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The deliberate collapse of education in Sindh, courtesy of PPP

Abdullah719

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The Sindh government budget for the fiscal year 2018-19 witnessed an increase in spending on education, with the Rs208.23 billion allocated for the education sector showing an increase in spending of 14.67% from the outgoing fiscal year.

Since the incumbent ruling party in Sindh took the reins of power years ago, budgetary allocations kept increasing every year compared to previous years, while education standards remained stagnant, or rather, deteriorated. For instance, an estimated 52% of children in Sindh are still out of school.

Despite billions of rupees being ‘spent’ every year on education by the Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) provincial government, in addition to money spent by international donors over the last 11 years, the ground reality remains depressing and contrary to the claims made by the Sindh government.

The ruling elites of Sindh translate increased literacy to be a danger to their power structure, which is essentially based on feudalism and dynastic politics. Increased literacy will enlighten the citizenry with more tools for critical thinking and informed decision-making skills, which is considered a threat to the very dynastic political structure that is being maintained in Sindh. The PPP-led government is afraid of such a social change, which may render it powerless.

To have a clear understanding of the gravity of the problem, it is imperative to dissect the long 11 years of PPP in Sindh with regard only to the education sector.

It is very unfortunate that the Sindh government vociferously cries a shortage of funds, which is what it blames for why it could not improve the standards of education, including increasing the literacy rate, providing a better quality of education, training teachers and so on. Above all, it has completely failed to stop the deadly practice of unfair means or cheating in exams, which is blatantly endangering the future of our younger generations.

However, the fact remains that the Sindh government could not utilise the allocated budget for Special Education, Sindh Technical Education and Vocational Training Authority (STEVTA), Universities and Boards, and so on. During the last eight months of the current fiscal year, utilisation of the allocated budget has been negligible. Out of the Rs5 billion allocated for college education boards for 48 ongoing schemes with different interventions, unfortunately a meagre 16% of the budget has been utilised over the past eight months.

The Chief Minister of Sindh allocated Rs9.598 billion for the Sindh Education Foundation (SEF), with the intention to expand 2,400 schools and reach around 650,000 students. However, it has not moved past 550,000 students, as compared to Punjab where three million students are enrolled under the foundation. This year, the SEF received a large number of applications for the Adoption Program but failed to execute it, because the Secretary School Education and Literacy Department Qazi Shahid Pervaiz could not convene a board meeting over the last five months.

Sindh has a total of 42,383 public schools, a number that has declined from 47,557 in 2011. Most schools, around 95%, only offer primary education. Given the situation, dropping out after primary level becomes unavoidable. Meanwhile, the Sindh government has completely failed to share a roadmap to overcome this gap.

The curriculum being followed is from 2007, while the last review was in 2012, for which the books have not yet been printed. The Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) curriculum belongs in the 19th century, and though the Early Childhood Curriculum (ECE) was launched in a five-star hotel years ago, only God knows how long it will take to get the required books and teachers trained in order to implement it. Till 10th grade the medium of education is either Sindhi or Urdu, but higher secondary and college education in Sindh is completely in English. This sudden change in the language of instruction at higher grades creates trouble for the children, who might as well be reading in French.

The Standardised Assessment Test (SAT), which used to take place for students of class five and eight, has also been suspended as most students who took the test failed. Instead of improving the quality of teaching or re-examining the test itself, the SAT process was suspended.

Meanwhile, there is no accountability when it comes to the performance of teachers beyond attendance, which is taken once a month, as this is part of the Reform Support Unit (RSU) project in which someone visits and checks attendance through a biometric device. This RSU project remains partly dysfunctional due to a lack of funds, as foreign funding has been stopped.

Regarding the management structure, there are currently two directorates that are operational, while a third one is being planned to be setup for ECE. This means each government school building and operations will be managed by three different directorates. The consolidation policy of Sindh clearly remains a failure.

It is evident that the challenges are immense, though certain steps are essential for improving Sindh’s educational system.

The SEF needs radical changes – including budgetary – to increase enrolment, while the Education Department needs to make existing public schools fully functional. The Private Schools Network (PSN) should be taken onboard (through legislation) to run second shifts for secondary schools, and for this the government should provide the PSN a subsidy per child. This is needed on a war footing basis if we are to ensure Sindh’s children get a secondary education. The process should be announced and published once a year to streamline the academic year and ensure increased enrolment.

A curriculum board should also be formed with an open and transparent process like that in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (K-P). When it comes to teachers, their performance – alongside the principal’s – should be linked with the result of the school unit, while their hiring should be carried out through independent bodies to ensure merit. The college merger process should be carried out as per the judgement of the High Court, while one school unit should obviously be managed by one head instead of four different ones.

