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 Maoist Curriculum

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Posted on 03-24-07 2:15 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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This is what your little sisters and brothers will be studying in Nepal in a few years' time.

Doubtless, this "scientific" and "relevant" education will prepare them well to meet the challenges of the changing world.


- http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/341/Nation/13359


oohi
ashu
 
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Posted on 03-27-07 3:38 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Typo:
"What about the most wonderful things she have said?"

to be read as:

What about the "most wonderful" things she has said? I was trying to be little sarcastic, but not to mean to be an ardent supporter of her. Only think that intrigues me about Hisila Yami is how can this lady from a conservative family (from my understanding), from "huney khaney" family in Kathmandu can dare to go underground to "fight for the people"?

From my apparant searching on the internet, I couldn't find the interview with Hisila Yami that I think is in Nepali. But, this is what I found in the same news magazine:

http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/340/Interview/13334

Nepali Times: What went wrong with Nepal’s education system?
Hisila Yami: Fundamentally what went wrong is that we started thinking about education as an industry. People started investing in education—they would sell off their land and homes, so their kids could go to private schools. So much money was invested, but in the end young people just left the country seeking a better life abroad.

What should the new education policy look like?
First the state should regard education as fundamental right. During the ‘People’s War’ our efforts in education were appreciated because our emphasis was on monitoring. Government schools need to be consolidated, facilities provided, and the performance of teachers monitored. Our education policy will be inclusive and will merge the natural and social sciences. The emphasis will be more on polytechnic education because people who get such training can be employed quickly. Kathmandu-centric education may not work for the rest of Nepal. Similarly we will link education with labour, because it is our biggest asset. The future generation will understand Nepali culture not as a feudal Hindu dominated Bahun-Chhetri culture, but as inclusive of all ethnicities, castes, and languages.

What is your stand on nationalising private schools?
When our war was on, we did not let private schools operate in our areas. Our emphasis was on improving government schools, but we also invested and made model schools. We had our own syllabus, we intervened in some private schools, and monitored to see if there was mismanagement. Our stance is, if we provide enough facilities and qualified people, there will eventually be a move away from private schools. There are ways to nationalise private schools without using coercion—by taxing them etc. I do not look after education, but I think universities may be the first target to be nationalised. In areas the government has not been able to reach, private schools will be allowed to operate.

What is your ‘revolutionary education’ (janabadi sikchhya) all about?
Janabadi sikchhya is a type of education answerable to the people. More than 80 percent of our country’s population is in the villages, which means this type of education has to be rural-oriented. Our economy is dependent on agriculture, therefore there must be a strong focus on agricultural economy. The emphasis will be on creating manpower that is productive and science-based, and it will define nationality in a new way. We can’t change the structure right away, we will change the base first and eventually revamp the entire system.

And still, I can't incorporate this interview of her and the "alarming" Maoist educational system posted above. I think I am dumb; but am I really that dumb?
 
Posted on 03-27-07 4:59 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/340/Interview/13334

Seems they take all the news browser for granted...they just think all these internet people will read whatever they have in their sites.....
Not very long back we could see gobinde joshi with few paragraphs on the politics, federal setup, republic what not....kasto din aayo....
now they have hishila yami talking about janabadi sikhhya....what the hell these mafias liers gona teach...what kind of sikchaya is that....some tricking game? hishila first ask your leader to come out with the evidence on that murder conspiracy....no more tricking...

I wonder whether these media people are serious enough....do they really care the people and the land we belong....really every now and then we find these media acting highly irresponsibly....highlighting something that is not credible...something that does not deserve at this crucial juncture...give me anything other than a la gobinde hishila...
 
Posted on 03-27-07 5:10 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Ashu,

I am relieved to see you did not defend the journalistic quality of the article. Otherwise you would be dragging me to the ring ;-)


ImI,

My, let's say, semi-anonymous optimism or your anonymous paranoia or Dr. Strangelove's similar sneer for that matter in this anonymous forum matters nothing as far as shaping Nepal's future is concerned. So don't take them seriously.


Dr. Strangelove,

Forget about the apologists. It should be a trial time for the dismissers and deniars. Shouldn't it ?

