Wednesday 17 April 2013

Fighters : The wind against the odds

Part One : The Feminine Power



A focus on girls’ education in India was put in place since the 1986 National Policy on Education and the 1992 Program of Action, followed by the SSA program launched in 2001, National Curriculum Framework in 2005 and the National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education in 2010. These policies were complemented by other schemes such as National Program for the Education of Girls at the Elementary Level, Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya Scheme, both ensuring inclusion and quality education for girls. The Mahila Samakhya program was launched in 10 states targeting marginalized sections of rural women. Access to education was also facilitated by separate schools for girls, availability of open learning resources, residential schooling, coaching facilities; scholarships, textbooks, uniforms and transport including bicycles. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (known as RTE) Act, 2010, charted a new road map for gender equality in education in India.
Despite all these efforts, surprisingly, a large number of girls still remain outside the education system. According to UNICEF India, out of 81% girls joining school at the primary level, around 50% drop out at the secondary level. A 2010 report by the National Council for Teacher Education estimated that an additional 1.2 million teachers were needed to fulfill the RTE Act requirements, and last year the RTE Forum, a civil society collective of around 10,000 non-governmental organizations (NGOs), found that only 5% of government schools complied with all the basic standards for infrastructure set by the act. Some 40% of primaries had more than 30 students per classroom, and 60% didn't have electricity. The RTE Forum also reported official figures showing that 21% of teachers weren't professionally trained. 
But these are all infrastructural and administrative problems. If we try to find out, there are plenty of socioeconomic problems as well and sometimes these are the biggest problems to send a girl to school and stand her in life. Main reason is poverty. Many talented children have been forcefully left school because their parents are unable to provide the money for their education. Girls are most common soft target in this regard. Still in India girls are considered as marriage materials and they must be married after a certain age. Even in some regions girls are unwanted during birth. It leads female foeticide. After sixty years of independence this perception has been changed very little. Sometimes parents force them to dropout from school and put them in jobs to increase the number of earning members of the family. Girls are very common target of human trafficking. It hampers their education as well. 
But some of them fight against these odds valiantly and keep faith on their will to reach their ultimate goal. From morning to night sometime they fight against the society, sometime against their parents and even sometime against their own motivation. 

12 years old priya at her home. Priya's father does not have any permanent job.But still her parents are confident to support her education at any cost.

Priya is ready for school










Girls are playing during annual sports day


Mid-Day-Meal is being distributed


Madhumita is having her lunch with her friends









We need a mass movement to change this scenario. First of all we need to provide enough financial support to the family. Some NGOs are doing this tirelessly. But these are not enough. In past Government started an initiative to provide lunch at break as “Mid-Day-Meal” to attract students to the school. Parents are sending their kids to school after this initiative, but not in large numbers. Education department has also directed to draw different diagrams in pictorial forms inside the classrooms to increase the interest about education. Different activities are often organized at school level like painting, sports, and cultural programs to increase the engagement with the students and their parents. We need to implement strong legislation outlawing child labor, gender based violence, and harassment of girls as well. But above all we need to change our perceptions and educate people around us about the importance of girls’ education that all the girls can go to sleep every night with their dreams intact with a hope for a better and joyful tomorrow.

© Balarka Brahma All Rights Reserved
Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is prohibited

22 comments:

  1. everyday you are super seeding yourself...:)

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  2. excellent detailing....

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  3. only one photo I found little weak....but rests are simply superb
    ---Balaji

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  4. a meaningful work.

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  5. make it a 25 photos story....wud be more compact

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  6. patience always pays off....this story proves it....great work with a vision

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  7. super strong work....now you are becoming a social documentary photographer :)

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  8. your best work....amazing....keep doing such things more.

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  9. your each work is better than the previous one

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  10. day by day your work is going out of my head...

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  11. It has always been a pleasure to see your work :)

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  12. flawless.....

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  13. photos are brilliant....

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  14. ei rokom aro kaj dekhte chai :)

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  15. mon vore galo....keep it up bro :):):)

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  16. too good....I have it on IPA :)

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