For examination boards, the government should constitute a commission for managing, overseeing and recommending measures related to examinations from primary to intermediate levels. It will help improve education standards in the province and prohibit cheating in exams.

Donor agencies such as the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the EU, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the Gates Foundation should also be convinced to work in liaison with the federal government for funded projects instead of directly engaging at the provincial level, for I am a witness to how foreign funding is being wasted here.

As an MPA of Sindh, I have submitted the Sindh Examination Commission Bill 2018 to address the aforementioned problems at the Sindh Assembly, and I request the Sindh government to support that bill.

Sindh is lagging behind in achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development goals and fulfilling the obligation of free education under Article 25-A. At the pace with which the Sindh government is working in the name of ‘reforms’, and with millions of children out of school, we can only pray for a miracle to change the fate of the children of Sindh.

However, as always, I believe change is inevitable in Sindh. The province has immense potential for development, keeping in view the large chunk of population that consists of the youth. It is high time we materialise this potential into a blessing, before it’s too late to bridge the gaps.

https://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/...llapse-of-education-in-sindh-courtesy-of-ppp/
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] this is the party u support. The most incompetent and corrupt party in Pakistan. U can call out PTI however much u like the fact is your party is far worse.
Like I said if u hate PTI so much and love PPP so much go move to interior sindh and enjoy a luxurious life with other interior sindh Bhutto supporters who clearly live splendid lives.
 
People in power fear the educated, same happened in syria and iraq when dictatorships existed, in Pakistan it has flourished in the interior regions, just for the vote bank.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] this is the party u support. The most incompetent and corrupt party in Pakistan. U can call out PTI however much u like the fact is your party is far worse.
Like I said if u hate PTI so much and love PPP so much go move to interior sindh and enjoy a luxurious life with other interior sindh Bhutto supporters who clearly live splendid lives.

You know they are corrupt but they are "competent" because they are making sure Sindhis remain Bhutto's slaves forever.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION].
Where are you on these threads where the poor are treated like rubbish. But Corruption is not a problem when you are beneficiary of haraam, it's only a problem for the poor buggers that are victims
 
Seems like the PTI bashers are absent from this thread.

Stinky PPP.

This halal Corruption, where the families of some of posters are beneficiaries at the expense of the hapless poor. Put a picture of a dodgy pipe, add the words IK or PTI and they will coming running.
 
https://youtu.be/OEQZ_iZs3NQ

The reality of this deeply badniyat party. I so wish Musharraf was around so that he could put the smirking Zardari and Bilawal in solitary confinement for life
 
The state of Sindh under ten years of PPP rule is no better than Africa. God gave IK the golden opportunity to make a difference, impose governers rule in Sindh and quit trying to expect miracles from the system this mafia has deep roots in
 
No amount of money will change the Sind public schools. The govt should offer poor parents a choice of sending there children to govt schools, or giving them a voucher to send their children to a private school. The amount that it would cost for the govt to educate the child, can be the voucher amount.
 
https://youtu.be/OEQZ_iZs3NQ

The reality of this deeply badniyat party. I so wish Musharraf was around so that he could put the smirking Zardari and Bilawal in solitary confinement for life

Why do people have so much high expectation with that small minded myopic clown, Musharraf. He was there when Zardari was around and had the full opportunity to hang Zardari/Bhutto clans and rid the country of their menace forever. But guess what this selfish fake commando did, just the opposite.

Musharraf is the very reason why Zardari was brought back from dead and installed as the President as some sort of sick and twisted joke with the country. The decade of deterioration and loot is courtesy of one man Musharraf and his deal with his handlers in US DoD and the thugs of Pakistan.
 
Kal bi corruption zinda tha aj bi corruption zinda hai.

Jiya bhutto
 
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[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION].
Where are you on these threads where the poor are treated like rubbish. But Corruption is not a problem when you are beneficiary of haraam, it's only a problem for the poor buggers that are victims

Mammon is not PPP supporter he also voted for PTI and he wants a strong Pakistan that is the reason why he always wants competent people.
Mamoon just telling us that PTI slogan was Naya Pakistan but they failed miserably and they are not better than the likes of PPP or PMLN.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] this is the party u support. The most incompetent and corrupt party in Pakistan. U can call out PTI however much u like the fact is your party is far worse.
Like I said if u hate PTI so much and love PPP so much go move to interior sindh and enjoy a luxurious life with other interior sindh Bhutto supporters who clearly live splendid lives.

