45% of teachers in schools are
women
Women Are Set To Overtake Men In Coming Years In
Teaching Profession, Reveals Edu Course Enrolment
Hemali Chhapia TNN
In India, teachers form the third largest workforce among white-collared
employees. A point to reflect on Teachers’ Day, Wednesday, is that of the
country’s 64 lakh school teachers, 29 lakh are women.
The percentage of women teachers in schools has
been increasing steadily in recent years. From 43.46% in 2008-09, it rose
to 44.83% in 2009-10 and 45.51% in 2010-11.
The shift started in the 1990s, when the government
launched Operation Blackboard, reserving 50% of jobs in schools for women.
RGovinda, vice-chancellor, National University of
Education Planning and Administration (NUEPA), said, “This change has been
induced because of government policy. Out of every two teachers a school
recruits today, one has to be a woman.”
Interestingly, this is a world-wide phenomenon, and
not just restricted to India. “Yes, feminization in the teaching fraternity
has either taken place or is taking place across the world,” the
vice-chancellor of NUEPA said.
Psychiatrist Harish Shetty, who doubles up as
counsellor for several city schools, said post-industrialisation research
has proved that the male role model was increasingly missing from the lives
of growing boys. What this means is that at home, the father is away at
work most of the time, and in school, the student rarely has a male teacher
to look up to.
The trend is likely to intensify. In 2010-11,
according to the University Grants Commission, education was the only
stream of study to have more girls than boys: 3.24 lakh girls as opposed to
2.64 lakh boys had signed up to take up teaching as a vocation. “At Azim
Premji University, we have more female students. But I would say gender has
no bearing on the goodness or badness of a teacher,” said Dileep Ranjekar,
CEO, Azim Premji Foundation.
But experts warn that the trend may have adverse
consequences for boys. Psychiatrist Harish Shetty, who doubles as a
counsellor for several city schools, said research showed that male role
models were increasingly missing from the lives of growing boys: at home,
the father is away at work most of the time, and in school, a boy rarely
has a male teacher to look up to.
In the UK, where the malefemale teacher ratio is
similar, a recent newspaper report lamented the absence of male teachers in
education, remarking that students were being raised to become “pansies”.
Shetty said, “In most cases, the male teacher these days is only a PT
trainer or a music teacher or one who drills maths into you. The only man
boys know now is Salman Khan. It is important for them to come across men
who are sensitive, men who are family people, men who have feminity.”
But Tripta Trivedi, an associate professor from the
department of education, University of Lucknow, has a different opinion.
She said female teachers have a more positive and professional attitude
than their male counterparts. She found this through a study she conducted.
Courtesy (Visited 5.9.12)
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