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primary school teachers the twists and turns of everyday practice

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Version 20 Oct 08, edited final<br />

Notwithst<strong>and</strong>ing <strong>the</strong> laudable objective behind creating NCTE, <strong>the</strong> last 15 years have<br />

witnessed a haphazard growth <strong>of</strong> teacher education institutions across <strong>the</strong> country—<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten against <strong>the</strong> judgement <strong>of</strong> state level bodies <strong>and</strong> state governments. In <strong>the</strong> states<br />

included in this study, <strong>the</strong> effects <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se developments have been resoundingly<br />

negative. In Maharashtra, for example, <strong>the</strong> D.Ed programme is <strong>of</strong>fered by <strong>primary</strong><br />

teacher-training institutions which, towards <strong>the</strong> mid-1970s, were fewer than 100. By<br />

February 2008, <strong>the</strong>re were 787 such institutions, <strong>of</strong> which 130 were government or<br />

government-aided institutions (33 DIETs <strong>and</strong> 97 aided D.Ed colleges), whereas <strong>the</strong><br />

rest—over 85 per cent <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> total—were self-financed or unaided colleges. 5 The state<br />

currently generates between 60,000 <strong>and</strong> 70,000 trained D.Ed <strong>teachers</strong> every year,<br />

about five times <strong>the</strong> annual dem<strong>and</strong> (Table 4.2). 6<br />

Table 4.2: Expansion in D. Ed institutions, Maharashtra<br />

Year<br />

Total number <strong>of</strong> % increase<br />

D.Ed institutions in <strong>the</strong> state<br />

1965 79<br />

1975 94 19<br />

1985 126 34<br />

1995 210 67<br />

Feb 2008 787 275<br />

(Source: 1965 to 1995: Adapted from MSCERT, Teacher Education in Maharashtra. Current<br />

Status, Issues, <strong>and</strong> Future Projections. New Delhi, NCTE (2001) (excludes 31 institutions<br />

whose year <strong>of</strong> establishment was not specified). 2008: Data provided by MSCERT).<br />

Table 4.3 Expansion <strong>of</strong> private teacher-training institutions in TN<br />

Type <strong>of</strong> Institution<br />

Year<br />

Government Govt. Unaided<br />

DIET<br />

TTI Aided TTI TTI<br />

Total<br />

2003/04 29 9 43 2 83<br />

2004/05 30 9 43 126<br />

2005/06 30 9 43 415<br />

2006/07 30 9 43 477<br />

2007/08 30 9 43 583 665<br />

(Source: DTERT, Chennai 2008).<br />

The situation in Tamil Nadu is not very different. In 2003–04, <strong>the</strong>re were only 83<br />

TTIs (including 29 DIETs) with a maximum intake <strong>of</strong> 8,300 teacher trainees. Since<br />

<strong>the</strong>n only one new DIET has been added, which means that <strong>the</strong> increase in <strong>the</strong><br />

numbers <strong>of</strong> TTIs has been entirely in <strong>the</strong> unaided sector (Table 4.3). A similar<br />

scenario can be traced with respect to B.Ed colleges, whose number is nearly 300 in<br />

<strong>the</strong> current year.<br />

Year<br />

Table 4.4: Kerala teacher-training institutions<br />

Type <strong>of</strong> Institution/course<br />

TTC Course B. Ed Course<br />

(DIET + TTI)<br />

5 At <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> fieldwork in February 2008, close to 100 additional private institutions had been<br />

sanctioned by <strong>the</strong> National Council for Teacher Education, but had yet to begin functioning.<br />

6 Estimates provided by functionaries at <strong>the</strong> Maharashtra Council for Educational Research <strong>and</strong><br />

Training (MSCERT).<br />

43

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