Nepe
 
Posted on 03-27-07 7:59 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Rein............. are you serious or just playing dumb here???...Am I the only one who thinks Nepal was united by the Shah dynasty along with our fore fathers............?????????? i mean Im confused here ..help me out here..... am I the only one who read in the history books that before the Shah dynasty named Nepal after uniting it .......Nepal was just a bunch of different small ethnic kingdoms with their own names?????.......how come you misssed out that if you are a Newar or a gurung or tamang or etc...you originally are not from gorkha and you dont speak the same language and culture......you were in a small kingdom that was united to be one strong country to fight off the invaders??????? ...........you must be one of those who hate their culture so you want to rewrite history...................DUDE I am not brain washed by mahendra mala but I am proud to have learnt how Nepal was united and by whom...........I am proud to have the heritage of our brave forefathers who in history had sacrificed their blood so that we were never ruled by the invading countries. ...with that we have maintained our proud heritage and history of the making of Nepal in our books......ANd you call it brain washing....................go pi*s off in India or live in N korea .......if you are to rob our comming generation of kids to learn about their countrys actual history.
you can read about prachanda who murdered 16 thousand Nepalese in just a short period of time.....................he is your hero...........educate you kids about maoism too..........good luck
 
Posted on 03-28-07 2:04 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepe ji it's an oxymoron to say someone's optimism or paranoia in this anonymous forum doesn't make a difference. Specially when you have pointed out that you are optimistic towards maoist dictates.

One persons denial may be another's optimistic proclamation. But word plays aside, when one looks at the fundamental quality of lives in Nepal, before and after the Maoists came in power, there are certainly more episodes of Maoists extortions in public and in living daylight than any party in power.
 
Posted on 03-28-07 3:31 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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>..Specially when you have pointed out that
>you are optimistic towards maoist dictates.

I don't know what you are trying to say by "optimistic towards maoist dectates". But, would you care to quote verbatim where and what exactly I said.

If you have any doubts/questions regarding my views on anything including Maoists, just ask. Don't assume.

*** *** *** *** *** ****

On the original note, I had a chance to talk to Tony Vaux, one of the authors of the article cited by Nepali Times op/ed and he just re-iterated what I had cited from their work above. He says, that somewhat eccentric curriculum will be a thing of the past.

Nepe
 
Posted on 03-28-07 3:41 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Maoist Curriculum = North Korea
 
Posted on 03-28-07 5:26 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepeji ,

you did really made me laugh saying "it doesn't make a difference" - it does more than you think in the cyber world.I am surprised.Many people's opinion does make place in people's mind thru internet.

My paronoia: you should have see that in recent days , i have stopped critizing maoist.My only intention earlier was to tell few people that they cannot be trusted.The things which we are seeing now is proof of it.I have nothing more to say about them.People are realizing.(some still say it is too early to say, may be they are right but MAY BE I AM RIGHT TOO) it depends one's analysis.

Another thing," Eccentric education is thing of past"- well, there are many things that are things of past in Nepal.One of them is communism.Traditional way doesn't mean we have to read about kings but history, nepalese kids should know.(contents of history is seperate discussion).Maoist trying to impose many things - their centric views wouldn't be taught , who knows? Can you say for sure!
 
Posted on 03-31-07 1:36 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Here are some letters to editor

Source:
- http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/342/Letters/13379

LITTLE MAOISTS

The Maoists’ proposed education scheme is appalling. Why on earth should a child’s mind be filled with political rubbish and deadly knowledge about making guns and explosives, and wars? Compare their ideology with the age-old idealistic belief that children should be taught physical education, music, poetry, and natural sciences. If a condemnable scheme such as the Maoists’ were to be implemented, I’d rather teach my children at home than send them to school. No conscientious guardian will allow their children’s minds to be filled with such rubbish at such a young age.

Khanal,
Stanford University

• The rest of the world may view Maoism as it does the dodo, albeit less fondly. In Nepal people want to give the dying ideology new life by indoctrinating children. This is fanaticism. If Maoists want to be looked upon as reasonable, normal people—i.e., part of the ‘mainstream’, they had better play the part. Only a crank would want to teach philosophy and economics to nine- and ten-year-olds. Not to mention ‘military science’, and the technology behind ‘homemade guns’. I’m sure the syllabus for 12-year-olds includes a section on nuclear weaponry. And I suppose 15- and 16-year-olds will have considerable practical studies of ballistic missiles.

The Maoists don’t seem to just want to replace capitalism with another system. It looks like they want to reach into children’s minds and distort their thinking. They think their ideology must be preserved unconditionally, even at the cost of permanently disfiguring childhood.

Manish,
email

• What are these commie educational experts thinking? This ridiculous curriculum will do nothing to achieve what we desperately need—jobs, economic growth, and prosperity, capital, investments, a strong middle class, and a democratic system. How will memorising Prachanda’s biography and communist ideologies help our nation?

