cover image: Bureau of Education  India. Post-War Educational Development in India: Report by the Central Advisory Board of Education  January 1944

Premium

20.500.12592/hxx155

Bureau of Education India. Post-War Educational Development in India: Report by the Central Advisory Board of Education January 1944

1944

INTRODUCTION 1. The White Paper containing proposals for the post-war expansion of the British system of Education which was laid before Parliament not long ago begins with these words :— Upon the education of the people of this country the fate of this country depends." If the people of Great Britain which even before the war was spending from public funds the equivalent of Rs. [...] The object of this report is to fix that datum line subject of course to the proviso that it will require modification in the light of the conditions obtaining in India in the years to come. [...] Some members of the Committee suggest that the adoption of Roman script might prove a solution to the language difficulty and greatly minimise the work of both scholar and teacher.13 () The Wardha Scheme of basic education is in full agreement with the recommendations made in the Wood—Abbott Report so far as the principle of learning by doing is concerned. [...] 8 their decsion was : While the majority of the members of the Board accepted the view of the Committee the official members representing the Government of India expressed their inability to commit themselves in any way. [...] The standards in regard to the training recruitment and conditions of service of teachers prescribed in the report of the Committee approved by the Central Adv 3or y Board in 1943 represent the minimum compatible with the success of a national system : these should be adopted and enforced everywhere.
education
Pages
123
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.141047
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-iv unknown view
Introduction
1-6 unknown view
Chapter I Basic (Primary and Middle) Education
7-14 unknown view
Chapter II. Pre-Primary Education
15-18 unknown view
Chapter III. High School Education
19-27 unknown view
Chapter IV. University Education
28-35 unknown view
Chapter V Technical Commercial and Art Education
36-47 unknown view
Chapter VI Adult Education
48-58 unknown view
Chapter VII. The Training of Teachers
59-64 unknown view
Chapter VIII. The Health of the School Child
65-75 unknown view
Chapter IX The Education of the Handicapped
76-82 unknown view
Chapter X Recreative and Social Activities
83-87 unknown view
Chapter XI Employment Bureaux
88-90 unknown view
Chapter XII. Administration
91-95 unknown view
Conclusion
96-99 unknown view
Note
100-107 unknown view
Appendix
108-i unknown view

Related Topics

All