Skip to content

Affirmative action? The fallout from quotas

Billy Khokhar blogs about the effect of the Indian caste system on pupils' educational achievement.

04 Jul
2007

What pressure! As if the academic burdens were not enough to cope with, the pupils at these two schools have caste pressures to live with too. They have to endure comments and judgement, from their peers as well as society. Creative Commons Image Ganesh Dhamodkar under CC-BY licence Poster protesting the exclusion of caste data from the 2011 Indian census A poster protesting at plans to not include data on caste in the 2011 Indian census

The contentious 'quota' system of reservations is flawed. Students from lower castes are allocated places as part of a quota, but academic requirements are compromised and therefore there’s no parity. The higher caste pupils are then pushed to achieve improbable entry marks, to compensate for the lack of places available to them through the reservations system. This causes resentment and puts the heads and schools in a difficult position.

To counter this, you could argue that the pupils from lower castes have started from a lower baseline, both socially and economically, so they’re academically compromised and have to play 'catch up' all their academic lives. So pro rata they’re actually overachieving.

In the UK when pupils often win places to private schools and gain scholarships there’s usually a standard academic test that they’ve passed. No compromise is made for class, or social or financial standing. You could argue that disadvantaged pupils in the UK are still relatively enabled, compared to their Indian counterparts who’ve a far greater amount of catching up to do.

Wherever the reality lies, does the caste system resonate as a distorted mirror of the class system in the UK? It’d be interesting to find out.

See also:

Rate and share this page:

There are no ratings yet

Share this page:

.

More like this

Comments

Be the first to post a comment.

Login or Register to post comments

Article Information

Publication details
Wednesday, 04th July 2007
Wednesday, 04th July 2007

Copyright information
• Body text - Copyright: The Open University

About OpenLearn

Hide

Explore

Try

Study

OU Courses

OpenLearn Now

Hide

Tag Clouds

Hide

My Cloud

Discover the latest about your passions - Sign In or Register and start a personal tag cloud.

What are Tag Clouds?
http://www.open.edu/openlearn/sites/all/themes/ole/flash/tagcloud.swf

Creative Commons License Except for third party materials and otherwise stated, content on this site is made available
under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Licence

/openlearn/sites/all/themes/ole/