Untitled Document
Untitled Document
 Sports
Brett Lee retires from international cricket
Blatter defends role in FIFA kickbacks scandal
National Women’s fbl begin today
Chelsea tops Champions League prize money list
Paes at the center of a storm ahead of Olympics
Serena wins fifth Wimbledon title
All the Bells’ to ring out start of London Olympics
It’s Federer again, and Murray for once in final
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last
 
 Main News
Govt expresses objections over EU, Limbuwan meet
 
 Editorial
Corruption And Water Resources
Reproductive Health Challenges Remain
How To Overcome Boredom
Work Out A Full-sized Budget
Rescue Of Child Workers - Commendable Work
PM On Official Media
Bad Budget Precedence
Tap Tourism Potential
 
 National
Single women break tradition
‘Change mindset to end untouchability’
School dropouts high in Banke
World Environment Day marked
Centuries old human remains found in Mustang caves
CDCs effective in Sindhuli
Remote schools get internet service
Republic Day observed
Water tanks getting dry
Diarrhea patients rising up
 
 
Editorial
Certificate Distribution Centres
Sajan Kumar Karn
 

What, if not certificate distribution centers? Yes, I find it not unjust to label most of the Nepalese schools and colleges mere certificate distribution centres. This, in fact, happens when educational institutions aim at nothing but upgrading students with high scores; teachers teach students but only to enable them to get through the exams; students get admitted but solely to obtain certificates which they can cash later in the job market. This way, we are not preparing students to live for life, which cannot be called an education.

There should be no doubt that the Nepalese education system overemphasises examinations and underemphasises learning. Perhaps we have considered exams and education to be synonymous. This is why, exams start the moment students start their schooling. They often ask their teachers: "When shall we finish the course? The exam is approaching." They ask their teachers to make a guess at the VVI (Very Very Important) questions for the exam. Many of them start to get ready for the exams with guess papers and guidebooks. Recently, I heard a confidential discourse between teachers. They were discussing how to prepare guess papers that are easy for the students to handle in the exam halls.

Let me share a fresh incident with you. A week ago, I happened to go to a shop to photocopy my appointment letter so that I could lodge a complaint that I have been transferred to a place I did not want to go. There, I found one of my students who was pleading to the man at the shop to shorten the size. I thought it was his citizenship paper. To my utter surprise, he was asking the man to condense the size of the guess paper as its actual size had been difficult for him to handle in the previous exam.

This reminded me of the previous period of the exam. Every evening, I would find hundreds of students gathered at the shop. I used to be puzzled. Now I understand why they were there. The man must have been very skilled at condensing the texts. He perhaps did not have the slightest idea that he was condensing not only the size of the guess paper but also the knowledge of the students.

The million dollar question is, what is important: education (learning) or exams? Without doubt, for us it has been exams because we aim at acquiring certificates and nothing else. This is why, it is only the exam that has happened here, not education. After all, why should it happen? Jobs are given if you have a certificate. There are evidences to show that exams are held mostly to meet the periodic ritual. They are held to help the distribution of certificates.

Again there is that question of a good exam and bad exam. The more democratic the exams, the better they are because the more satisfied the students and their guardians are. No section of the academia has enjoyed the newly dawned loktantra more than the exams of Nepal.

No exams have been untouched by the fruit of democracy in this most democratic era of Nepal. Everyone laughed and lambasted that it was a mockery when a teacher said, "Let us pass a proposal to open educational institutes for three days – the first day for admission, the second day for filling up the forms and the third day for distributing certificates as per the score wish of the candidates."

I wish I were the education minister of this country. Democratic exams require no teaching and no learning. They require some skills, though: how to make most of the cheats in the exams, how to put ashes into the eyes of the invigilators who are the union leaders that can help you in using unfair means. If education merely aims at providing certificates - a piece of paper - why invest so much of efforts, funds, resources and time into it?

Despite the criticisms against the exams, they survive and are bound to exist in our education system in the foreseeable future. Then, what are the challenges and what could be their feasible solutions? There are chains of exam-related issues in the Nepalese academia awaiting to be tackled with insight and expertise.

For instance, most of tests made in Nepal for different levels demand nothing but mere rote learning and reproduction. Students either commit to memory the contents or carry guess papers in the exams. There is little room for students’ creativity and critical abilities in both test writing and marking.

Test givers hardly receive any orientation on what is to be tested and how they should be tested. Likewise, examiners never receive any training on how to mark the papers. Let us not talk about the slack marking. Exam results are hardly analyzed. Without a doubt, these evil testing practices do have harmful effects on education and ultimately on the society.

Who is responsible for all the mess - Tom, Dick or Harry?

Other Headlines
Corruption And Water Resources Pranav Bhattarai
Reproductive Health Challenges Remain Prabin Shakya
How To Overcome Boredom Shyam Kumar Singh
Work Out A Full-sized Budget
Rescue Of Child Workers - Commendable Work
PM On Official Media
Bad Budget Precedence
Tap Tourism Potential
PM Not To Stick To Post
NAC, A National Crutch Raj Bhai Manandhar
Sliding State Ritu Raj Subedi
Urgent Reforms Pranav Bhattarai
Handle Your Hands Carefully Nirajan Pudasaini
Stop Destruction Of Forests
Prime Minister’s Resolve
Monsoon Musings
Sporting Politics Shyam K.C.
The Noise Nuisance
Divided Maoists And Shattered Dreams Nandalal Tiwari
In 2014, Out Of Afghanistan P. Kharel
Hunger Risk
The Coming Oil Crash Steve Levine
RIM, Royalists And Maoist Split Ritu Raj Subedi
PM For Global Solidarity
Politics Of Fragmentation Yuba Nath Lamsal
 
 
Gorkhapatra Sansthan - Dharmapath, Kathmandu, Nepal - Tel: 0977-1-4244437
© Copyright 2008. Gorkhapatra Sansthan. All Rights Reserved.

Best viewed in 1024 x 768 px