Wednesday 16 April 2014

Riskshaw with a toy!! By Shelina Bhamani

In Karachi more than 70% people travel in public transport amongst which Rikshaws are found to be one of the most common means of transportation and favourite ride for the young children. It is observed that young children enjoy best by standing and holding a handle that is between the driver and passengers. No wonder a bumby ride in rikshaw fascinates children because they can feel the jumps meanwhile enjoying hustle bustle of the surroundings.

I too have been a regular traveler of rikshaw since ages. Today, to my amusement, I saw an interesting and innovative way to use the handle( that works as a separator) as one of the most common toy for fine motor development for young children in a rikshaw. I asked him the reason for innovatively using that handle as a toy so he mentioned

"Baji app log pain baton mai masruf hutein hu bacha bechara bore huta hai so Mai ne toy lagaya takey bacha handle bhi pakray aur kheley bhi akhir bache bhi tu hamare customer hein" English translation " because I find mothers talking to each other while children get bored so during heir ride they can hold the handle and also play after all they are also our customers"

Not thinking about about children friendliness of this innovation I appreciated him and had given him some extra money for taking this initiate and counting children as equal part and respecting their rights.

Proud of you my karachiets!! We are surely developing!!! 


Some pictures for you to enjoy!! 

Assessments should be outlawed by Seema Khalid

The reasons of Assessment for an institution are many for example to meet institutional accreditation requirements which helps in  enhancing quality in higher education, to guide curricular planning, revising program requirements, proposing new academic programs, or revising existing programs etc. Whereas for a student the reason for assessment is to get good grades, which has raised the need for the growing industry of private tuitions better known as the shadow education system to help in cramming. In some countries, parents, educators and politicians are highly critical of the way in which private tutoring has come to dominate the lives of families and pupils. Tutoring commonly propagates social inequalities and it consumes human and financial resources which perhaps could be used more appropriately in other activities. It is also very obvious that children who attend both mainstream and supplementary classes of shadow education are under significant pressure as children are not able to live their lives to the fullest. Parents abuse them over the concern of Grades, thus putting on young minds enormous pressure and probably setting them into undesirable attitude patterns as a result of a super competitive education system and a work environment which has no room for initiatives, creativity and adaptability. Another area which is greatly affected is that when children due to pressure of exams stay away due to school and private tuitions stay away from home family bonds of affection are inevitably weakened. Also rushing to several places without food or rest makes students denied of free time to explore their own personal interest.


Planners must consider reforming examinations and examining students’ skills in a manner which cannot be achieved by cramming or shadow education. This will help reduce fatigue amongst students. Schools have a larger role of defying such ills and developing a framework which helps students rather than compels them to odd stuff for example thinking of suicidal attempts due to low grades which has become very common. Also a reform is also required to stop showing comparisons of students in ranking rather a better option for assessment rather a better method should be to tell how the child did their personal best against their own standard rather than against standards of the mass. At school level Portfolios of individual achievement can be a better way of measuring student achievement measurement. There are schools in Pakistan too though not many, with an approach which dismisses the entire concept of paper pencil tests to label students rather they have an approach which recognizes each individual as an identity worthy of achieving better every day with the support of the teacher. My proposed idea of examinations should be outlawed still remains as I still observe the purpose of examinations which should be to improve practices is not being implemented rather the victim of  examinations are the students whose lives are at stake due to the assessment policies of each organization. 

Tuesday 15 April 2014

ARNEC Webinar on 'ECD and Peacebuilding' on the 6 May 2014.

Posting as received 

To start off this years webinar series we would like to invite you to join the interactive ARNEC Webinar on 'ECD and Peacebuilding' on the 6 May 2014. The aim of the webinar is to provide ARNEC members with a 'snapshot' overview of current research on ECD and Peacebuilding (presenters from IoE - University of London and Penn State) as well as to give practical insights provided by the organisation, Early Years.

Topic: 'ECD and Peacebuilding'
When: Tuesday, 6 May 2014 
Time: 7pm Singapore time (UTC/GMT +8)
Duration: 60 min (allowing time for questions from members via 'chat')

Please email secretariat@arnec.net to RSVP for the webinar!

