Education in Maharashtra - History

History

Brahmin gurus imparted education by means of begging and not through charging fees or funds from the students or their guardians. Later, temples were also centrees of education. Religiouis education was compulsory but secular subjects were also taught. Students were required to be brahmacharis or celibates. The knowledge in these orders was often related to the tasks a section of the society had to perform. The priest class, the Brahmins, were imparted knowledge of religion, philosophy, and other ancillary branches while the warrior class, the Kshatriya, were trained in the various aspects of warfare. The business class, the Vaishya, were taught their trade and the working class of the Shudras was generally deprived of educational advantages. The book of laws, the Manusmriti, and the treatise on statecraft the Arthashastra were among the influential works of this era which reflect the outlook and understanding of the world at the time.

Secular institutions cropped up along with Hindu temples, mutts and Buddhist monasteries. These institutions imparted practical education, e.g. medicine. A number of urban learning centers became increasingly visible from the period between 500 BCE to 400 CE.The important urban centers of learning were Taxila (in modern day Pakistan) and Nalanda in Bihar, among others. These institutions systematically imparted knowledge and attracted a number of foreign students to study topics such as Vedic and Buddhist literature, logic, grammar, etc. Chanakya, a brahmin teacher, was among the most famous teacheres of Taxila, associated with founding of Mauryan Empire.

By the time of the visit of the Islamic scholar Alberuni (973–1048 CE), India already had a sophisticated system of mathematics.

With the arrival of the British Raj in India the modern European education came to India. British Raj was reluctant to introduce mass education system as it was not their interest. The colonial educational policy was deliberately one of reducing indigenous culture and religion, an approach which became known as Macaulayism. This dramatically changed the whole educational system. Educated people failed to get jobs because the language in which they received their education had become redundant. The system soon became solidified in India as a number of primary, secondary, and tertiary centers for education cropped up during the colonial era. Between 1867 and 1941 the British increased the percentage of the population in primary and secondary education from around 0.6% of the population in 1867 to over 3.5% of the population in 1941. However, this was much lower than the equivalent figures for Europe, where in 1911 between 8 and 18% of the population was in primary and secondary education. Additionally, they made efforts to improve literacy. In 1901, the literacy rate in India was about 5.4%; by India's independence it was nearly 16.5%.

The credit for fostering education to the masses following independence in 1947 chiefly goes to the first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru. India's first education minister Maulana Azad envisaged strong central government control over education throughout the country, with a uniform educational system. However, given the cultural and linguistic diversity of India, only higher education, which dealt with science and technology, came under the jurisdiction of the central government. The government also held powers to make national policies for educational development and could regulate selected aspects of education throughout India.

The central government of India formulated the National Policy on Education (NPE) in 1968 and in 1986 and also reinforced the Programme of Action (POA) in 1992. In 2008 the government initiated several measures the launching of DPEP (District Primary Education Programme) and SSA (Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan,ssa.nic.in India's initiative for Education for All) and setting up of Navodaya Vidyalaya and other selective schools in every district, advances in female education, inter-disciplinary research and establishment of open universities. India's NPE also contains the National System of Education, which ensures some uniformity while taking into account regional education needs. The NPE also stresses on higher spending on education, envisaging a budget of more than 6% of the Gross Domestic Product. While the need for wider reform in the primary and secondary sectors is recognized as an issue, the emphasis is also on the development of science and technology education infrastructure.

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