Title: Tribal situation in Orissa
1(No Transcript)
2Tribal situation in Orissa
- There are 62 tribal groups in Orissa.
- They constitute 23 of the total state population
- 32 tribes speak in their own languages
- Rest of the tribal has partially or totally
assimilated in to Oriya language. - Some of them have lost their language. (Gonds,
Kondh, Mirdhas, Binjhals) - Out of 30 districts 15 districts are with high
tribal population. - Seven tribal districts of south Orissa are with
low female literacy (They are Kalahandi, Nuapada,
Nabarangpur, Gajapati, Koraput, Rayagada,
Malkangiri) - Out of 314 Blocks 118 Blocks are under TSPlan
having 50 to 100 tribal population. - There are 13 Primitive Tribal Group (PTG) with
out having access to communication, health and
education.
3Tribal Languages and Major Tribes
I. There are three tribal language groups in
Orissa
- Austro-Asiatic (Santali, Munda, Saora Ho, Kol,
Bonda etc.) - Dravidian (Gond, Kondh, Kurukh,)
- Indo-Aryan (Bhunjia ,Bhumia, Bhatra etc)
II. Major /Primitive Tribes in Orissa
Major Tribes (Population in Lakhs) Gond(7.0),
Kondh(11.40), Santal(6.29), Saora(4.0),
Munda(3.96), Koya((1.41),Kol((4.0) Kishan(2.66),
Khadia(1.68),Parja((3.53)Bhumij(1.78) Oroan(2.57),
Bhuiyan(2.46)Bhatada(3.00)Ho (0.50) These
tribes have their own language. Primitive
Tribes Gadaba,Bonda, Choktia-Bhunjia, Kutia,
Dongria Kondh, Lanjia Saora,Paudi Bhuiyan,
Lodha, Didayi, Juang,Saora
4Community Participation Some Basic Issues
- Most of the tribal parents are non-literate
and poor. - Education directly affect their day to day
income by drawing their children from home. - Poor relationship between school and community
- Tribal community have mixed opinion regarding
using tribal language in primary schools. - Educated tribal oppose using tribal language in
classroom - Teachers in tribal areas do not involve the
community in schooling process - The experience of the tribal community, which is
the best source to construct knowledge on tribal
curriculum, is not utilized.
5Bilingual Teaching in tribal area schools
- Tribal area schools are monolingual in nature
(only tribal language speakers) - Many schools are bi-lingual in nature (Oriya
and tribal speakers) - Teachers are not trained on bi-lingual
teaching method - Tribal children are the source of mediating
mother tongue with textbook language - Learning is a mutual process among teachers
and children, a teacher should ready to
learn their mother tongue from the children, but
non-tribal teachers dont take interest in
bilingual education
6Enrollment Figures of ST Children in Orissa
7Schools with ST Children
8Overview of ST Children
- About 748000 Children of class I to lass III
face severe language difficulties in
comprehending the content and language. - In early classes ST children promoted to
higher classes having a weak foundation in
content knowledge and also in language. - Tribal Children are unable to read in regional
language and unable to comprehend the texts
properly. - Rote memory followed in the classrooms help
them in answering the questions with out
proper comprehension. - Pronunciation of aspirated words is difficult
since in the tribal phonetics is completely
different. - Since reading and understanding are
difficult, writing skill also becomes
difficult among the children. - Dropout of Tribal children is 77. And
Tribal girls are neglected in comparison to
the boy
9Attitude of Teachers Some Make beliefs
- Tribal language is inferior to the regional
language. - There's no grammar in spoken language.
- Spoken language is limited to the community
and not by others - Tribal language is parochial, not recognized
- Tribal language is not superior to the
regional language. - Tribal language is not the language of power
- Tribal children are docile
- Tribal girls are slow in comprehension
compared to the boys - Non tribal children are good in mathematics
- Moreover, teaching is not possible in tribal
language
10Childrens apprehensions in class room
- They should not use mother tongue in
classrooms/schools - If they use mother tongue, teachers will scold
them - Other students will tease them
- Using mother tongue in school is a matter of
shame. - Teachers encourage the children to use
regional language than mother tongue. - Even teachers belonging to tribal community
also feel shy in using mother tongue in
classroom. - Teachers dont understand their language
11Some Issues and Concerns
- The State Teacher Training Institute or
teacher training Curriculum does not reflect the
tribal education as a subject. - Even in Ashram Schools, school culture is
assimilative than contextual. - Curriculum from the context is absent.
Dichotomy of core and contextual areas in
pedagogy is yet to be decided. Many believe
that contextually is opposed to integration.
There is least discussion on tribal education
in teacher training - Teachers as well as DI of schools dont follow
that National policy of Education has provision
of mother tongue education in tribal areas in
primary classes. Therefore they dont promote
tribal language in primary education -
- Teachers dont use tribal primer due to want
of official - instructions from their Block education officers
12DPEP Interventions
In DPEP,Orissa some concrete steps were taken to
address tribal Education
Preparation 1996-97
- Formation of State and District Resource Group
(involving linguists, Tribal experts,
anthropologists, teachers from tribal community,
non tribal teachers having interest in
tribal culture and language, pedagogists) - Identifying the issues on education of the
tribal children (through workshop mode and
through individual survey conducted among the
tribal area teachers) - Identified the training need of tribal area
teachers (through workshops and survey) - Teachers prepared training Module in the
context of socio- cultural and linguistic
variations with state support - Conducted Linguistic survey and mapping to
assess the gap of home language and school
language in 25 Blocks with more than 70 tribal
popn)
13DPEP Interventions
Process I 1998-2001
- Training of Teachers
- Trained 350 Master Trainers on pedagogic issues
in tribal context from selected - tribal Blocks on Attitudinal Aspects.