Joining instructions will then be emailed to you. Please share this announcement with your colleagues and friends who may be interested in this topic.

Presentation 1: Dr Lynn Ang, Department of Early Years and Primary Education, IoE, University of London 
Presentation 2: Sukhdeep Gill, Ph.D, Penn State
Presentation 3: Siobhan Fitzpatrick, CEO, Early Years

To find out more please see: 

http://www.arnec.net/cos/o.x?c=/ntuc/pagetree&func=view&rid=1035898

Following on from the webinar, ARNEC will be hosting e-discussions on the same topic (7-21 May). Do you have questions regarding 'ECD and Peacebuilding'? Send them in to: secretariat@arnec.net

We look forward to connecting at the webinar!

Best wishes,
ARNEC Secretariat

Early Childhood Development: the Promise, the Problem, and the Path Forward By: Tamar Atinc and Emily Gustafsson-Wright


This content is shared with the consent of the authors and is originally published by brookings.edu 

Early Childhood Development: the Promise, the Problem, and the Path Forward

By: Tamar Atinc and Emily Gustafsson-Wright

More than 200 million children under the age of five in the developing world are at risk of not reaching their full development potential because they suffer from the negative consequences of poverty, nutritional deficiencies and inadequate learning opportunities (Lancet 2007).  In addition, 165 million children (one in four) are stunted, with 90 percent of those children living in Africa and Asia (UNICEF et al, 2012).  And while some progress has been made globally, child malnutrition remains a serious public health problem with enormous human and economic costs.  Child death is a tragedy.  At 6 million deaths a year, far too many children perish before reaching the age of five, but the near certainty that 200 million children today will fall far below their development potential is no less a tragedy.

Early Childhood: The Scale of the Problem

There is now an expanding body of literature on the determining influence of early development on the chances of success later in life.  The first 1,000 days from conception to age two are increasingly being recognized as critical to the development of neural pathways that lead to linguistic, cognitive and socio-emotional capacities that are also predictors of labor market outcomes later in life. Poverty, malnutrition and lack of proper interaction in early childhood can exact large costs on individuals, their communities and society more generally.  The effects are cumulative and the absence of appropriate childcare and education in the three to five age range can exacerbate further the poor outcomes expected for children who suffer from inadequate nurturing during the critical first 1,000 days.

The Good News: ECD Interventions Are Effective

Research shows that there are large gains to be had from investing in early childhood development.  For example, estimates place the gains from the elimination of malnutrition at 1 to 2 percentage points of gross domestic product (GDP) annually (World Bank, 2006).  Analysis of results from OECD’s 2009 Program of International Student Assessment (PISA) reveals that school systems that have a 10 percentage-point advantage in the proportion of students who have attended preprimary school score an average of 12 points higher in the PISA reading assessment (OECD and Statistics Canada, 2011).  Also, a simulation model of the potential long-term economic effects of increasing preschool enrollment to 25 percent or 50 percent in every low-income and middle-income country showed a benefit-to-cost ratio ranging from 6.4 to 17.6, depending on the preschool enrollment rate and the discount rate used (Lancet, 2011).

Indeed, poor and neglected children benefit disproportionately from early childhood development programs, making these interventions among the more compelling policy tools for fighting poverty and reducing inequality.  ECD programs are comprised of a range of interventions that aim for: a healthy pregnancy; proper nutrition with exclusive breast feeding through six months of age and adequate micronutrient content in diet; regular growth monitoring and immunization; frequent and structured interactions with a caring adult; and improving the parenting skills of caregivers.

The Reality: ECD Has Not Been a Priority

Yet despite all the evidence on the benefits of ECD, no country in the developing world can boast of comprehensive programs that reach all children, and unfortunately many fall far short.  Programs catering to the very young are typically operated at small scale and usually through external donors or NGOs, but these too remain limited.  For example, a recent study found that the World Bank made only $2.1 billion of investments in ECD in the last 10 years, equivalent to just a little over 3 percent of the overall portfolio of the human development network, which totals some $60 billion (Sayre et al, 2013).  