Mamoon is not PPP supporter, in fact, he voted for PTI in 2013 as well as 2018
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION].
Where are you on these threads where the poor are treated like rubbish. But Corruption is not a problem when you are beneficiary of haraam, it's only a problem for the poor buggers that are victims

PPP are corrupt and incompetent and PTI is no better than them, then what is the problem if someone criticized your favorite PTI
 
KPK education was far better than Sindh before the PTI government
PPP destroy Sindh education but PTI is not the reason for KPK education which was already better than Sindh before 2013
 
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PPP are corrupt and incompetent and PTI is no better than them, then what is the problem if someone criticized your favorite PTI

you have no idea what you are talking about. You are like a child joining an adults conversation. Either understand the context or go away.
 
Mamoon is not PPP supporter, in fact, he voted for PTI in 2013 as well as 2018

Well let me give you a breaking news. Mamoon is going to vote for PPP in 2023 he already mentioned it in another thread.
 
But but but, lets hear more of Bilawal Zardari's pre pubescent screeching in Parliament
 
Well let me give you a breaking news. Mamoon is going to vote for PPP in 2023 he already mentioned it in another thread.

Why wouldn't he? Corruption is not a problem( according to him) and who better to vote for than a party that do Corruption better than anyone in Sindh
 
This type of callousness does not belong in the 21st century. I hope people of interior Sindh educate themselves and stop listening to conspiracy theories and propaganda spread by these crooks to stay in power. The results speak for themselves, everywhere in Sindh there is chaos and corruption yet the status quo remains because of nationalist politics.
 
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Remind me of this video:

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/WUDw-G1V7Go" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
<iframe frameborder="0" width="480" height="270" src="https://www.dailymotion.com/embed/video/x76gxop" allowfullscreen allow="autoplay"></iframe>
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[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION], 1trillion? Is that high enough for you or would you like to see it higher?
 
KPK education was far better than Sindh before the PTI government
PPP destroy Sindh education but PTI is not the reason for KPK education which was already better than Sindh before 2013

Are you Mamoon's spokesperson?
Also please look at KPK education in 2013 and compare it to 2018. Definitely an improvement if u ask ppl living in kpk. Also, Mamoon said that he would vote for Bilawal in 2023. That implies he supports PPP now.
 
Dedication doesn’t pay - the inside story of Sindh’s cabinet reshuffle

A day after Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah inducted six new members to his team, the Sindh provincial cabinet underwent a major reshuffle on Monday. The latest development came as a surprise to many as the government changed the portfolios of two dedicated ministers of education and local government departments, who, through their hard work and commitment, actually wanted to make a difference.

The decision to withdraw the education portfolio from Syed Sardar Shah sparked an ‘outcry’ on social media where educationalists, civil society activists, writers and intellectuals of Sindh demanded the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leadership to reconsider the decision. The merit of the reshuffle can be gauged from the appointment of former home minister Sohail Anwar Siyal, who has been facing serious corruption charges levelled by the National Accountability Bureau and has been given the portfolio of ‘Anti-Corruption Establishment’ to deal with corruption in the province.

Education dept

According to the notification issued by the services, general administration and coordination department, the education minister, Syed Sardar Ahmed Shah, who assumed the charge of the department on August 13, 2018, has now been allowed to only retain the portfolio of culture and tourism. Sources privy to the development told The Express Tribune that Shah’s decision to follow ‘meritocracy’, his critique of past policies of the education department, refusal to transfer education officers and teachers on political grounds, award of contracts on open merit and appointments of employees and teachers through competitive exams, lead to his removal. “As education minister, he publicly admitted that around 100,000 teachers in Sindh don’t know maths and science. Most of these teachers were appointed by the previous PPP governments,” a cabinet member told The Express Tribune, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “This irked the PPP leadership who don’t want to see any cabinet member defaming government on public forums,” he added.

Sources said that Shah ordered to close around 11,000 non-viable schools [those with lower number of students] a few days ago. In these schools, teachers and other staff received salaries without going to work. “In the last 20 years, there has been no procurement of furniture in government schools. For the first time, the education department allocated Rs9 billion for the purpose and formed a central procurement committee with renowned educationalists as its members,” said a senior official in the education department. “Shah decided to award tenders to well-reputed firms rather than appeasing his own party people. He announced to induct 1,100 science teachers, 400 taluka officers and 150 assistant education officers through public service commission. This kind of decision was against the party policy, so he has been shown the door,” the official added.

The official also pointed out that Shah was the first education minister who enrolled his daughter in a government school in Hyderabad. After this around 60,000 students have been transferred from private schools to government schools in Karachi alone,” he said, showing the official record.

