It is no longer, enough for us to talk about providing for universal access to education. Making available schooling facilities is an essential prerequisite, but is insufficient to ensure that all children attend school and participate in the learning process. The school may be there, but children may not attend or they may drop out after a few months. Through school and social mapping, we must address the entire gamut of social, economic, cultural and indeed linguistic and pedagogic issues, factors that prevent children from weaker sections and disadvantaged groups, as also girls, from regularly attending and complementing elementary education. The focus must be on the poorest and most vulnerable since these groups are the most disempowered and at the greatest risk of violation or denial of their right to education. The right to education goes beyond free and compulsory education to include quality education for all. Quality is an integral part of the right to education. If the education process lacks quality, children are being denied their right. The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act lays down that the curriculum should provide for learning through activities, exploration and discovery. This places an obligation on us to change our perception of children as passive receivers of knowledge, and to move beyond the convention of using textbooks as the basis of examinations. The teaching-learning process must become stress-free; and a massive programme for curricular reform should be initiated to provide for a child-friendly learning system that is more relevant and empowering. Teacher accountability systems and processes must ensure that children are learning. And that their right to learn in a child- friendly environment is not violated. Testing and redesigned to ensure that these do not force children to struggle between school and tuition centres, and bypass childhood. What is the essential message in this passage?
The Right to Education now is a Fundamental Right.
The Right to Education enables the children of poor and weaker sections of the society to attend schools.
The Right to Free and Compulsory Education should include quality education for all.
The Government as well as parents should ensure that all children attend schools.
Option (a) and (b) are factual statements, but they don't capture the essential message of the paragraph. Option (c) accurately reflects the main idea conveyed in the passage: the importance of Quality Education. Option (d) doesn't capture the primary message conveyed in the paragraph. Therefore, Option (c) is the most suitable choice for the essential message of the paragraph.
For election to the Lok Sabha, a nomination paper can be filed by
Miscellaneous · Easy
In a month if the seventh day is three days earlier than Saturday,then the nineteenth day of the month will be a
Miscellaneous · Easy
Which among the following events happened earliest ?
Miscellaneous · Easy
An 80-litre solution of alcohol and water has 75% alcohol. How much water (in litres) must be added to bring down the concentration of alcohol to 60%?
Miscellaneous · Easy