The following are important inputs into the development of healthy and productive children and adults, but unfortunately these issues are often not addressed effectively:

Maternal  Health. Maternal undernutrition affects 10 to 19 percent of women in most developing countries (Lancet, 2011) and 16 percent of births are low birth weight (27 percent in South Asia).  Malnutrition during pregnancy is linked to low birth weight and impaired physical development in children, with possible links also to the development of their social and cognitive skills. Pre-natal care is critical for a healthy pregnancy and birth. Yet data from 49 low-income countries show that only 40 percent of pregnant women have access to four or more antenatal care visits (Taskforce on Innovative International Financing for Health Systems, 2009). Maternal depression also affects the quality of caregiving and compromises early child development.

Child Care and Parenting Practices. The home environment, including parent-child interactions and exposure to stressful experiences, influences the cognitive and socio-emotional development of children.  For instance, only 39 percent of infants aged zero to six months in low and middle-income countries are exclusively breast-fed, despite strong evidence on its benefits (Lancet, 2011).  Also, in half of the 38 countries for which UNICEF collects data, mothers engage in activities that promote learning with less that 40 percent of children under the age of six.  Societal violence and conflict are also detrimental to a child’s development, a fact well known to around 300 million children under the age of four that live in conflict-affected states.

Child Health and Nutrition. Healthy and well-nourished children are more likely to develop to their full physical, cognitive and socio-emotional potential than children who are frequently ill, suffer from vitamin or other deficiencies and are stunted or underweight.  Yet, for instance, an estimated 30 percent of households in the developing world do not consume iodized salt, putting 41 million infants at risk for developing iodine deficiency which is the primary cause of preventable mental retardation and brain damage, and also increases the chance of infant mortality, miscarriage and stillbirth.  An estimated 40 to 50 percent of young children in developing countries are also iron deficient with similarly negative consequences (UNICEF 2008).  Diarrhea, malaria and HIV infection are other dangers with a deficit of treatment in early childhood that lead to various poor outcomes later in life.  

Preprimary Schooling. Participation in good quality preprimary programs has been shown to have beneficial effects on the cognitive development of children and their longevity in the school system.  Yet despite gains, enrollment remains woefully inadequate in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa.  Moreover, national averages usually hide significant inequalities across socio-economic groups in access and almost certainly in quality. In all regions, except South Asia, there is a strong income gradient for the proportion of 3 and 4 year olds attending preschool.

Impediments to Scaling Up

So what are the impediments to scaling up these known interventions and reaping the benefits of improved learning, higher productivity, lower poverty and lower inequality for societies as a whole?  There are a range of impediments that include knowledge gaps (especially in designing cost-effective and scalable interventions of acceptable quality), fiscal constraints and coordination failures triggered by institutional organization and political economy.

Knowledge Gaps. Despite recent advances in the area, there is still insufficient awareness of the importance of brain development in the early years of life on future well-being and of the benefits of ECD interventions.  Those who work in this area take the science and the evaluation evidence for granted. Yet awareness among crucial actors in developing countries—policymakers, parents and teachers—cannot be taken for granted.

At the same time much of the evaluation evidence from small programs attests to the efficacy of interventions, we do not yet know whether large scale programs are as effective. The early evidence came primarily from small pilots (involving about 10 to 120 children) from developed countries. [1];While there is now considerable evidence from developing countries as well, such programs still tend to be boutique operations and therefore questions regarding their scalability and cost-effectiveness.  

There are also significant gaps in our knowledge as to what specific intervention design works in which context in terms of both the demand for and the provision of the services. These knowledge gaps include the need for more evidence on:  i) the best delivery mode – center, family or community based, ii) the delivery agents – community health workers, mothers selected by the community, teachers, iii) whether or not the programs should be universal or targeted, national or local, iv) the frequency and duration of interventions, of training for the delivery agents and of supervision, v) the relative value of nutritional versus stimulative interventions and the benefits from the delivery of an integrated package of services versus sector specific services that are coordinated at the point of delivery, vi) the most effective curricula and material to be used, vii) the relative effectiveness of methods for stimulating demand – information via individual contact, group sessions, media, conditional cash transfers etc.  In all these design questions, cost-effectiveness is a concern and leads to the need to explore the possibility of building on an existing infrastructure.  There is also a need for more evidence on the kinds of standards, training and supervision that are conducive to Safeguarding the quality of the intervention at scale.

