Assignment 4 2025
Unique #:
Due Date: 2025
Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.
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, SECTION A
1. Introduction
This section explores the development, transformation, and challenges of the
Indian education system, with a focus on both historical and contemporary
contexts. It draws from Chapter 9 of the prescribed book Decolonising Education
in the Global South by Seroto, Davids, and Wolhuter (2020), which critically
examines how India’s education system evolved during and after colonial rule.
The assignment begins by analysing the shift in the aims and objectives of
education from the colonial period to post-independence India, followed by a
discussion on the nature and relevance of formal education in the country. It also
evaluates India’s decision to reject Mahatma Gandhi’s basic-schooling approach,
which focused on practical, community-based learning. The impact of India’s slow
economic structural change on its education sector is reviewed, highlighting the
disconnect between education and industrial growth. Finally, the assignment
assesses the challenges faced by underprivileged citizens in accessing quality
education and how this affects their social and economic mobility.
2. Aims and Objectives of Education in India During Colonial and Post-
Independence Periods
During the colonial period, the British introduced education in India with specific
administrative and political goals. The primary aim was not to uplift the masses or
to promote broad-based learning, but to create a small class of Indians who were
familiar with Western knowledge and fluent in English to serve as intermediaries
in colonial administration. Education was elitist and selective, targeted mainly at
the upper castes, especially Brahmins. It was designed to produce clerks,
bureaucrats, and loyal workers for the British government rather than promote
critical thinking, industrial skills, or social mobility. The colonial rulers had no
interest in spreading education widely or using it to promote socio-economic
transformation. Consequently, the majority of the Indian population remained
uneducated and excluded from formal learning systems.
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