Professor Liaquat Mirani, a civil society activist who has been campaigning for the quality of education in the province, derided the decision to transfer a minister who was striving to bring reforms in the education sector. “PPP has never seen such a man in the education department,” he said, adding Shah should have been allowed to complete his tenure to prove himself, rather than sending him packing within a year.

As of now, no decision has been made regarding the portfolio of education, so the chief minister will head the ministry till further orders.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2029021/1-dedication-doesnt-pay-inside-story-sindhs-cabinet-reshuffle/
 
Sindh’s relatively better education spending still doesn’t cut it, claims study

A recent study reveals that Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab, Azad Jammu & Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan have relatively better retention rates than Sindh and Balochistan, with the newly merged districts in KP being the exception.

Authored by Asim Bashir Khan, an economist and part of the Institute of Business Administration’s teaching faculty, the study titled ‘Bringing all the girls to school: a case for more investment’ was published by the Pakistan Coalition for Education and the Pakistan Youth Change Advocates in collaboration with many other NGOs.

The study shows that Sindh and Punjab have 38,132 and 36,900 primary schools respectively, but girls’ enrolment in Sindh is 2,398,592, which is less than half of Punjab’s 5,465,564.

The comparison between the two provinces also shows that while Sindh has around 3 per cent more primary schools than Punjab, the enrolment ratio is 100 students per school in the former while it’s 227 per school in the latter. The difference grows wider when it comes to girls’ enrolment. For every 100 girls enrolled in Sindh, 289 are enrolled in Punjab.

The situation of girls’ education in rural areas across Pakistan paints a very grim picture. Only 15 per cent of the girls who enrolled in grade-I in 1993 were able to graduate from secondary schools in 2017. Sindh, Balochistan and former FATA districts rank among the lowest performers with retention rates of 9, 8 and 7 per cent respectively.

Countrywide scenario

Currently, 22.8 million children aged 5-16 years in Pakistan are out of school. This figure represents 44 per cent of the total population in this age group and amounts to the second largest population of out-of-school children (OOSC) in the world.

Around 10.7 million boys and 8.6 million girls are enrolled at primary levels, but these figures drop to a mere 3.6 million and 2.8 million at lower secondary levels.

Of the 22.8 million OOSC in Pakistan, 53 per cent are girls and 47 per cent boys. The present enrolment of girls between 5 and 16 years from grades I to X in public schools is 7.73 million and the number of OOSC is 8.96 million.

Moreover, the number of public schools for girls is much lesser than that for boys. On the whole, there are 78,601 primary schools for boys compared to only 40,548 for girls in Pakistan. Similarly, there are 15,902 secondary schools for boys against 13,012 secondary schools for girls, while against 976 higher secondary schools for boys, the number of girls’ schools is 722.

Where Sindh stands

These statistics show that 37.3 per cent of the girls of primary school-going ages are currently not attending school. The number of out-of-school girls in Sindh, Balochistan, GB and former FATA districts is more than the those in school at primary levels.

The author says that although Sindh’s spending on education is much higher than that of FATA, KP and Balochistan, the situation of out-of-school girls in Sindh is not much better compared to the lowest performing regions of Pakistan.

A closer look at the spatial distribution reveals that two-thirds of the out-of-school girls in Pakistan, both at primary and secondary levels, are based in Sindh and Punjab: approximately one-third in each province, adds the author.

Ratio of primary schools

“Despite the fact that majority of the primary and secondary schools and the bulk of public investment on education is concentrated in the rural areas,” reads the report, “female drop-out rates in rural areas are much higher than those in urban centres. A sharp increase in girls’ drop-out is especially evident in rural districts after grade-V.”

The total number of primary schools in urban areas is 10,843, which is around a tenth of the 108,306 primary schools in rural areas. This means that for every 100 schools in urban areas, there are 999 schools in rural areas. Similarly, the total number of secondary schools in urban areas is 5,257, which is slightly more than a fifth of the 23,747 secondary schools in rural areas.

As the overall national average shows, the situation across the country is poor. However, the bottleneck in Sindh is worse with only 10 secondary schools for every 100 primary schools. A further breakdown of the province’s situation reveals that for every 100 primary schools in urban areas, there are 34 secondary schools, while there are merely eight secondary schools for every 100 primary schools in rural areas.

The ranking based on the disparity of primary and secondary schools shows Balochistan, former FATA districts and Sindh to be the poorest performers, while GB, Islamabad Capital Territory and Punjab show reasonably decent parity.

Talking to The News, the study’s author said that to fulfil the state’s constitutional commitment under Article 25-A, the number of secondary schools needs an increase across the country.