Fiscal Constraints.  Fiscal concerns at the aggregate level are also an issue and force inter-sectoral trade-offs that are difficult to make.  Is it reasonable to expect countries to put money into ECD when problems persist in terms of both access and poor learning outcomes in primary schools and beyond?  Even though school readiness and teacher quality may be the most important determinants of learning outcomes in primary schools, resource allocation shifts are not easy to make for policymakers.  In addition, as discussed above, we do not yet have good answers to the questions around the cost implications of high quality design at scale.  

Institutional Coordination and Political Context.  Successful interventions are multi-sectoral in nature (whether they are integrated from the outset or coordinated at the point of delivery) and neither governments nor donor institutions are structured to address well issues that require cross-sectoral cooperation.  When programs are housed in the education ministry, they tend to focus on preprimary concerns.  When housed in the health ministry, programs ignore early stimulation.  We do not know well what institutional structure works best in different contexts, including how decentralization may affect choices about institutional set ups.

There are also deeper questions about the nature of the social contract in any country that shapes views about the role of government and the distribution of benefits across the different segments of the population.  Some countries consider that the responsibilities of the public sector start when children reach school age and view the issues around the development of children at a younger age to be the purview of families.  And in many countries, policies that benefit children get short shrift because children do not have political voice and their parents are imperfect agents for their children’s needs.  Inadequate political support then means that the legislative framework for early year interventions is lacking and that there is limited public spending on programs that benefit the young.  For example, public spending on social pensions in Brazil is about 1.2 percent of GDP whereas transfers for Bolsa Familia which targets poor children are only 0.4 percent of GDP (Levy and Schady 2013).  In Turkey, only 6.5 percent of central government funds are directed to children ages zero to 6, while the population above 44 receives a per capita transfer of at least 2.5 times as large as children today (World Bank, 2010).  Finally, the long gestation period needed to achieve tangible results compounds the limited appeal of ECD investments given the short planning horizon of many political actors.

The Future: An Agenda for Scaling Up ECD

Addressing the constraints to scaling up ECD requires action across a range of areas, including more research and access to know how, global and country level advocacy, leveraging the private sector, and regular monitoring of progress.  

Operational Research and Learning Networks. Within the EDC research agenda, a priority should be the operational research that is needed to go to scale.  This research includes questions around service delivery models, including in particular their cost effectiveness and sustainability.  Beyond individual program design, there are broader institutional and policy questions that need systematic assessment. These questions center on issues including the inter-agency and intergovernmental coordination modalities which are best suited for an integrated delivery of the package of ECD services.  They also cover the institutional set-ups for quality assurance, funding modalities, and the role of the private sector.  Finally, research is also needed to examine the political economy of successful implementation of ECD programs at scale.  

Also necessary are learning networks that can play a powerful role in disseminating research findings and in particular good practice across boundaries. Many of the issues regarding the impediments for scaling up are quite context specific and not amenable to generic or off-the-shelf solutions.  A network of peer learning could be a powerful avenue for policymakers to have deeper and face-to-face interactions about successful approaches to scaling up.  South-South exchanges were an enormously valuable tool in the propagation of conditional cash transfer schemes both within Latin America and globally. These types of exchanges could be equally powerful for ECD interventions

Advocacy. There is a need for a more visible global push for the agenda, complemented by advocacy at country or regional levels and a strong role for business leaders.  It should be brought to the attention of policymakers that ECD is not a fringe issue and that it is a matter of economic stability to the entire world. It is also in the interest of business leaders to support the development of young children to ensure a productive work force in the future and a thriving economy.  Currently, there is insufficient recognition of the scale of the issues and the effectiveness of known interventions. And while there are pockets of research excellence, there is a gap in the translation of this work into effective policies on the ground.  The nutrition agenda has recently received a great deal of global attention through the 1000 days campaign and the Scaling up Nutrition Movement led by the United States and others.  Other key ECD interventions and the integration and complementarities between the multi-sectoral interventions have received less attention however.  The packaging of a minimum set of services that all countries should aspire to provide to its children aged zero to six would be an important step towards progress.  The time is ripe as discussions around the post-2015 development framework are in full swing, to position ECD as a critical first step in the development of healthy children, capable of learning and becoming productive adults.  