Yes, the communist revolution has become a significant part of our history, and students must be aware of what it was and the players involved. But this has to be done in an unbiased, objective manner. We should also not forget all the other important actors and events that have shaped our history. More importantly, we need an apolitical curriculum that encourages students to think and analyse critically, that fosters entrepreneurship and rewards hard work. We need a capable citizenry up-to-date with the constantly shifting economic realities of the world. Instead, our students will be taught to live off barter, as in medieval times.

And military education? Fourth- and fifth-graders learning to make guns and explosives works if you want to introduce the draft. Mr Prachanda, if you are listening, our kids don’t need to learn route-finding—we don’t want to live in the jungle like you did.

Looking at this curriculum, it’s easy to imagine Nepal turning into North Korea, with a military dictatorship that glorifies its tyrannical leaders. If this is implemented, I am moving with my kids.

Deepti Satyaki,
email

• Granted Ms Yami’s take on education has its limitations, some of which were pointed out in last week’s letters (‘We will link education with labour’, #340, ‘Mis-education’, Letters, #341). But it was irresponsible to paste the Maoists’ guerrilla education policy and curriculum and attribute it to the present-day mainstream party (‘Little Maoists;, #341). Had the Maoist stayed in the jungle to fight the war and won, this curriculum might have been implemented. But with the change in their political status, I am sure their education policies have changed, and I don’t think this absurd curriculum does justice to their outlook.

Nepal’s education does need reform. We do not need the monarchical propaganda replaced by communist propaganda, but we do need reform. And the Maoists’ quasi-’scientific’ answerable-to-the-people brand of education has merit—as long as it remains scientific and non-communist (between which they’ve ceased to see the difference), and answerable to the people and not to ideology.

SK,
email

• Re: ‘Little Maoists’. Are you serious?! I was about to congratulate the Ass for his wacky genius, but then I realized this was a bonafide story. Thanks to you, Hisila, with your plan Nepali kids in the Maoist version of fundamentalist madrasas will find themselves not only brainwashed with laal salaamism, but also glaringly incompetent in the software-driven Asian economy. We’ve already paid the price for an educational experiment gone wrong—the Naya Shikshyaa Yojanaa. We cannot repeat the mistake. After 10 years of bloodshed and trauma, our kids deserve better.

Nirmal Niroula,
email
 
Posted on 03-31-07 1:43 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Nepe wrote:

"Ashu, I am relieved to see you did not defend the journalistic quality of the article."


Nepe, unfortunately, I am a mere consumer of news from ALL sources: private newspapers, newsletters, blogs, podcasts, text messages, TV, radio and what not.

As such, I am NOT one of those purists who sit on Nepal's Pulitzer-prize equivalent Selection Committee and decide for all what "quality" is and what it is not.

So, sorry, I remain unqualified to comment on the "quality" of researcher's Mark Turin's that comment in one of Nepal's agenda-setting newspaper The Nepali Times.

Rather than bask in my "article quality-spotting" ability (which I don't have at a professional level), I'd let readers here decide what they make of the story by starting this conversation. Tetti ho

oohi
ashu
 
Posted on 03-31-07 5:28 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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It's a different thing to assume that Maoists will come to power in a few years time and it's a different thing to fear about their education policy before them coming to power.

There is a group of Nepali intellects who have already decided god-knows-on-what-basis that maoists will unilaterally sieze power in a few years time.

I find this optimism for maoism amongst the scaremongers even stronger than amongst the maoists themselves. And may be thats the reason why maoists sometime feel themselves stronger than what they really are.

Me thinks that the fate of Nepali politics is defined and determined by the majority of the politically conscious Nepali population, which is always against the extreme rights and the extreme lefts. They have always handsomely resisted these extremes in the past and they will do the same in the future too.

Grabing power and ruling the country single-handedly is not as easy as threatening, beating and extorting some people. Implementing communist curriculum is not as easy as publicizing their arcadian ideology . Maoists have themselves given up the hope for a communist state. If they were such a powerful force, they wouldn't have tolerated the massacre of their 30-around cadres in Gaur. They have learned tolerance in a year. Now as they will know how it feels to be a part of the government, they will understand what it takes to become a legitimate political force. For the moment let them enjoy the honeymoon. We better not run after the crow, when our ears are safely stiched by the sides of our head.
 
Posted on 03-31-07 7:48 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Newuser writes:

"There is a group of Nepali intellects who have already decided god-knows-on-what-basis that maoists will unilaterally sieze power in a few years time."



To my knowledge, nobody has decided anything.
The future is too uncertain for anyone to lay a claim on
it.

What some people, including myself, have done, is this.

