today.

Do you know that we do not believe in calling and labelling any one as Backward class AKA BC in your constitution? Do you also know that we have 33% reservation of seats in all provincial and National assemblies for the women?
Do you also know that we have never killed hindus or any other minority in the manner they are cleansed ethnically? Do you also know that we have never demolished a single mandir, church or any other place of worship claiming our right over it, the way you did with Babri Masjid? and also with Golden Temple? Do you know we do not kill female child because we want a boy ,in infancy or through abortion? Let me know if you want to play the do you know game any more!
 

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