Leveraging the Private Sector.  The non-state sector already plays a dominant role in providing early childhood care, education and healthcare services in many countries.  This represents both a challenge and an opportunity.  The challenge is that the public sector typically lacks the capacity to ensure quality in the provision of services and research evidence shows that poor quality child care and education services are not just ineffective; they can be detrimental (Lancet 2011).  The challenge is all the greater given that going to scale will require large numbers of providers and we know that regulation works better and is less costly in markets with fewer actors.  On the opportunity side of the ledger, there is scope for expanding the engagement of the organized private sector.  The private sector can contribute by providing universal access for its own workforce, through for-profit investments, and in the context of corporate social responsibility activities.  Public-private partnerships can span the range of activities, including providing educational material for home-based parenting programs; developing and delivering parent education content through media or through the distribution chains of some consumer goods or even financial products; training preprimary teachers; and providing microfinance for home or center-based childcare centers. Innovative financing mechanisms, such as those in the social impact investing arena, may provide necessary financing, important demonstration effects and quality assurance for struggling public systems.  Such innovations are expanding in the United States, paving the way for middle and low-income countries to follow.

ECD Metrics.  A key ingredient for scaling up is the ability to monitor progress. This is important both for galvanizing political support for the desired interventions and to provide a feedback loop for policymakers and practitioners. There are several metrics that are in use by researchers in specific projects but are not yet internationally accepted measures of early child development that can be used to report on outcomes globally.  While we can report on the share of children that are under-weight or stunted, we cannot yet provide the fuller answer to this question which would require a gauge of their cognitive and socio-emotional development.  There are some noteworthy recent initiatives which will help fill this gap.  The UNICEF-administered Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 4 includes an ECD module and a similar initiative from the Inter-American Development Bank collects ECD outcome data in a handful of Latin American countries.  The World Health Organization has launched work that will lead to a proposal on indicators of development for zero to 3 year old children while UNESCO is taking the lead on developing readiness to learn indicators (for children around age 6) as a follow up to the recommendations of the Learning Metrics Task Force (LMTF) which is co-convened by UNESCO and the Center for Universal Education at Brookings. 

The LMTF aims to make recommendations for learning goals at the global level and has been a useful mechanism for coordination across agencies and other stakeholders.  A related gap in measurement has to do with the quality of ECD services (e.g., quality of daycare). Overcoming this measurement gap is critical for establishing standards and for monitoring compliance and can be used to inform parental decisions about where to send their kids. 

ECD programs have a powerful equalizing potential for societies and ensuring equitable investment in such programs is likely to be far more cost-effective than compensating for the difference in outcomes later in life.  Expanding access to quality ECD services so that they include children from poor and disadvantaged families is an investment in the future of not only those children but also their communities and societies.  Getting there will require concerted action to organize delivery systems that are financially sustainable, monitor the quality of programming and outcomes and reach the needy. 

References

Lancet (2007). Child development in developing countries series. The Lancet, 369, 8-9, 60-70, 145, 57, 229-42.  http://www.thelancet.com/series /child-development-in-developing-countries.

Lancet (2011). Child development in developing countries series 2. The Lancet, 378, 1325-28, 1339-53.  http://www.thelancet.com/series/child-development-in-developing-countries-2.

Levy, S. and Schady, N. (2013). Latin America’s Social Policy Challenge: Education, social Insurance, Redistribution. Journal of Economic Perspectives 27(2), 193-218.

OECD and Statistics Canada (2011). Literacy for Life: Further Results from the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey. Paris/Ottawa: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development/Canada Minister of Industry.

Sayre, R.K., Devercelli, A.E., Neuman, M.J. (2013). World Bank Investments in Early Childhood: Findings from Portfolio Review of World Bank Early Childhood Development Projects from FY01-FY11. Draft, March 2013, Mimeo.

Taskforce on Innovative International Financing for Health Systems (2009). More money for health, and more health for the money: final report. Geneva: International Health Partnership.http://www.internationalhealthpartnership.net//CMS_files/documents/taskforce_report_EN.pdf

United Nations Children’s Fund (2005). Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 3. UNICEF. http://www.childinfo.org/mics3_surveys.html.

