Tag: Schools

  • Murders, Bonded Children Of Namakkal Schools

    Parents do want their children to come up in Life,by getting them admitted  to what they trust to be the best schools.

    Death of Student in School
    Student Killed In Namkkal lSchool

    Their objective is to make them secure a Top Rank.

    While it is not advisable to go in only for Ranks as Life is much more than securing a Rank,it is highly regrettable and sad that the children who were admitted into what is beloved to the Best schools in terms of securing the Top Ranks in Tamil Nadu Examinations.

    Schools located in Namakkal in Erode District,Tamil Have this distinction securing most of the Top Ranks in the Examinations, and are reported to be among the best in Coaching the students.

    The Schools are equally notorious for exorbitant Fees.

    The Tamil Government recommends a Maximum fee of Rs 9000 per annum for + 2 Course, these schools collect anything between Rs. 200,000 to 20,ooooo!

    It may be worth remembering that a sum of rupees 40 Crore was seized by the Income Tax Department in Namakkal Schools in a single raid some time back, as unaccounted Money!

    No followup action yet.

    What is more worrying is the fact is the number of deaths/murders in these schools.

    Four murders were reported in the first half of 2013-14 in the school premises and no action has been taken

    As most of these schools are run with Political backing and Police protection even filing an FIR is not possible.

    The Directorate of Education Schools Tamil Nadu State that they have control over Law and Order, Police say it is an Educational Institution and they can not take action.

    These schools inform parents casually about the death and the scene of crime reveals the story touted by the school as  suicide is false.

    There are instances where the students are murdered by rival students engaging thugs!

    Some Institution have 23, 000 students!

    These students are treated like bonded labor and the Campuses do not even have Phone booths.

    Students are not allowed to possess Mobile Phones.

    Nor are they allowed to contact their parents/Guardians.

    Parents have to fill in application Form to meet t\their children and they may or not granted permission.

    Even if permitted they are made to wait for inordinate time before they meet up with their children under the supervision of the school staff!

    Parents are bullied and insulted.

    Children are not allowed any extra curricular activity or is Sports encouraged.

    They are made o study for at least 17 to 18 Hours a day including night study around 100 am!

    The only plus point is these schools get top ranks.

    But Loss of Lives, Personality?

    Time the Government of Tamil Nadu took action.

    Parents, Life is more precious than securing Ranks.

    Readers may send in details about cases of ill-treatment, murders and any other relevant information.

    I plan to move The Human Rights Forum and I need more inputs.

    Source for this Post.

    Ananada Vikatan, Tamil Weekly dated 5 Febrile 2014.

    Image Source.The Hindu.

    http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/namakkal-on-boil-as-xi-std-student-found-dead-in-school/article5129415.ece

     

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  • Education, Choosing A Course.

    Selecting a Course for Higher Studies is a daunting task.

    Choosing a Course.
    Choosing a Course.

    The Course one selects for Higher Studies determines the Career.

     

    It is not practical, at this point of time,to debate and stake one’s Life, by arguing about the System of Education in India being one of producing machines that aim to produce mark oriented Curriculum a against real Education which is Character building and about the teaching of Skills to face Life.

     

    Whether one likes it or not the system and society is oriented towards Money.

     

    Before one proceeds further, this fact has to be kept in Mind.

     

    In India, in general there used to be  time when parents chose the course,I would not say ‘chose’,-but enrolled in a Course available,for their children.

     

    Our generation studied what our Father has joined us in , married whom he pointed out and we, at least. I, have no regrets,

     

    Now children are better informed and have a clear idea as to what they want to do with their Career and are focused.

     

    This post is for them and parents also may have a few points for them to ponder over.

     

    Parents must realize and accept that to days children have more information(not knowledge) and it is their future .

     

    So one should limit oneself to guiding them and not try setting their Life /Career Agenda for them.

     

    It is essential for parents to get to know the latest trends nd advise children from their stand point and at the same time point out the pitfalls .

    It is not ethical and fair trying to ram down your aspiration on your child for he is what He or She is.

    At best basic values that go to make good one a good Human Beings has to be inculcated, like Honesty,Integrity, Harming none, hard work, perseverance and nerves of steel to face Life’s problems.

