The Education Crisis in Pakistan

The government has cut HEC’s funds in the wake of fiscal constraints. The government has allocated Rs15.8 billion for the HEC for the current year, an amount which is Rs19 billion less than that needed and is under threat of reduction. So far the government has only released Rs1.4 billion of this amount, all of which is going towards human resources while no money has yet been released for scholarships as a result of which the future of 14,000 PhD students, 5,000 of whom are studying abroad, is at stake. [Tribune: 72 Universities to go on Strike]

This fiscal year’s budgetary allocations for higher education have been slashed by more than 70 per cent. In a poorly thought out moment, the government announced in June a 50% increase in salaries which has subsequently not been possible to honour to date leading to a very avoidable sense of deprivation.

CUTTING BACK ON UNIVERSITY  EDUCATION

Why is it that financiers only think of money: How much money will it take to make more money? How much money must we borrow? How much money must we make to repay what we borrow? There is never enough talk of what money can buy, what is worth buying, or those things worth achieving that perhaps money can’t buy.

Such as being accomplished at what we do, being well behaved, appreciating what is beautiful around us, how to use authority wisely, how to be calm and dignified, the necessity of being honest in one’s dealings, respect for others, being responsible, how to be empowered , how to be ambitious without being ruthless, how to be competitive without being unjust, how to love and be loved, how to care for and value our elders, our children, our women, our neighbours, our animals, our environment, how to harvest yet preserve the gifts of nature.

I cannot imagine not knowing how to read, how to quickly calculate amounts using multiplication or division, not being able to go to a shelf or the internet to settle some discussion, to not be able to write a letter or a diary, to not remember my geography class when someone talks of whether Pluto is a planet or not, to be able to reach out to the Quran or the Bible or Buddha’s teachings or Confucius  to understand the purpose of my existence. I cannot imagine not sharing what I have just read,  or not being able to read up the next chapter of my daughter’s history book so I can help her with her exams.

I never want to take for granted that I have an education and that has given me the ability to continue to educate myself.

So, imagine my horror when I find that the wise elders of the country, to whom we look to manage our collective earnings, to negotiate for us, to keep us safe, to plan our future  say education is only worth 1.8% of our GDP and we need to cut back on that even further for the sake of the economy of the country; when my despairing Vice Chancellor says we must roll back our very successful professional courses, reduce the numbers of teachers, and not even think of improving our facilities. We must stay uneducated so that we can support our struggle to preserve our borders, to pay back loans that were forced upon us, to pay uncaring bureaucrats better salaries, to build yet another monument or make more signal free roads.

There are some alarming statistics around. In a list of 130 countries Pakistan ranks 126th in the amount of GDP spent on education way below Rwanda, Burundi, Solomon Islands, our neighbours: India Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Bhutan and nowhere near the list topper, Cuba, that spends 18.7% of its GDP on education.

Yet we can proudly say we have a much more respectable ranking when it comes to Military spending of 23.1% of our annual budget, even more than that most war-mongering of nations, USA and more than our nemesis, India. We slip down the list again when it comes to spending in health with a mere 1.3%.

Even if we question the statistics, we simply have to look around our cities, towns and villages to see the pathetic state of our government educational institutions like dried twigs of a once healthy sapling planted with great hopes. You just have to step into a Flood relief camp and see the lost generation of children and young adults who are so excited to see a shamiana go up that is to be their school.

There is all this talk of literacy, as if literacy alone will lead to progress rather than the whole span of education up to higher education. At least our version of literacy defined as “One who can read newspaper and write a simple letter in any language.”  This is nowhere near the UNESCO definition: the “ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate, compute and use printed and written materials associated with varying contexts. Literacy involves a continuum of learning in enabling individuals to achieve their goals, to develop their knowledge and potential, and to participate fully in their community and wider society.

637,037 young men and women are enrolled in 68 ( 72)  State run universities in Pakistan taught by 38,266 teachers. [Pakistan Education Statistics – PDF] Over 80% of university going students are enrolled in State universities where the fees are heavily subsidized making education for all a real possibility. Eg. In University of Karachi the semester fee is Rs 2600 as compared with most private universities with fees in excess of Rs 50,000 per semester. I too am a product of University of Karachi and had an excellent education, not just academically, but also socially by being part of the wider society of Pakistan.

