An Essay on Affordable Private Schools
What do you believe is the role of affordable private schools for th e poor in India?
âPrivateâ schools are schools that are independently operated and do not receive government aid. Private
schools for the poor exist and they are most likely to have the largest effect on enrollment. The macro-level
analysis of various independent factors such as government spending on education, political opinion,
economic data, and cultural variables determines their relationship to private schools in the developing
world.
Private schooling in India is demand-driven. Parents choose private education because they believe they
provide better education and future opportunities for their children than the government schools. Political
factors play a serious role in private education choice. Private schools are currently educating a large
percentage of the worldâs poor. Governments are not on track towards achieving the Goal: Education for All.
When private schools are included, more students are enrolled in school than governments. Affordable
private schools are included in education enrollment goals and benchmarks are being met. Because of
government failure to educate students in very poor areas, private schools that charge low-fees are
educating students that would otherwise attend government schoolsâor not be in school at all.
Schools develop in this scenario as government does not meet a mandate to education, which it declares a
fundamental right. Whether the failure is actual or perceived, private organizations are educating the
masses where there is government failure. The low-fee private school sector is fulfilling parentsâ demands in
cases where government schooling does not. Political scientists, policy-makers, and government officials
need to recognize the influence and salience of the private sector when discussing global education.
Private education is helping educate the worldâs poor in a substantial way. Primary reason that families
choose private schools is perceived superior quality to government schools. Largest reasons for choosing
private schools are, in order, poor or nonexistent government-school infrastructure, lack of English medium
education, and insufficiency or absenteeism of government-school teachers.
Government schools geographically located too far from many families to attend school, and children who
attend private school tend to have higher attendance and greater measured achievement. Political aspect of
affordable private schools has often been overlooked. Existing studies either discount affordable private
schools completely, citing education as a normative universal âpublic goodâ, or discount the role of
government, saying that private schools arise because the âgovernment system is perceived to be
inadequateâ, that they exist because of the poor and declining quality of government education, or
inadequate infrastructural capacity of government to handle educational needs alone. Affordable private
sector can âreclaim educationâ for the poor, especially in cases in which governments fail to provide
education. When a collective-action problem leads to failure of the government sector, and government is
not responsive to citizensâ needs, citizens are more likely to privatize what has been previously viewed as a
collective function. Trust in government, the relationship between teacher job protection, union strength,
and teacher absenteeism and the language of instruction are all salient concerns. Government policies,
including spending and curriculum help explain the size of the private sector.
There is a role of key players in government and private education. The principal actors, which are outlined
as follows, are government actors (public officials), teachers, parents, and school operators/entrepreneurs.
With such heavy job protection, teachers are often absent from class. Some teachers are absent because of
the close relationship between teachersâ unions and the government sectorâthey are carrying out
administrative, political, or election-related work, and other teachers are absent because of the lack of
accountability surrounding teacher absence.
Parental preferences also play a role in private enrollment. Parents also recognize teacher absence, and cite
government-school teacher absenteeism as one reason for choosing private schools. Government officials
also hinder or encourage the provision of private schools by motives of personal financial gain. Corruption
taints private school regulation. Government teachers oppose private education for both ideological and
practical reasons. Teachers have a stated commitment to universal and compulsory government education,
and many do not feel that poor families ought to pay money for private school. Practically, low-fee private
schools are competitors for government schools, and teachers have a rational incentive to limit their supply
in order to protect the pre-eminence of government school.
Individuals and groups create and operate affordable private schools. For these schools to exist there has to
be significant incentive for independent school operators to work in the sector. School curriculum and
language of instruction can also impact parentsâ preference. Many families choose private schools because
they are English-medium. English provides a competitive advantage: though the country has official