Bihar committed to providing quality education: Minister

Updated - September 16, 2016 04:56 pm IST

Published - June 29, 2016 12:00 am IST - Patna:

PATNA ,BIHAR,28/06/2016: Shanta Sinha, former chairperson national commission for the protection of child right (NCPCR) with Bihar Education Minister Ashok Chaudhary launching the "State of the World's Children Report 2016" , in Patna on 28/06/2016.

 Photo: Ranjeet Kumar


                                                                                         
 



                                      

PATNA ,BIHAR,28/06/2016: Shanta Sinha, former chairperson national commission for the protection of child right (NCPCR) with Bihar Education Minister Ashok Chaudhary launching the "State of the World's Children Report 2016" , in Patna on 28/06/2016.

 Photo: Ranjeet Kumar


 
 



 

Amid the hullabaloo over Bihar toppers scam, State Education Minister Ashok Choudhary on Tuesday said the government is committed to provide quality education and that school drop-out rate has declined significantly in last few years.

“The State government has worked a lot on development of infrastructure. We are contemplating as how to ensure quality education. In his ‘seven resolves’, the Chief Minister has included quality education. The government is sensitive and committed towards providing quality education,” Mr Choudhary said after releasing UNICEF report ‘The State of the World’s Children: A Fair Chance to Every Child’.

He also released a ‘Teachers’ handbook on inclusive learning for secondary schools in Bihar’ prepared by Bihar Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad (BMSP) with the support from the UNICEF. Stating that a lot of development work has taken place in education sector in the past one decade, the Minister said development meant investment in people, especially in children, and for this everyone concerned should work for ensuring quality education.

Talking about drop-out rates, Mr Choudhary said that they have declined to 2.1 per cent in 2014-15 from 11.4 per cent in 2006.

Similarly, the student-teacher ratio had also improved in the State. There was one teacher for 78 students in 2004-05, but now there was one teacher for 50 students in 2014-15, he said, adding that the State government was spending Rs.2,200 crore with the help of World Bank for imparting training to teachers by 2020.

Stating that there has been a significant change in enrolment at elementary levels, the Minister said that gross enrolment ratio at primary level had registered an increase from 86 per cent in 2007 to almost 99.9 per cent in 2015 while in case of upper primary NER (net enrolment ratio) had increased from as low as 32.7 per cent to 87.6 per cent. - PTI

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