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Education in Nepal: An
Overview
Education in Nepal from the primary school to the university
level has been modeled from the very inception on the Indian
system, which is in turn the legacy of the old British Raj.
Hence, until the recent past, Nepal followed the
traditional three-tier sixteen-year education system,
allocating ten years to school education, four years to
college level studies - two years each for intermediate and
bachelor program, and two to the Masters program at the
university.
During the 1950s and in the subsequent decades, Nepali
students started facing comparative disadvantage in their
academic and professional career advancement not to mention
in the regional or international fields even in their home
country. Therefore, in order to make the nepali education
system more competitive and compatible, policy and
structural changes were made and gradually implemented,
although for the lack of funds and resources only at a
snail's speed during the last three five year plan periods.
As a result, the present education system although still in
the transition phase, stands as follows:
(i) Pre-School Education
The pre-school learning, be it kindergarten, Montessori or
any other form of pre-school education, does not yet form an
integral part of the formal school education system.
Nevertheless, the need for such facility is being
increasingly felt by the society. And, a number of
pre-school establishments have come into existence in
response to the demand particularly among the affluent, the
educated and the working parents in the urban areas.
These facilities range from simple day-care centers operated
by semi skilled tutors and ayahs to sophisticated but
informal playgroups run by trained teachers and nurses, and
from formal pro-primary schools managed as junior wings of
large school set-ups to advanced westernized kindergarten
and Montessori pre-school establishments. Very different in
their fees and infrastructure, they profess equally diverse
professional objectives and educational goals, and practice
divergent approaches to early education. His Majesty's
Government of Nepal has recently formulated some guidelines
for pre-primary curricula.
(ii) School Education
(a) Primary Level
(b) Middle School/Lower Secondary Level (S.L.C.)
(c) High School/ Secondary Level
(d) 10+2/ Higher Secondary Level
Formal school education in Nepal officially spans a period
of 12 years, at the successful completion of which a student
graduates with a certificate of Higher Secondary Education
(10+2). However, since the majority of the schools in the
country have not been upgraded for the lack of funds and
resources to the 10+2 level, the old high school system with
School Leaving Certificate (SLC) examination at the end of
10 year still persists. Most of them are public schools
funded by the government. However, they have not been able
to reach and maintain the expected educational quality
standards, nor have they been able to address the needs of
the society. If the lack of adequate funds and resources is
partly to be blamed, the lack of accountability and too much
of politicization in the educational administration from the
bottom to the top most hierarchy have had a crippling effect
or the educational system. The S.L.C. examination results of
the public schools, which have been getting bad to worse
over the years, bear witness to this fact. Not
surprisingly at all, in spite of tin provision of free
education up to primary level and free distribution of books
to girl-children and children of socially discriminated
ethnic groups up to lower secondary level, parents prefer to
send their children to comparatively more expensive private
schools right from the beginning.
The private schools in general have better facilities,
are better managed and have been showing a much better
performance in the S.L.C. examinations. However, the
quality standards of the private schools, too, are not
consistent and vary considerably from school to school.
There are, on the one hand 'A’ class private school
establishments managed and run by charity organizations,
companies, trusts or? visionary individuals, and on the
other, the so called private English boarding schools
operated by business minded people in semi-furnished
residential houses or even factory-like tin-shades, which
are in fact nothing more than teaching-shops. They do,
nevertheless, seem to be catering to the taste and the need
of the different sections of the society. In addition, the
capital also has a British and an American School, which,
although initially started for the children of the foreign
diplomats, have opened their doors to Nepali children, too.
In the recent years, some public schools have upgraded
themselves to the 10+2 level will governmental support, and
in the urban and semi-urban areas a number of private 10+2
institution;
have sprung up without any lower school base. This sorry
state of transition to 10+2 level has
forced the universities to continue their intermediate or
proficiency certificate level program! for the time being,
at least until 2005 according to the latest revised
phase-out schedule. Hence,| present, the 10+2 level school
education in Nepal is being administered parallely and
independent by the university as its intermediate program
and as a higher secondary school education program by the
Higher Education Board of the Ministry of Education, HMG/Nepal.
Meanwhile, the S.L.C Examination continues to remain as
the iron-gate to be crossed for an entry into either of the
above programs.
The SLC
Examination System.
The SLC thus being the gate way to higher education
commands full attention of all concerned-students and their
parents, teachers and their institutions. The students are
virtually groomed for the S.L.C. from s VIII onwards. They
are taught the actual S.L.C. courses in class IX and X and
are required to pass the qualifying examination, popularly
called Sent-up Test, at the end of class X to be eligible to
appear in the C. examination. The S.L.C. requires the
students to take three-hour written examination of 100 marks
in each subject for the entire syllabus covered in two years
of class IX and X. The evaluation scheme follows the
traditional marking system with division ratings as follows:
35%and
above to below45% - Pass with 3nd division.
45% and above to below
60% - Pass with 2nd division.
60% and above to below
75% - Pass with 1st division.
75% and above - Pass with
distinction.
The S.L.C., however, as the policy makers claim, is now a
matter of only a few years because after the full,
nation-wide implementation of the 10+2 system, the present
S.L.C. examination will be replaced by a or regional level
class X examination. The Higher Secondary Education Board
only will t national level 10+2 annual examinations to
certify students of having completed their secondary school
education or what is popularly called school education in
the west.
