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The Problem With Pakistani And Indian Education.


13Mirch
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Please don't compare Pakistani education with Indian education. Pakistan is a theocratic religious society while Indian education is communist.

All History books are written by communist who hide all the crime committed by Islamic invaders in medieval period!

The more you comment the more you affirm our belief that inherently both Indian and Pakistani education is sorely lacking in ubiquity and common sense. Commenting on Indian education, you can see its imbecility from none other than Teejomay Bharat. What are you? An apologist for the NCERT. The context of both the NCERT and the Hindu taliban are the same, Proscribe that they, and they alone, are the champions of the world at the cost of the truth.

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Name me any imbecility mentioned in Indian NCERT books. The person who is trying to add these new chapters about Vedic India, is not going to be part of mainstream curriculum.

They will be merely few vocational courses.

Oh <banned word filter activated>. Let me guess the communists infiltrated the Indian media and are spreading myths that this is intended on a national scale? Or maybe the Indian national media got infiltrated by the ISI and is spreading this myth? NCERT itself glorifies so called Indianism at the cost of diversity. All NCERT promulgates is the history of the Indo-Gangetic plains. Does it exhibit the history of the north east? The south? It is on par with the current Pakistani system. In one you learn that the politically failed state of India is the foremost and in another Pakistan.

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How many of you have read Pakistani text books?

LAHORE: National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP) has conducted a content analysis of the revised curriculum of Punjab and Sindh textbooks for 2012-2013 for inclusion of biased and discriminatory content against religions other than Islam.[/size]The findings reveal excessive use of the words Hindu, Christian and Jew while discussing the history of Pakistan and Islamic Studies, which portray the said faiths in a negative light.[/size]For example, an Islamic Studies book of Sindh board for class 5, in a chapter on Eid (religious festivals), includes a line saying, People of other religions usually stay busy in useless activities during their religious festivals. There is no concept of God or submission among them.[/size]The chapter Pakistan, an Islamic State in the same textbook of Punjab board includes this line: Hindus harmed Muslims in every way.[/size]The content analysis has been published in Urdu to generate a debate on how the inclusion of discriminatory content in curriculum sows seeds of hatred, and to ensure that the review reaches maximum people.[/size]Number of chapters with biased content[/size]PUNJAB:[/size]Class 1: General Knowledge 1 out of 30 chapters (3.33%)[/size]Class 5: Pakistan Studies -1 out of 11 chapters (18%), Urdu 2 out of 33 chapters (6.06%)[/size]Class 6: History 2 out of 5 chapters (20%)[/size]Class 7: Pakistan Studies 1 out of 10 chapters (10%)[/size]Class 8: Urdu 3 out of 43 chapters (6.9%), Pakistan Studies 4 out of 13 chapters (30.76%)[/size]Class 9 and 10: Urdu Grammar 3 out of 9 chapters (33.3%)[/size]Class 9: Pakistan Studies 3 out of 4 chapters (75%)[/size]Class 10: Urdu compulsory 1 out of 32 chapters (3.12%), Pak Studies 3 out of 10 chapters (30%)[/size]Total number of chapters with biased and discriminatory content: 28 out of 204, which make up for 13.7% of the content.[/size]SINDH: [/size]Class 2: Urdu 1 out of 39 (2.6%)[/size]Class 5: Islamic Studies 3 out of 4 (75%)[/size]Class 6: Islamic Studies 1 out of 5 (20%), Urdu 3 out of 33 (9.09%)[/size]Class 7: Pakistan Studies 2 out of 9 (22.2%), Islamic Studies 2 out of 5 (40%)[/size]Class 8: Urdu 7 out of 40 (17.5%), Pakistan Studies 1 out of 9 (11.1%)[/size]Class 9 and 10: Urdu 1 out of 25 (4%), Pakistan Studies 1 out of 10 (10%)[/size]Total number of chapters with discriminatory content: 22 out of 179, which make up for 12% of the content of curriculum.[/size]Comparison between revised curricula of 2009-11 and 2012-2013[/size]SINDH:[/size]The NCJP analysed that the syllabus being taught at government schools in Sindh includes a higher number of mentions which can be categorised as discriminatory. Number of chapters with discriminatory content in 2009-11 was 11, but in 2012-13 there are 22.[/size]The marked increase is due to the addition of mentioned content in syllabus of Urdu for classes 9, 10, 8, 5, 6. However, the Islamic Studies book of class 7 and Pakistan Studies of class 8 do not include the discriminatory content from the 2009-2011.[/size]PUNJAB:[/size]In Punjab, the number of chapters with discrimination towards minorities has increased from 11 in 2009-11 to 22 in 2012-13.[/size]The analysis shows that in 2009, the number of lines with religious bias was 45 and in 2012 the number is 122. Urdu and Pakistan Studies syllabus for classes 10, 9, 8 and 7 show a marked increase in discriminatory content.[/size]In 2009, Urdu and Pakistan Studies books of the said classes included 15 lines with discrimination towards religious minorities, but in 2012, the number of such lines went up to 86, the NCJP reveals. Islamic Studies and Urdu syllabus include more content with religious bias. The Islamic Studies textbook previously did not include chapters with such content but now have three chapters each.[/size]Recommendations[/size]The content analysis recommends that students should be taught the role of religious minorities in Pakistans creation. Religious teachings should ideally be passed on to children at home through families.[/size]In case, it is impossible for the state to exclude Islamic Studies from school curriculum, then the minority children should have a right to religious teachings as well, as per the Article 20 and 22 of Constitution of Pakistan. Therefore, the latter should be allowed to study teachings of their respective faiths instead of ethics.[/size]

There is no difference between them and the chauvinism taught in Indian schools.

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