In comparison in a much faster growing education system 1.603 million are enrolled in Deeni Madaris with 55,680 teachers, and are overwhelmingly private (95%). Not to create is a misleading comparison since this statistic is from lowest to highest levels of education, following are the statistics for State education:

137,225 primary schools. 15,702 middle schools 9,587 high schools 1,202 HSC colleges 802 degree colleges and 68 universities, not including technical and vocational centres.

21,791,890 sought public school education in 2007-8, and   17,090 made it to college level.

In Universities :

445,500 almost equally male and female are enrolled in Bachelors programmes,  146,330 almost equally male and female in Master of 16 yrs of Education,  719 more males than females on PhD programmes.

Including PGD and masters of 16+ years we have a Grand Total 325,777 male 311,260 female  and a total of 637,037 that depend on government expenditure on higher education.  It is only 0.38% of the population.

How problematic can it be to support 637,037 young people and 38,266 teachers in a country of over 17 million? Especially since this 0.38% will run government and private offices, businesses, write books, develop literature, determine the very economy that they seem to threaten in the eyes of the government.

Parents who send their children to higher education rather than to work in factories and corner shops, have certain expectations: that their children will get a good education and that their chances for respectable jobs will thus increase.  Can we let them down? Can we let them feel their economic sacrifice was a waste of time? If today many degrees are  a piece of paper that allows us to open doors ( or a better simile may be to help us break into locked doors), may it not be because so few funds are spent in improving, updating curricula and facilities, teacher training, conferences, publications? The University of Karachi was designed for 7000 students in the 1950s. Today it has a student strength of 24,000.  Clearly it needs development funds to match their needs.

I am not sure why I am even presenting these arguments, because it is obvious even to the most disenfranchised segments of Pakistani society that the only thing that stands in their way is lack of a good education, not just amongst the uneducated, but even those who have degrees but studied with outdated curricula.

Am I trying to convince a government whose own web pages state:

It is a universally accepted fact that education is considered the most powerful instrument, to eradicate poverty and gear up socio-economic development and welfare of a society. It unlocks the door to awareness and informed choices. It gives people access to knowledge for improving their own lives but also for shaping a more informed and shrewd about the world outside. It brings changes in the attitude and behaviour of the people towards modernization and life style, raises the productivity, efficiency of individuals and produces skilled manpower that is capable of leading the economy towards the path of sustainable economic development and this is an instrument for eradication of poverty.” [Education Statistics of Pakistan]

Who have allocated the largest workforce of any government office  in the Education Department, almost one million employees all over Pakistan.

As Minister for Finance, Planning & Development Sind,  Dr Abdul Hafeez Sheikh said in an interview “ no country was able to develop itself till such time they educated their people. We also need to do that to be successful and this is a big challenge.” However the 7 major objectives stated by the Minister of Finance  in 2010 do not include education.

In the International Crisis Group report Asia Report N°84  – “Pakistan’s deteriorating education system has radicalised many young people while failing to equip them with the skills necessary for a modern economy. Pakistan is now one of just twelve countries that spend less than 2 per cent of GDP on education.”[PDF] UNESCO recommends raising public expenditure on education to at least 4 per cent of GDP.

70 % of Pakistan’s population is under the age of 25. They are the future. We cannot let them down.

Durriya Kazi


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Comments

13 responses to “The Education Crisis in Pakistan”

  1. Syed Nadir El Edroos Avatar

    Part of the problem is that the people who are making the policy are working from the outside, looking in. They have either studied abroad, or attended public local institutions during their hay day. Their children dont attend many of the universities that face funding problems.

    True, the HEC has mismanaged alot of the heavy allocations and patronage it received during the Musharaf era. One could also argue that several universities were granted charters well before they were financially viable or sustainable. The shocking contempt that our policy makers have for education, and that too at every level of education shows how little a priority education is.

    It seems as if the state has accepted its abdication of education to the private sector. However, it excludes a majority of Pakistanis from a good education. The elitism associated with private education helps to make a rigid class system dominant and impedes social mobility.

  2. MB Avatar

    If only gov could cut its ayyashiz only by 1% this cut for education would not be required.