    Children also must remember that parents are not enemies; they are interested in your welfare and want to ensure that you do not suffer for none can share your failures or the pain associated with it and they must learn to listen to them .

    While choosing a Course, which is 10th standard in India where specialization starts,bear in mind couple of facts.

    There are always things you want to do ,pursue and like and what is good what that secures your financial security.

    Idealism to pursue what one wants to do is fine ,but to achieve that one needs financial security.

    Unfortunately, in Life these two normally do not co-exist.

    On balance it is safe to choose something which offers you financial security and affords you the luxury of doing what you want to do.

    The same principle works for Jobs as well.

    How does one choose a Course?

    First one has to find out what he /she is best equipped for and where his/ her interests lie.

    In jargon , they are called ‘Aptitudes and Attitudes’.

     

    We shall examine them in the forth coming posts.

     

    This post is about the process of selecting Courses, both in India and abroad and the ways to go about them, including Foreign/Indian Admissions, Fees, Courses, Universities,Financial assistance, Tests to undergo and paper work

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Indian School Conducts Clinical Trials On Children

    We know that foreign Pharma companies conducting clinical trials of new drugs in India with out the Governments’s approval.

    But for a School to conduct this with out permission from the authorities in unthinkable.

    To make it prim and proper the school sends out a circular that it is Voluntary!

    What an arrogance!

    Story:

    A school in Bangalore wants its children in the 6-9 age group to be part of a “clinical trial” that a student of its sister institution is conducting.

    The Oxford English School (CISCE), JP Nagar, has sent a letter to parents. In the letter (a copy of which is with TOI), the school has said: “A first-year student of our Oxford Dental College and Hospital, pursuing his MDS, has taken up as part of his dissertation for the topic, ‘Comparison of retention of favourable composite resin and conventional resin based sealant’, which involves as randomized control trial of the patient with 18 months’ follow-up. This exercise is aimed at students of ages 6 to 9 (classes one to four) and is totally free.”

    Signed by school principal Alistair M Laporte, the letter further says: “If there is a problem, a follow-up will be taken (up) by him, which will involve placement of cement, without drilling or cutting.” The circular asked parents to send their consent by January 17 and all students were informed by their respective class teachers.

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Clinical-trial-on-children-kicks-up-big-row/articleshow/18108587.cms

     

  • American Youth in the 21st Century: Pathologized, Criminalized and Disposable.

    Issues raised are two.
    One is of racist discrimination and another is of disintegration society because of loss of Family values.In the garb of individual freedom,decency has been given a go by , moral values lost and family as the bedrock of Society is fast losing its grip.Drugs,Gun culture,free sex,living together,single parent, dumping parents in old age homes ,sexual disloyalty, loss of Faith and crass consumerism and materialism are the order of the day Unless this trend is arrested, there is no solution or salvation.Build solid family values, follow moral principles and give freedom of the individual a rest for some time.

    Story:
    Editor’s note: the following is an excerpt from Henry Giroux’ new book, Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability? (Palgrave MacMillan).

    Punishment and fear have replaced compassion and social responsibility as the most important modalities mediating the relationship of youth to the larger social order. Youth within the last two decades have come to be seen as a source of trouble rather than as a resource for investing in the future, and in the case of poor black and Hispanic youth are increasingly treated as either a disposable population, cannon fodder for barbaric wars abroad, or the source of most of society’s problems. Hence, young people now constitute a crisis that has less to do with improving the future than with denying it. As Larry Grossberg points out, “It has become common to think of kids as a threat to the existing social order and for kids to be blamed for the problems they experience. We slide from kids in trouble, kids have problems, and kids are threatened, to kids as trouble, kids as problems, and kids as threatening.” This was exemplified when the columnist Bob Herbert reported in the New York Times that “parts of New York City are like a police state for young men, women, and children who happen to be black or Hispanic. They are routinely stopped, searched, harassed, intimidated, humiliated and, in many cases, arrested for no good reason.” No longer “viewed as a privileged sign and embodiment of the future,” youth are now increasingly demonized by the popular media and derided by politicians looking for quick-fix solutions to crime and other social ills. While youth have always had to bear the misplaced fear and distrust of adults, how youth are represented, talked about, and treated has changed dramatically in the last two decades.