The following table presents a bird's eye
view of the prevalent structure of Nepal's School education
system:
| Level |
Class/Grade |
Duration |
Pupil's
Age |
Certifying exams |
Core
Subjects |
Primary |
I to V |
5 Yrs |
5(+)-10(+) |
District
level primary school examination at the end of class
V |
Nepali,
English, Math, Social Studies, Science
|
Middle/Lower Secondary |
VI
to VIII |
3
Yrs. |
10(+)
-13(+) |
Dist.
level lower secondary exam at the end of class VII |
Nepali,
English, Math. Social Studies, Science, Health and
Environment |
High School/ Secondary |
IX&X |
2Yrs. |
13(+)-15(+) |
School
Leaving Certificate (SLC) exam at the end of class
X |
Nepali,
English. Math, Social Studies, Science, Health and
Environment
|
Higher Secondary
10+2 |
XI
to XII |
2Yrs. |
15(+)-17(+) |
HSEB
exams at the end of both XI and XII |
English.
Nepali and 3 Core subjects of the chosen stream.
|
(iii)
Higher Education
(a) Bachelor's/Undergraduate Level
(b) Master's Level/Graduate/Degree Level
(c) Post Graduate, M. Phil. Level
(d) Ph.D. Doctoral Level
Higher
education in Nepal, like elsewhere in the world, is the sole
responsibility of and administered by universities and
institutions of higher learning. At present, the country has
six universities; five of these - two public (state), two
again public (community) and one private - offer western
model academic program and technical education while the
remaining one, again a public university, is dedicated to
the study of Sanskrit and related subjects. There are two
more universities in the offing-an international Buddhist
university at Lumbini and another a general university with
concentration on BuddhisH at Banepa. But since they have not
yet received the character, they can be classified only as
proposed universities.
Entry into
the public institutions of higher learning, except to the
technical programs such as medicine, engineering, forestry
and agriculture, remained and still remains to a
considerable extent almost unrestricted. This has created a
tremendous pressure on institutions, draining their physical
and human resources and leading, in turn, to a progressive
deterioration in the quality of education they impart. As
a result, during the last decade of the last century, the
government has granted affiliation to a number of private
i.e, proprietary colleges and many of them are now fully
operational. They offer their programs with the same
curricula, but being smaller in size and restrictive in
enrolment, they are better equipped and better facilitated.
However, such colleges are comparatively very expensive and
are almost beyond the reach of the common people. Similar is
the case with the only private university of the country as
its programs, too, are accessible only to the family
well-off.
The
following table* presents a glimpse of the overall
infrastructure framework of higher education in Nepal.
| Institute
|
Estd
Date
|
Type
|
Number
of Campus
|
Major
Field of study
|
Degrees
offered
|
Tribhuvan
University
|
1959
|
Public
(State) Residential cum Affiliating
|
61
own
institutes + 191 affiliated campuses
|
Humanities
and Social Sciences, Management, Education,
Health and Medicine, Agriculture and Animal Science,
Forestry, Engineering, Law and Science & Technology
|
Intermediate Bachelor's Master's M. Phil. Ph.D.
|
Kathmandu
University
|
1991
|
Private
(UGC grants)
residential cum Affiliating
|
Central
Campus + 8 Affiliated Campuses
|
Management, Science, Arts, Education, Engineering
and Medical Sciences.
|
Intermediate Bachelor's Master's M. Phil. Ph. D.**
|
Purbanchal
University
|
1995
|
Public
(Community and UGC grants) Residential cum Affiliating
|
2
Univ.
Campuses + 72 affiliated campuses
|
Sciences
Technology, Management, Humanities, Law and Education
|
Bachelor's
Master's M. Phil.** Ph. D.**
|
Pokhara
University
|
1995
|
Public
(Community and UGC grants) Residential cum Affiliating
|
Central
Campus + 29 Affiliated Campuses
|
Management, Science & Technology, and Humanities
& Social Science
|
Bachelor's
Master's M. Phil. Ph. D.**
|
Mahendra
Sanskrit
University
|
1986
|
Public
(states) Residential cum Affiliating
|
Central
Campus +13 Affiliated Campuses
|
Sanskrit,
Ayurved and Related subjects
|
Intermediate Bachelor's Master's Ph. D.
|
B,P.
Koirala Institute of Health Sciences
|
1991
|
Public
(state and donor grants') Residential
|
Central
Campus
|
Medicine
and Health Sciences
|
Diploma
Bachelor's Master's Doctoral
|
Number of Students in Higher Education
Education
Institutes |
2000/01 |
2001/02 |
2002/03 |
1.
Technical
i) Engineering
ii) Agriculture & Animal Husbandry
iii) Medicine
iv) Forestry
v) Science and Technology
|
21861
4985
773
1698
405
14000
|
23136
6020
720
1926
360
14110
|
24044
6798
712
2058
394
14082
|
2.
General
i)
Law
ii) Management
iii) Education
iv) Humanities and Social Sciences
|
129955
3854
40463
22191
63447
|
126302
2084
39238
23164
61816
|
102733
1296
33762
18424
49251
|
3.
Sanskrit
|
3616
|
3252
|
3001
|
|
Total
|
155432
|
152690
|
129778
|
| This article has been provided by Nepal
Educational Directory. |
 |
| |
| For
more information log on to
www.nepalpages.com |
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