A. Looked at what Hisila Yami said in March 2007.
B. Read the comment by Mark Turin Maoists' educational style (as of March 2006).

and then, putting these things together, asked the question:

Is this what we are going to get about education in Nepal?
If so, we'd better be careful.


Nepe is not worried about this.

That's because he's been personally promised by some ICG guy -- with
a crystal ball clearer than Rani Pokhari's water -- that Maoists can't do what they say they will do. So, why worry?

Newuser too has seen the future.

Hence his proclamation: "The Maoists have learned tolerance in a year. Now as they will know how it feels to be a part of the government, they will understand what it takes to become a legitimate political force."


As for people like me, who tends to think about future in probabilstic terms depending on what I read, see, hear and interpret from all sources while adjusting those probilities on a daily basis, that
sort of certainty smacks of sheer short-sightedness.

And if Nepali people were so empowered, then, why the hell have they NOT been consulted about the country is being run since May of 2006?
What are they -- just sheep who can vote?

oohi
ashu
 
Posted on 03-31-07 7:59 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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exacactly my views on newuser optimisim.
i have only one more thing to say .The patience you see in maoist right now is very superficial.Their ultimate goal is not multiparty democracy.Ya granted it is hard to achieve that.Who knew in mere 10 years they would bag 5 ministries - local development,planning,woman and culture..Think about it.I see them marching toward their aim.which is good for them but not good for your kids.(ah.. well your kids will be learning hiphop in america:P)
 
Posted on 03-31-07 10:42 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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ImI...I agree with you ......you see these people dont have a clue or are just plain stupid...........I mean the maoists current activities of how they want Nepal and what their future goal is enough to send warning signal to any sane person but you see there are those who will benifit from this all......because it is all just a power shift in Nepal........... One power hungry to another power hungry monsters
 
Posted on 03-31-07 4:00 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Ashu, I found your first sentence quite assertive.

''This is what your little sisters and brothers will be studying in Nepal in a few years' time.''

Hence the word 'decided'. The original article had something different.

''This is what children in classes four and five will study, if Maoist plans are implemented.''

Unlike you, I don't see the Nepali people as sheep who can just vote. Therefore I am more certain about the maoists having no chance to rule the country on their own than your -that sort of certainty- about the maoists ruling Nepal in a few years time.

Everyone does the same - making observations based on what they read, see, interpret and experience.

Overall its been fantastic. It takes a lot of political astuteness to contain a decade long armed insurgency. Tell you what? Compared to other countries facing similar situations, ours have done remarkably well.

Ofcourse there are Maoists excesses against which rest of all should unite to force them back. But curriculum? Man, thats too far-sighted rather than sheer short-sighted.

Well, if hardly a hundred thousand maoists including their combatants could rule Nepal in a few years, its time for the tens of millions of Nepalese lower middle, middle and upperclasses to pack their bags and leave the country.
 
Posted on 03-31-07 6:04 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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" Well, if hardly a hundred thousand maoists including their combatants could rule Nepal in a few years, its time for the tens of millions of Nepalese lower middle, middle and upperclasses to pack their bags and leave the country. "

yes we are all doing that...that means you too!!
 
Posted on 04-01-07 12:14 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 04-02-07 9:20 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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I had written:
>Ashu,
>I am relieved to see you did not defend the journalistic quality
>of the article. Otherwise you would be dragging me to the ring ;-)

Ashureplied:
>...So, sorry, I remain unqualified to comment on the "quality" of researcher's Mark >Turin's that comment in one of Nepal's agenda-setting newspaper The Nepali Times.

यो आशुले सिङौरी खेल्ने निम्ता दिएको हो कि walk over दिएको हो, केही बुझे मार्दिनु ।
 
Posted on 04-02-07 10:46 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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नेपेजी अशु ले जोरी नै खोजेको हो ल ल तपाईं पनि देखौनु पर्‍यो नि
तपाईं जती ज्ञान कस्लाई छ र :P
 
Posted on 04-03-07 4:00 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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"Little knowledge is dangerous" -- this applies perfectly to our commies aka maobadi. What are these craps going to propose re? Prachando ko gaatha and Hisila ko ... These are trashes of 21st centuray. True, these maoist e ideologus need little more education. They need practical education which they never got. They deserve to go to labor camp. Even if someone quotes Baburam as PhD, show me a single fruitful work he has done in his life. He is a frustrated personality. They could not do what they wanted to do in life because of lack of self confidence, and in depth study. So, these Bhadure GORUs are seeing everywhere green. Let them graze.

Nepe, Singauri nakhelana yaar. Kina hukkka hukkka gareko?Or have you also started seeing commies symptoms??

Kiran.
 



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