    If only our Pindi Gang could cut its ayyashiz by 1% this cut in education was not required

    If only our Bureucracy could cut its corruption by 1% this cut in education was not required.

    If Only. . .

  3. S.A.R.A Avatar
    S.A.R.A

    Doc, this is revenge taken on HEC for "mis-handling" the Fake degree issue.

  4. Sakib Ahmad Avatar

    We need to get rid of the self-conscious buffoons, obsessed with self-aggrandisement, who make the decisions vital to the country's interests. It is not so much an educational as a political issue.

  5. Sakib Ahmad Avatar

    Sara, sounds more like Uncle Sam's revenge. Click the link below:

    http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-

    1. Honorliving Avatar
      Honorliving

      Yes, it must be the US fault. Please grow-up.

  6. no Avatar
    no

    future of PHD's my a$$

    what theses so called PHD's have done for Pakistan ?

    Instead of giving millions to these doctors … why not use the same money to increase the meager salary of the junior school teachers who are after-all the backbone of complete educational system ..

    why should Govt pay for the ayashi of PHD's abroad, won't it be more sensible that Govt invests the same amount to build-up local and primary education ?

  7. Salma Avatar

    Sir teeth maestro: have u seen this video of our pakistan army? What are your comments? many forums/youtube have deleted the link/video. News papers / media doesnt want to comment on it.

    Link: http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=af8_1285266157

    or

    http://www.multiupload.com/I3S9EMK2KO

  8. Sakib Ahmad Avatar

    Honorliving,

    No need to assume a sarcastic tone. Shireen Mazari's is a well argued article. Did you read it?

    The Pakistanis themselves are as much to blame as anyone else. I have given my views elsewhere on the absence of original thinking among so-called "educated" Pakistanis:

    "Technocrats or civil servants, they hardly seem real Pakistanis. Will we ever again have a civil servant of the calibre of Qudratullah Shahab? The current breed seems to lack deep roots in Pakistan. It is almost as if a plant is grown in foreign soil and it is then uprooted and re-planted in Pakistan. The airs that these people put on!

    My own view is that, on the whole, the influx of technocrats has done Pakistan more harm than good. We would probably do better through pooling our home grown wisdom and finding indigenous solutions to local problems. It is the insane spread of expensive foreign education, unaccompanied by wisdom and real knowledge, which wastes both our precious resources and prevents us making use of the intelligence and talent trapped within the overwhelming majority of Pakistanis who lack the wherewithal to acquire the trashy but pretty worthless “education” that people hanker after. To recognise intelligence and wisdom, and to bring it to the fore in large enough quantities to solve Pakistan’s deep seated problems, will only become a reality when we abandon the false god of English and replace it with Urdu, a language all Pakistanis understand. That step will also free us from the terrible inferiority complex we suffer from as a nation."

    1. Honorliving Avatar
      Honorliving

      I could be wrong but it seems like you have not attended either American or any other foreign institution. Discourse, critical reasoning, open debates and discussions are the basis of imparting education in almost all colleges and universities. It is in the curriculum. This is how people are educated in most of the world, including India and china. So please do not pas judgment on something you have either not experienced or care to get to know about.

      As far as Ms. Mizari is concerned, she is a female version of Hameed Gul. I used ot read her before she drank the koolaid and went to the deep end. She lives in a parallel universe of her own making. About qudratullah shahab, I read his book in 1989 and I wish I had not read the end where he went on to talking to ghosts. Let’s not forget that he was Ayub’s information secretary as well.

      To your point, today s technocrats/politicians, bureaucrats are the indeed the products of Pakistan. That is the reason they are what they are.

  9. Ahsan Bashir Avatar

    JIAY BHUTTO!!!!!!!!!!!!

  10. Ahsan Bashir Avatar

    This happens whenever PPP government is in power.

    They are taxing the hardworking people and distributing money to stay at home Kaam Chors in the name of Besharam Income Support Program.

  11. Sakib Ahmad Avatar

    I thought Honorliving was an American. Turns out he is one of those home grown vultures feeding on the still-breathing body of Pakistan.

    Parvaaz hai dono.n kii isee ek fazaa mei.n

    Kargas ka jahaa.n aur hai shahee.n ka jahaa.n aur