- Attitudinal Training 20000 teachers in 87
Blocks with high tribal concentration were
trained up by the 350 MTs. The focal theme of the
training was - -Understanding tribal children,
- -Learning theories of language
- -Mother tongue education,
- -Addressing bilingual classroom,
- -Using folklore/local knowledge for language
TLM, - -Motivation of tribal children,
- -Attitude and behaviour of teachers in tribal
area school - -Integrating natural learning with school
learning - -Tribal society as the source of school
development - -Specific role of BRC and CRC in high tribal
areas - Reflection
- The need for preparation of tribal bilingual
primers was emerged from the teacher training.
The process was initiated with the effective
teachers. First step was tapping the language
resources/folklore of the tribal community Need
identification of teachers led to need
identification of tribal children by the
teachers under attitudinal training.
14DPEP Interventions
Process I 1998-2001
- Teachers from tribal communities were trained on
how to write primers - They were made to know how and why to
prepare the primers. - Cultural context of each tribe was the
foundation of the text. - Senior tribal students participated in the
content making process actively. Community
participation was encouraging in getting
language materials for primers. (in six
languages Saora, Koya, Bonda, Kui, Kuvi and
Juang)
15DPEP Interventions
Process I 1998-2001
- Preparation of Primers
- Training was imparted to the teachers on
preparation of cultural primer - Teachers were made to know that village is the
first source of knowledge - Experience of the children is the foundation of
constructing knowledge - Oral tales, songs, folk games, riddles and
pictures have learning potentialities in which
childrens experience can be presented as a
text - MT is important since it is the language of
thought - Children see the world in their own language
- Aim of language learning is not to write but
to understand it in its context with meaning - Non contextual text or using a a language
other than MT in the class room dont help
the children in their cognitive development - Language helps cognition
- Llearning in MT leads to learn second language
effectively - Children have their own choice in selecting
the texts( Likes and dislikes) - Children create new text given them a context
16DPEP Interventions
Achievements 2000 Onwards
- In the year 2000-2002, 63000 tribal children
were provided with tribal primers
supported with - Picture Dictionary,
- Teachers Handbook,
- Conversational chart
- Self learning materials for teachers, and
- Language training module for non- tribal teacher
- In 2004-5 academic years about 100,000 tribal
children were provided the same materials. - Adoption of Cluster approach to tribal
education (CATE) in2005-06
17DPEP Interventions
Process I 1998-2001
- Jati Mahasabha
- Tapping Community resources- Jati Mahasabha-
for ensuring access and enrollment of
children and stopping teacher absenteeism and
intervening in school management, and
putting pressure on education officers for
providing teachers, infrastructure,
supervision, TLM, strengthening ST, SC and woman
in (VEC and MTA) - Tribal youth as community mobilize In 800
Gram Panchayat, tribal educated youths were
engaged on contractual basis as youth educator/
community mobilizes to ensure access of all
children in the GP, conducting parental
counseling and VEC, MTA meeting, helping
the teachers in preparing tribal language
materials, and coordinating with the CRC and
PRI members Sarpanch. - Results Hike of 4 ST and 3 SC
enrollment in the Blocks - Achievements Enrollment of 13520 ST girls in
396 kanyashrams in KBK Districts.
18Reflections
- Participation of tribal children in classroom
is active in using MT . - Children perceive the text from their past
experience/own way. - Children attach new meaning to the text and
interpret with their logic - Children can create new texts from their
own cultural context - Teachers could know that local knowledge is
the foundations for the children in her
early education - Teachers in tribal areas took much interest
in addressing tribal children from their
socio-cultural context - Teachers could know that tribal language and
folklore are the best source to educate
the children - Teaching in bilingual classroom is more
challenging than in mono-lingual
situation - Teachers associated the experience of the
children with the text book knowledge
19Reflections
- Community interest in teaching Saora, Kuvi
and Juang primer was amazing. - They were taking active part in classroom
transaction and were suggesting - the teachers .
- The myth that tribal language and folklore
is not important in view of educating the
children in the classroom was broken. - Children could get their freedom of
thinking, speaking and learning in their
language and environment. - Access and retention of tribal children
after using primer in MT was increased. - Major tribal community now want to demand the
government to introduce tribal language in
schools. - The Santal community want to use their primer
in ol-chiki script.
20Gaps
- The effectiveness of using these primers is yet
to be assessed . - Post Training activities were poor
- Contextually of effective teaching and
learning was missing due to lack of academic
support - One time training of teachers on tribal issues
was not sufficient. - The experience gathered by the teachers were
not given importance since it was an
experiment. - Lack of State institutional support and sustained
efforts for establishing tribal education in
teacher education - Perception of decision makers differ from time to
time, for which there is a lack of sustained
support at the policy level
21Gaps
- Traditional school Inspectors, non- tribal
teachers are apathetic to tribal education and
their superior mindset do not allow them to
accept that education of tribal children need
special attention. - The Growing interest of teachers could not be
continued due to lack of sustained efforts - Community were not oriented on use of primers,
so there was a mixed reaction to adopt it. - DPEP or SSA project have not been
institutionalized to replicate and sustain them
in the State system.
22Experiential Learning At its best
Erai Erai. Obang.. (Come my friend)
23Thank You
Prepared and Presented By Dr. Mahendra Kumar
Mishra mkmfolk_at_gmail.com