Expanding and Improving Upper Primary Education in India

This report considers the current status of upper primary school education in India. It looks at future impacts and recognizes the national level focus on elementary education. The importance of specific contexts in defining how states fulfill their constitutional responsibilities in upper primary education are studied. The report is based upon two studies whose findings include: length, structure & organization vary across and within states; the transition rate between primary and upper primary is high; transition rates and enrollment are lower for girls; school place is provided for current, but not future, demand; private unaided school enrollment is increasing; state qualification policies for teachers are not always relevant to instruction needs; in-service teacher training is very limited; discontinuity exists for curricula and subject weight between primary and upper primary schools; information overloads exist in syllabi, textbooks, and classroom processes; upper primary grades are cheaper when combined within an elementary school; a constitutional requirement for decentralized educational management exists; and expenditures need to increase before universalization of elementary education. Specific recommendations are given. Expansion and improvement of upper primary schooling, as endorsed by the Supreme Court of the Constitution's reference to the provision of education up to 14 years of age, will require both resources and reform.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2001-05-08
Subjects:ADDITION, ADDITIONAL RESOURCES, ADOLESCENT GIRLS, AGE GROUP, AGED, BASIC EDUCATION, BASIC LITERACY, CLASS SIZES, COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT, COMPLEXITY, COMPOSITION, CURRICULA, CURRICULUM, CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT, DECENTRALIZATION, DECENTRALIZATION OF EDUCATION, DECENTRALIZED MANAGEMENT, DROPOUT RATES, EDUCATION SECTOR, EDUCATION SYSTEM, EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATIONAL PLANNING, EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, EFFECTIVE SCHOOLS, ELEMENTARY EDUCATION, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, FIRST GRADE, FREE EDUCATION, GER, GIRLS, GROSS ENROLMENT RATIO, HEAD TEACHERS, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, INNOVATION, INSERVICE TEACHER TRAINING, INSERVICE TRAINING, INSTRUCTION, INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS, INTERVENTION, INTERVENTIONS, ISOLATION, LEARNING, LEARNING ACHIEVEMENT, LEARNING MATERIALS, LEVEL OF EDUCATION, MATHEMATICS, MEANING, NER, NET ENROLMENT RATIO, PARENT TEACHER ASSOCIATIONS, PARENTS, PARTNERSHIP, PEDAGOGY, PRE-SERVICE TEACHER TRAINING, PRESERVICE TEACHER TRAINING, PRIMARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY SCHOOL, PRIMARY SCHOOL CURRICULUM, PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHERS, PRIMARY SCHOOLING, PRIMARY SCHOOLS, PRIMARY STUDENTS, PRIMARY TEACHERS, PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS, PUPILS, QUALITY EDUCATION, REASONING, REPETITION, RURAL POPULATION, SCHOOL BUILDINGS, SCHOOL COMMITTEES, SCHOOL MANAGEMENT, SCHOOLING, SCHOOLS, SECONDARY EDUCATION, SECONDARY SCHOOLS, SMALL SCHOOLS, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT, SYLLABI, TEACHER, TEACHER DEPLOYMENT, TEACHER EDUCATION, TEACHER QUALIFICATIONS, TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAMS, TEACHERS, TEACHING, TEXTBOOK CONTENT, TEXTBOOKS, UPPER PRIMARY, UPPER PRIMARY GRADES, URBAN AREAS, VILLAGE EDUCATION, WORKING CHILDREN PRIMARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY ENROLLMENT RATE, ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CURRICULUM, ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHERS, PRIMARY SCHOOL STUDENTS, INFORMATION OVERLOAD, EDUCATIONAL ATTENDANCE, GIRLS' EDUCATION, GENDER & EDUCATION, SCHOOL ENROLLMENT, SCHOOL DISTRIBUTION, SCHOOL FINANCING, TEACHER TRAINING, TEACHER RECRUITMENT, INSERVICE TEACHER EDUCATION, PRESERVICE TEACHER EDUCATION, CLASSROOM MATERIALS, EDUCATIONAL FINANCING, PRIVATE SCHOOLS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/05/1121255/india-expanding-improving-upper-primary-education
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15668
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