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The Shaping of Secondary Education in Pakistan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
The purpose of this paper is to trace some of the educational developments in British India which later shaped the thinking of educators in Pakistan and to discuss the educational aspirations of Pakistan within the broader context of Pakistan society. The first section contains a description of some educational reform plans prepared in pre-independence India. The second section deals with the circumstances of the partition of the Indo-Pakistan sub-continent from the standpoint of Pakistan and with the political and economic conditions which appeared to influence educational reforms in Pakistan. In the final section, some salient recommendations for educational advancement in Pakistan are examined and it is noted that the government of Pakistan has conceived of its schools as instruments for the reconstruction of Pakistani society.
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- Copyright © 1963, University of Pittsburgh Press
References
Notes
1. In this context, “realistic” is used to describe the efforts to make education more broadly vocational in nature. All of the different proposals of this kind will not be examined. However, the general characteristic of all such proposals was that they assumed the traditional literary curriculum to be too narrow and overly oriented to preparing students for white-collar jobs. They recommended that along with the literary curriculum there should be some alternative courses suitable to other types of employment and to terminal students. The view of the writer is that from the standpoint of the student and his parents literary education was eminently realistic and, moreover, eminently vocational.Google Scholar
2. Nurullah, S. and Naik, J. P., A History of Education in India (Bombay 1949), 307.Google Scholar
3. Ibid. Google Scholar
4. Ibid., 307–08.Google Scholar
5. Ibid., 308.Google Scholar
6. Ibid. Google Scholar
7. Ibid., 311.Google Scholar
8. Ibid., 310.Google Scholar
9. Ibid., 483.Google Scholar
10. Ibid., 657.Google Scholar
11. Ibid., 785–87.Google Scholar
12. Ibid., 833.Google Scholar
13. Ibid. Google Scholar
14. Central Advisory Board of Education, Post-War Educational Development in India (Delhi, 1941), 17.Google Scholar
15. Foster, Philip. “The Transfer of Educational Institutions: The Ghanaian Case Study,” (Unpublished Ph. D. disseration, University of Chicago, 1962), 274.Google Scholar
16. See also Leslie Banks, Arthur (ed.), The Development of Tropical and Sub-Tropical Countries (London, 1954).Google Scholar
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28. Ibid., 7, 9, and 11.Google Scholar
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33. Ibid., 70.Google Scholar
34. Ibid., 68.Google Scholar
35. Ibid., 69.Google Scholar
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37. Ibid., 544.Google Scholar
38. It is interesting to note that the present traditional academic-type school which evolved from the English-medium, Western-oriented school of the nineteenth century is, in a sense, in its second phase, due to pass, perhaps, to a third phase. In the first phase, lasting, roughly, from 1840 to some time early in the twentieth century, the “new” schools were status-reversal in nature, that is, the schools gave their students a set of attributes—knowledge of English, Western values—which, in the context of nineteenth century colonial Indian society, formed the basis of a new elite. Since the early years of the twentieth century, the “new” elite was no longer new; now, it was “the” elite. The same type of education which led to the development of anew elite now served in its second phase to maintain the elite. The schools had become status-maintenance in nature. In the event that the current far-reaching reforms are implemented, it is likely that the schools will enter a third phase—in part, status-reversal, in part, status-maintenance.Google Scholar
39. Government of Pakistan, Report of the Commission on National Education (Karachiy, 1960), 114–15.Google Scholar
40. Mead, Margaret, New Lives for Old (New York, 1961).Google Scholar
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