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Education and Change: A Historical Perspective on Schooling, Development and the Nepali Nation-State
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'Discipline makes the nation great': visioning development and the Nepali nation-state through schools
This scene, describing the daily ritual of morning assembly as conducted in an English medium private school in eastern Nepal in autumn 2000, graphically depicts the
disciplinary dimensions of schooling and the very visible and at times violent way in which students’ behaviour is transformed to comply with the norms of the institution. Such a transformation, in Nepal as in many other contexts, is widely associated with a move away from the traditional lifestyle of the locality or village towards that considered modern, developed and more connected with the nation and, indeed, the world beyond
Outward looking eyes: visions of schooling, development and the state in Nepal
This study explores the relationship between global discourses of education and
development, how those ideas are taken up and utilised in the context of national programme
development and implementation, and their further reinterpretation by groups at the district
and school level. I engage in an examination of development as a socio-political process in
order to explore critically the tensions and paradoxes evident in the promotion of schooling
in contemporary Nepal. In doing so, I challenge the depoliticised vision of schooling which
underpins dominant donor discourses of education reform and highlight the political and
contested nature of education administration and the everyday activities in school.
I take as my starting point Nepal's Basic and Primary Education Project (BPEP), a multidonor
initiative aiming to improve access to schooling, the quality of education provision
and the efficiency of education administration. Developed in line with the goals of the
World Conference on Education for All, the initiative starts from the assumption that the
various parties involved - donors, central government officials, District Education Office
staff, teachers and parents - share a common interest in and commitment to the promotion of
schooling. As such, schooling is considered a clear development 'good' and the state viewed
as a single entity, acting as a benign provider of this service.
Through an exploration of the context into which this programme is inserted, the limitations
of this dominant consensus-based model are considered. Particular focus is given to the
multiple interests played out in the arena of education reform challenging the assumption of
shared interests in expanding schooling opportunities. The study traverses from debates
between the various donor and central government officials in Kathmandu, through the
implementation of the process of District Education Planning, to an examination of the
everyday practices of school life and the direct, and often violent, challenges made to the
state through schools. At each level, the conflicts of interest and multiple views of the
relationship between schooling, development and the state in Nepal are highlighted,
challenging the idea that a consensus exists around the content and purpose of schooling.
Such an analysis creates an opportunity for a more critical examination of perceptions of
schooling and the link between education and development and, as such, has implications for
how development practitioners view their role in processes of education reform in Nepal
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