He, however, said the governments of Sindh, KP and Balochistan will have to allocate a major chunk of their development spending to construct more secondary schools or upgrade existing schools, so children in those provinces have a level playing field when graduating from primary to secondary levels.

Student-teacher ratio

An urban-rural comparison of primary schools shows that those in lesser developed regions of the country are likely to have fewer teachers, especially at rural level. Balochistan, for instance, has an average of two teachers per school in urban areas and one teacher per school in rural areas. However, per school enrolment in Sindh’s urban areas is nearly half, and in rural areas it’s one-third of that in Punjab.

This simple comparison suggests that while more financial resources are certainly required for expanding the system, existing structures are also underutilised in terms of accommodating OOSC.

The situation is only very slightly better for Sindh, GB, AJK and former FATA districts with an average of between two to six teachers in urban and only two teachers in primary schools of rural areas.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/67...on-spending-still-doesn-t-cut-it-claims-study
 
Are these the competent people you support [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]. Maybe we need another relaunch of Billo. The PPP have been in power for 12 years this time around, and bar trillions stolen, what do you have to show for it.
 
Are these the competent people you support [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]. Maybe we need another relaunch of Billo. The PPP have been in power for 12 years this time around, and bar trillions stolen, what do you have to show for it.

I blame Imran Khan for whatever happens in Sindh. The biggest political disappointment ever. How he hasn't fixed everything in two months i don't know. Bilawal will fix everything. I mean he's the got the experience gained from hours of intense workouts with David and his other friends in Oxford. That charisma, the amazing Urdu that just inspires millions. Such vision. Pakistan's future is now secure. inshallah Malala and Bilawal will make a great couple ruling Pakistan for 30 odd years.

we will be a super power when Biloo rani takes charge..
 
the Great Khan;10793604[B said:
]I blame Imran Khan for whatever happens in Sindh.[/B] The biggest political disappointment ever. How he hasn't fixed everything in two months i don't know. Bilawal will fix everything. I mean he's the got the experience gained from hours of intense workouts with David and his other friends in Oxford. That charisma, the amazing Urdu that just inspires millions. Such vision. Pakistan's future is now secure. inshallah Malala and Bilawal will make a great couple ruling Pakistan for 30 odd years.

we will be a super power when Biloo rani takes charge..

I had some ignorant soul blame IK for NS and AZ bails from IHC, whilst at the same time calling for special treatment of the same criminals.
 
I had some ignorant soul blame IK for NS and AZ bails from IHC, whilst at the same time calling for special treatment of the same criminals.
I hear it from pmln friends all the time. Mostly lahoris ..I don't know what they want..is thirty years not enough. .no health care no education yet let's blame IK. It's just stupid..
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Karachi has drowned because:<br><br>- People of Afghan heritage live there<br>- People from other parts of Pakistan live there.<br><br>Insane racist clown <a href="https://twitter.com/Arfanamallah66?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Arfanamallah66</a> is a professor at university of Sindh and <a href="https://twitter.com/SarmadPalijo?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@SarmadPalijo</a>'s bio lists universities that every bright kid wants to go to. <a href="https://t.co/yDqmMmlwxd">pic.twitter.com/yDqmMmlwxd</a></p>— D (@Le_Sabre54) <a href="https://twitter.com/Le_Sabre54/status/1299663421361844224?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 29, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Not a great look for University of Sindh.
 
But as per [MENTION=135038]Major[/MENTION] PPP are not to be blamed. Billoo Rani is the rightful next PM.
 
SINDH EDUCATION DEPARTMENT SACKS GHOST TEACHERS

The Sindh education department has sacked eight ghost teachers in the province, ARY News reported on Monday.

According to the secretary education department, Akbar Leghari, eight teachers, residing abroad, were sacked from their services. The teachers who were sacked from their services were receiving salaries for the last 2 years.

The secretary further said Taluka education officers across the province are highlighting the ghost teachers.

The secretary warned of strict action against the ghost teachers.

Earlier, the Sindh education department stopped the disbursement of salaries of over 2,000 ghost teachers across the province.

As per details, the Sindh education department wrote a letter to the provincial accountant general to stop the salaries of 2,019 ghost teachers.

Following the letter of the education department, the AG Sindh has seized disbursement to salaries to the ghost teachers.

Sindh education secretary Akbar Laghari said they will sack the services of the teachers who are receiving their salaries by sitting at home.

ARY
 
For all the posters on this forum.

before getting into this debate of education system. Plz do visit public schools of federal.

All parties are at fault. Not a single one has bothered to do anything
 
OP proves PPP are enemies of Pakistan. Only a banana republic would permit this party to exist after their open treason from at least the 70s.
 
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