United Nations Children’s Fund (2008). Sustainable Elimination of Iodine Deficiency: Progress since the1990 World Summit on Children. New York: UNICEF.

United Nations Children’s Fund, World Health Organization and The World Bank (2012). UNICEF- WHO-World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates. New York: UNICEF; Geneva: WHO; Washington D.C.: The World Bank.

World Bank (2006). Repositioning Nutrition as Central to Development: A Strategy for Large-Scale Action. Directions in Development series. Washington D.C.: The World Bank.

World Bank (2010). Turkey: Expanding Opportunities for the Next Generation-  A Report on Life Chances. Report No 48627-TR. Washington D.C.: The World Bank.

World Bank (2013). World Development Indicators 2013. Washington D.C.: The World Bank.


[1] The Perry preschool and Abecedarian programs in the United States have been rigorously studied and show tremendous benefits for children in terms of cognitive ability, academic performance and tenure within the school system and suggest benefits later on in life that include higher incomes, higher incidence of home ownership, lower propensity to be on welfare and lower rates of incarceration and arrest.

 

Sunday 13 April 2014

The School VS Tuition Centres by Nancy Lobo

Tuitions have become an essential part of our schooling system. And no, I do not refer to tuitions as in ‘tuitions fee’ written on a school fee slip that parents make payments for. Tuitions, in this article refers to the extra help that students seek outside formal school hours and for which parents so willingly pay towards in order to ensure that their child secures A grades in the examinations. A double tuition fees is what these parents then pay! (And we call ourselves an ‘economically poor nation’!) Is there anything wrong with this? Nothing, if one can afford the fee! Plenty, if one cannot afford it and as parents feel ineffectual. But, as a school, we should feel ashamed if our students are going off for tuitions!

Students take up private tuitions for at least one if not more subjects and they do so because they do not get the education they require at school. Research studies conducted by Chuadhry and Javed (2012) in Punjab indicate that students are better prepared for examinations at the tuition academies where the teachers are more understanding and answer students queries. Parents believe that their children become more confident in communicating with them and their teachers. One can only wonder why such skills are not developed in schools. Though this study was conducted with students in government schools, private schools, including the ones catering to the elite class, have students rushing off to tuitions at all times of the day and night. It is the need to excel in examinations and the competition to get admissions in good universities in Pakistan and abroad that motivates such behaviours, even if it means missing school.

So have schools failed, or have they joined hands with the tuition centres, are fair enough questions to ask, the later not meriting an answer at all as schools involved would plead the fifth, hence I will endeavour to answer the first.

Schools are an integral part of an educational system in a country and their contribution toward students’ learning should not be in doubt. The doubt begins when students do not perform well academically, in terms of tests and examinations results, and dissatisfied students and parents find it easier to lay the blame on the school. Unfortunately, sometimes schools too begin to blame themselves, particularly their teachers. Do teachers create the problems or is it really the examination system?

As Khan (2013) claims in his article in The ExpressTribune, teachers are not being paid well and seek additional employment after school to supplement their income, so they teach ineffectively in schools so that the students will attend their private tuition sessions. In a utopian world this seems unreal, it maligns the image of a teacher, but Khan is not far from the truth. School teachers are paid low salaries ranging from PK Rs 5,000 to 30,000 and in terms of inflation today one wonders how they survive.  In addition, classroom environments create many difficulties for the teacher where there are 50 odd students in one class and 30 to 40 minutes to teach a lesson. Such a situation is definitely not conducive for students, particularly those with learning difficulties, as teachers cannot give them individual attention. So for the few slow learners, the only option viable maybe to seek private tuitions when parents are unable to help them at home.

However, a very important factor contributing to the tuition culture in our country is the examination system. In the study conducted by Chuadhry and Javed, 95% students in government schools seek additional help at formal tuition academies. Students claim that their teachers in school do not finish the course and do not answer all their queries.  Unfortunately the examination system, largely, emphasizes the need for professional learners, who are trained to answer examination questions effectively.  This, as Patel (2008) points out in her article, makes students focus on the content and the use of rote memory techniques rather than indulging in developing their independent learning skills and investigating different phenomenon. So, at tuition centres learning independently and developing necessary skills to do so is not a priority, unless it focuses on learning how to take examinations.