    Under the reign of neoliberal politics with its hyped-up social Darwinism and theater of cruelty, the popular demonization and “dangerousation” of the young now justifies responses to youth that were unthinkable 20 years ago, including criminalization and imprisonment, the prescription of psychotropic drugs, psychiatric confinement, and zero tolerance policies that model schools after prisons. School has become a model for a punishing society in which children who commit a rule violation as minor as a dress code infraction or slightly act out in class can be handcuffed, booked, and put in a jail cell. Racism, inequality, and poverty are on full display in the growing resegregation of public schools in the United States. Now more than ever, many schools either simply warehouse young black males or put them on the fast track to prison incarceration or a future of control under the criminal justice system. All across America, black and brown youth are being suspended or expelled at rates much higher than their white counterparts who commit similar behavioral infractions. For example, as Howard Witt writes in the Chicago Tribune, “In the average New Jersey public school, African-American students are almost 60 times as likely as white students to be expelled for serious disciplinary infractions. In Minnesota, black students are suspended 6 times as often as whites [and ] in Iowa, blacks make up just 5 percent of the statewide public school enrollment but account for 22 percent of the students who get suspended. . . . And on average across the nation, black students are suspended and expelled at nearly three times the rate of white students.” As schools become increasingly militarized, drug-sniffing dogs, metal detectors, and cameras have become common features in schools, and administrators appear more willing if not eager “to criminalize many school infractions, saddling tens of thousands of students with misdemeanor criminal records for offenses such as swearing[,] disrupting class,” or pushing another student. Trust and respect now give way to fear, disdain, and suspicion, creating an environment in which critical pedagogical practices wither, while pedagogies of surveillance and testing flourish. If young people were once defined as part of the vocabulary of innocence and compassion, they are now largely understood through the discourse of fear, guilt, and punishment.

    Clearly, there is more at stake under the current regime of neoliberal politics than an attack on children largely characterized by “negative labels and characterizations of youth [that] are falsely totalizing” and punitive laws and public policies. Youth have also become collateral damage for conservatives and neoliberal advocates who want to dismantle the social state and in doing so justify themselves by pointing to an alleged rise of a generation of disorderly and dangerous youth dependent upon government entitlements. Within this discourse, government support for young people is both undermined and inappropriately blamed for creating a generation of kids labeled as psychologically damaged, narcissistic, violent, and out of control. Scapegoating youth as both a generation of suspects and a threat to the social order allows conservatives and neoliberals to further privatize those public spheres that youth need, such as education and health care, while developing policies that move away from social investment to matters of punishment and containment. In this instance, the punishing state combines with the logic of the market to produce priorities and policies that disinvest in the future of children and assert a ruthlessness that largely treats them as reified commodities or disposable populations. Both childhood and the state are now being reimagined in ways that reveal the priorities of a society that has fully embraced the reckless abandon of casino capitalism, where the only rules that matter are made to order by powerful corporations and rich investors. How else to interpret neoliberal-inspired government programs that in the midst of deepening inequality, rising levels of poverty, catastrophic increases in failed mortgages, and growing unemployment invest more in prisons than in public and higher education?

    It is more necessary than ever to register youth as a theoretical, moral, and political center of concern, even as it is increasingly evident that youth are one of our lowest national priorities. It is crucial to connect the current crisis in democracy to the war against young people. Doing so will remind adults of their ethical and political responsibility to invest in youth as a symbol for not only securing a democratic future but also keeping alive those elements of civic imagination, culture, and education that subordinate economic principles to democratic values. The category of youth may be one of the most important referents for beginning a critical examination about the pernicious consequences of a society driven by market values, one that not only abstracts young people from the future but shapes the present in a theater of war in which youth become the most innocent victims. Youth provide a powerful touchstone for a critical discussion about the long-term consequences of neoliberal policies, which undermine any viable notion of justice, equality, and freedom, while also gesturing toward those conditions that make a democratic future possible. Many young people are part of social movements that not only address these crucial issues but also provide a politics, modes of resistance, and connective relations that adults should take seriously as part of their own civic and political formation at the beginning of the new millennium.
    http://www.alternet.org/politics/143875/american_youth_in_the_21st_century:_pathologized,_criminalized_and_disposable/?page=entire