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EDUCATION FOR

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Title: EDUCATION FOR


1
EDUCATION FOR UNDERPRIVILEGED CHILDREN
BY SHUBHANGI NAGPAL
2
THE STARK REALITY OF HUMAN DIVISION
HAVES
HAVE -NOTS
3
CONDITION OF THE UNDERPRIVILEGED
4
Among the world's 10 richest people, 4 are
Indians On the other side 17 million Indian
children work as child labourers
WE CANNOT COMPLETELY PREVENT THIS WORLD FROM
TORTURING CHILDREN BUT WE CAN REDUCE THE NUMBER
OF TORTURED CHILDREN
5
CHILD LABOUR
CHILD WORK
6
CHILD LABOUR
CHILD WORK
AND
Child work is found in developed countries where
children are legally employed for working. The
children in developed countries have enough to
eat, can attend school, and have time to play,
but the children choose to work part time or
during holidays so they can have pocket money to
spend. But for the under previleged children in
developing countries it is a question of basic
survival.
7
THE MAJOR STEP THAT CAN TURN THE TABLES
EDUCATION
EDUCATION IS NOT THE ANSWER TO THE QUESTION IT
IS INFACT THE MEANS TO ANSWER ALL THE QUESTIONS!
8
Dr. B.R. Ambedker,who belonged to a socially
deprived class of society headed the nation
towards liberation and wrote the constitution of
India. He set an example for the whole
mankind that the deprived children, if provided
with education can do wonders.
9
MAKING EDUCATION SOCIALLY RELEVANT, AND
RESPONSIVE TO THE DEVELOPMENT AND
MANPOWER NEEDS OF THE COUNTRY INITIATING
AWARENESS CAMPAIGNS ON ISSUES CONCERNING
CHILDREN
10
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11
THE IDEA
  • Every private school that wants to open a branch
    in a metro or any tier 2 city must be
    required by law to open at least one small branch
    in a village.
  • Government should create a centralized monitoring
    center for these remote schools in metro cities.
  • Simple things like clean drinking water, working
    infrastructure, clean toilets are some of the
    things that the students in these schools should
    cherish.
  • A replacement teacher should be sent from a
    nearby school if a teacher goes on leave,
    ensuring that all classes are always staffed.

12
  • There should be evening or night schools for
    teenage children who work in the factories, tea
    shops, cycle repair shops, work shops or do odd
    jobs during the day time.
  • These schools should provide them meals and
    educate them in a way that is entertaining and
    interesting for the children.
  • The learning process for the children should make
    use of audio visual methods, computers,
    educational charts etc.

13
CONTRIBUTION BY STUDENTS
  • The Students of Universities and public schools
    can also contribute towards providing better
    quality education for slum children
  •  They can enrich the experience that the slum
    children get from the government run schools that
    they attend.They can raise funds for them by
    organizing fetes, musical, cultural and sports
    events.
  • They can also donate their spare books, school
    bags, old
  • magazines, stationery etc. for these children. It
    is truly
  • wonderful that as part of their college and
    school activities the students are able to source
    funds and provide for a better education for the
    lesser privileged children of our country. And
    this work may not just stop at providing
    classroom education. They can organize extra
    curricular activities for the kids.
  • They can bring them to their campus at least once
    a week and give them classes for English, Maths,
    Science, personality development, general
    knowledge and so on.
  • They can also take them for games and sports and
    show them inspirational documentaries .

14
  • There should be mobile crèches for children of
    the labourers working at construction sites,
    factories and market places.
  • These crèches should work towards providing the
    basic protection, healthy environment, nutrition
    and elementary education to children when their
    parents are out on work.

15
  • Each of these schools can be built within the
    budget of Rs 20 lakh .
  • Each school will be located in half an acre of
    land and will have five classrooms (for standard
    1-5) and a staff room. Other facilities will
    include toilets, a vegetable garden and a
    playground.
  • Every school will also have an internet
    connection.
  • The schools can also download teaching manuals
    and instructions from a centralized monitoring
    cell located in either the district headquarter
    or in metro city.
  • The schools will run on two shifts and will have
    5-7 teachers whose salaries will start at about
    Rs 4,500. The head teacher can be paid about Rs
    7,000. On an average, the foundation will spend
    about Rs 12 lakh per annum to run each school.

16
BENEFIT

Education penetration is very good in cities
and very low in villages. There is a huge gap
that we need to fill else we will never be able
to become a developed country. Education and
schools in the village itself will create an eco
system that will make villages more independent
and people from villages will not have to migrate
to cities. This will reduce the pressure on city
infrastructure and there will be all round
development Every one, even the private schools
would benefit, as social activities like these
will help create good branding for the schools in
the cities which is where they make money.
17
Many industrialists such as SUNIL MITTAL OF
BHARTI, SHIV NADAR OF HCL TECHNOLOGIES and AZIM
PREMJI OF WIPRO Ltd are spending money on
education and the government is also stressing on
greater corporate involvement in social service
activities.
18
SUNIL MITTAL, Chairman of the Bharti Group
(Airtel) is the man behind the Bharti Foundation
which is running 236 schools across five states
for underprivileged children.
  • These schools are being run at an annual cost of
    Rs 28 crore.
  • More than 30,000 students are now studying in
    Mittals free English-medium schools in Punjab,
    Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu

19
  • This is likely to increase to 50,000 in two
    years. The plan is to eventually build 500
    primary schools and 50 secondary schools which
    will enroll 100,000 students by 2013.
  • More than 70 of the students in these schools
    are from SC/ST and OBC categories.
  • Moreover, 47 of the students are girls.

20
AZIM PREMJI, the promoter of WIPRO who cut short
his education to look after the family business
after the death of his father in 1966, has
donated over Rs. 8000 Crores worth of his shares,
to build schools, train teachers , and fund other
educational activities.

This represents the single-largest donation by an
individual towards philanthropic activities. The
move comes at a time when there is greater
awareness about and spotlight on the social
responsibility activities of corporate and
industrialists
21
SHIV NADAR OF HCL recently donated over 580
crore by selling his 2.5 stake in HCL
Technologies to fund the education initiatives of
his eponymous foundation.
22
Teach Indiacampaign which has been initiated by
Times of India group. Teach India is a nation
building initiative (or social initiative) from
the Times of India that brings together children
in need of education and people who can
contribute a little time towards teaching them.
It is based on one simple principle If you have
the desire to teach, we will put you in touch
with underprivileged children who are willing to
learn.
If we all pledge to educate at least 1 person in
our lifetime it will be enough to help India rise
from the status of a developing nation to that of
a developed one.
23
  • The initiatives taken by
  • should be emulated by the other corporates as
    well
  • The government should encourage them by giving
    them tax incentives on account of spending on
    these initiatives.

24
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26
NOT JUST IMPLEMENTATION BUT ENFORCEMENT CAN BRING
A CHANGE
LET THE FIRE TO GO TO SCHOOL KINDLE
27
ITS TIME TO LOOK BEYOND THE BORDERS OF OUR
MIND.. LOOK NOT AT THE WALLS BUT WHAT COULD LIE
BEHIND
28
THANKYOU
PREPARED BY SHUBHANGI NAGPAL VENKATESHWAR
INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL DWARKA SEC-10, NEW DELHI
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