It is examinations which seem to take priority for students, their parents and even schools when they focus on getting good result, even if it means that students spend their afternoons and evenings at tuitions! As a result, why bother to have schools, just send students to tuition centres from day one of formal education and have examination boards organize themselves for exams at all levels. On second thought, wouldn’t it be better if schools transformed themselves into tuition centres, at least parents will have only one tuition fee to pay!  


Reference List:

Chuadhry, W.  and Javed, F. (2012). History and culture of tuition academies: voicing native’s
perspective. Asian Journal of Management Sciences and Education, Vol. 1. No. 3. From:
http://www.ajmse.leena-luna.co.jp/AJMSEPDFs/Vol.1(3)/AJMSE2012(1.3-11).pdf

Khan, K. (2013). Tuition culture. The Express Tribune. April 5th. From:            http://tribune.com.pk/story/531127/tuition-culture/


Patel, B. (2008) The tuition culture. Pakistan Education News: Education News Archive 2007-08-09-10-11-12-2013From:
             http://www.interface.edu.pk/students/March-08/Tuition-culture.asp

The Impact of Technology on Children By Nadia Khan

The average kid, ages 8-18, spends over 7 ½ hours a day using technology gadgets equaling 2 ½ hours of music, almost 5 hours of TV and movies, three hours of internet and video games, and just 38 minutes of old fashioned reading according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, which adds up to 75 hours a week! These statistics are not just mere numbers; they are a reflection of the way our society is heading.

T
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/1102949/thumbs/o-KIDS-IPAD-facebook.jpgechnology advancement has great impact on our society. It has transformed our lives especially children today are so much engaged in Technology. It has become important part of their lives which have changed their daily routine keeping them busy all day using different gadgets without which they cannot visualize their lives. Change in technology is so drastic that if we compare families of the past and present in the 21st century there is a great difference in terms of family structure and life styles. Children were allowed to play outside they were involved in physical activities and games,  but today by the influence of technology every where they are restricted in homes sitting in front of the TV all day surfing the net, playing games online for hours, chatting with the friends all day. Children are addicted of using all these gadgets and they consider these things necessity of their lives.
At one point when these technology development made people life more convenient fast and efficient in terms of communication, learning, socializing, sharing, collaboration, in different fields of our life whether home, school, or workplace.
Technology's have great positive effects on children. Computer is a great learning tool which provides kids with different software, word processors, spreadsheets, search engines, multimedia encyclopedias etc which help them to develop Project and slide shows for schools. Computer aided learning (CAL) helps them to learn and gain knowledge outside the classroom which make students independent and increase their sense of empowerment. There are number of different online activities available for children to develop their creativity and different skills which not only enhance their learning but they can have fun in learning at the same time. Even interactive games can be beneficial for kids that encourage creative thinking and for their motor skill development with eye/hand coordination.
Technology is benefiting our lives but like every thing have two sides positive and negative similarly, technology development have positive and negative impact on our lives especially on children. Our social, mental physical and environmental health can be devastating if we don’t maintain a balance in the use of technology.
Here are some negative effects technology can have:
·         Kids live in isolation. These days they isolate themselves around in their own little world, watching TV, chatting with friends on line which can lead to obesity in kids.
·         Lack of human contact, over eating and no exercise results in depression.
·         Due to engage late night in online activities on internet results in poor sleeping disorder.
·         Lack of privacy just one click can give the address and contact information of anyone, more use of viruses, phishing, hacking help to find any information wish to obtain.
·         Technology has produced an entirely different method of interaction and communication. Children are interacting with others through different platforms like apps, online games, social networks, etc. This innovation has hindered the physical interaction skills of children.
·         The extreme uses of digital communication, online chatting, have greatly weakened the writing skills of today’s young children.
·         There are also fears that children see things in video games or online that have negative effects on their behavior and can lead to anxiety disorders, violent behavior, or hyperactivity.
·         Technology causes people to suffer from mental and emotional disturbances, such as anxiety, phobias and delusions, which are all symptoms of neurosis.
  • The greater use of these devices has shortened our attention span from 12 minutes to 5 minutes.
Technology helps us be more productive and improves our lives, but we have to learn to use it carefully and in healthy ways. Technology should be use in moderation. Kids should be taught to secure their information and not to share with any unknown person. Parents should provides guidance to help monitor their children’s computer and gaming activities and should decide what technology they allow their children to use based on the child’s maturity level. They can be aware of their children’s activity online and put monitoring software in place to ensure a positive, safe, and healthy technology experience for children.






Globalization and Digital Education – A Divide or Unite? By Lubna Ali

The phenomenon of ‘Globalization’ is a course of action that rapidly increasing inter-dependence among people regardless of their identity, race, colour or religion. In congruence with International Monetary fund, ‘Globalization is characterized by increase in flow of trade, capital and information as well as mobility of individuals across borders’. Despite this globalization is enriching global markets, ideas, technologies and cohesion as well as lives of people around the globe, the confronting situation is to assure that the distribution of  benefits among people is equitable. Also, the increasing advancement and inter-dependence must be people friendly and not just for pecuniary benefits. Human Development Report (2013) made globalization solely responsible for the dynamic and radical shift in the economic world order. The southern part of the world is pacing out of poverty unprecendently difficult to find in human history. Globalization provided the world with propitious opportunities through cutting edge technology and communication but it has to be directed in such a way that all humankind can make the most of this blessing. To keep this in view, Human Development Report (2013) also commends a course of action that includes restoring governance around the globe to ascertain equity.     
Digital education is the sole technique through which we can achieve the goal of Education for All provided that the digital divide must be eliminated from Pakistan. Now the nighest challenge is to make Pakistani society a knowledge society as early as feasible. Knowledge society is a community where generating, communicating and exercising knowledge are the fundamental components responsible for the success and holistic well-being of its people. As compared to the earlier societies such as ‘cultural’ and ‘industrial’, knowledge societies are much more than land, labour and money. These societies have knowledge as a key element to generate wealth and make living standards better for people. Therefore, the notion of knowledge society is escalating fast. Knowledge about truth, principles, laws, capabilities, economy, management and workers of numerous aspects of knowledge of knowledge society. To make any country a knowledge society, science and technology enable countries to cover goals of  economic advancement, social sciences and environment form a reticular veins of a knowledge society. Pakistan is not an exception to that.  In Pakistan, the knowledge explosion must help the eradication of poverty and be in instrument to achieve social justice. Like any permissive society, Pakistan should also have shared morality for its peaceful existence. That shared morality should be protected and promoted by education only.
The emergence of informational technology and access to social media, advanced telecommunication systems, audio visual technology and multimedia have led to a new  possibilities of collection, development, organization and dissemination of information. Digital resources offer one such possibility and posses an advantage over traditional source with respect to access to information. One of the greatest benefits of digital resources is that, users can access the resources themselves from their desktops.  Approximately, two million Pakistanis possessing computers, most of them have internet accounts; hence the environment is set up the quantum leap in taking advantage of the information technology. The information and communication revolution has converted the world into a small village. At the same time, it poses a serious challenge to the existing and established institutions, practices and law in all the countries. Pakistan is on the verge of IT revolution, IT infrastructure is rapidly building up in the country. In five years PC population is going to increase 10 times. However, in the field of education, Pakistan’s performance has been failing to achieve the post-modern development plan. This digital divide creates an imbalance that requires immediate correction.

If there has been a single development that altered the entire digital age, it is the onset of Internet. Although urban Pakistani society has access to computer but English language of Windows and Internet left millions of Pakistani deprived from the recent IT revolution. To remedy this situation and spread Internet to wider users as a useful instrument, decision makers will recognize the difference between the requirement of commercial user and domestic user. If  we genuinely want to eliminate the digital divide exist in Pakistani society, the language of the Internet has to be replaced by the language that can accommodate wider users from both urban and rural areas. Simultaneously, content of the Internet must facilitate education for children and adults who need to be acquainted with not only basic reading,  writing and numeracy skills but also the challenges of learning computers functions. Clearly, making Pakistani society a computer savvy society is a challenge but it is definitely a challenge worth accepting.