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Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan is
an effort to universalise elementary education by
community-ownership of the school system. It is a response to the
demand for quality basic education in Mathura District. The SSA
programme is also an attempt to provide an opportunity for improving
human capabilities to all children, through provision of
community-owned quality education in a mission mode.
1.1 WHAT IS SARVA
SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
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A programme with a
clear time frame for universal elementary education.
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A response to the
demand for quality basic education all over the country.
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An opportunity for
promoting social justice through basic education.
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An effort at
effectively involving the Panchayati Raj Institutions, School
Management Committees, Village and Urban Slum level Education
Committees, Parents' Teachers' Associations, Mother Teacher
Associations, Tribal Autonomous Councils and other grass root
level structures in the management of elementary schools.
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An expression of
political will for universal elementary education across the
country.
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A partnership between
the Central, State and the local government.
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An opportunity for
States to develop their own vision of elementary education
1.2 AIMS OF SARVA
SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
The Sarva Shiksha
Abhiyan is to provide useful and relevant elementary education for
all children in the 6 to 14 age group by 2010. There is also another
goal to bridge social, regional and gender gaps, with the active
participation of the community in the management of schools.
Useful and relevant
education signifies a quest for an education system that is not
alienating and that draws on community solidarity. Its aim is to
allow children to learn about and master their natural environment
in a manner that allows the fullest harnessing of their human
potential both spiritually and materially. This quest must also be a
process of value based learning that allows children an opportunity
to work for each other's well being rather than to permit mere
selfish pursuits.
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
realizes the importance of Early Childhood Care and Education and
looks at the 0-14 age as a continuum. All efforts to support
pre-school learning in ICDS centres or special pre-school centres in
non ICDS areas will be made to supplement the efforts being made by
the Department of Women and Child Development.
1.3 OBJECTIVES OF SARVA
SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
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All children in
school, Education Guarantee Centre, Alternate School, '
Back-to-School' camp by 2003;
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All children complete
five years of primary schooling by 2007
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All children complete
eight years of elementary schooling by 2010
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Focus on elementary
education of satisfactory quality with emphasis on education for
life
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Bridge all gender and
social category gaps at primary stage by 2007 and at elementary
education level by 2010
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Universal retention by
2010
1.6 BROAD STRATEGIES
CENTRAL TO SSA PROGRAMME
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Institutional Reforms
- As part of the SSA, the central and the State governments will
undertake reforms in order to improve efficiency of the delivery
system. The states will have to make an objective assessment of
their prevalent education system including educational
administration, achievement levels in schools, financial issues,
decentralisation and community ownership, review of State
Education Act, rationalization of teacher deployment and
recruitment of teachers, monitoring and evaluation, status of
education of girls, SC/ST and disadvantaged groups, policy
regarding private schools and ECCE. Many States have already
carried out several changes to improve the delivery system for
elementary education.
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Sustainable Financing
- The Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan is based on the premise that financing
of elementary education interventions has to be sustainable. This
calls for a long -term perspective on financial partnership
between the Central and the State governments.
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Community Ownership -
The programme calls for community ownership of school-based
interventions through effective decentralisation. This will be
augmented by involvement of women's groups, VEC members and
members of Panchayati Raj institutions.
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Institutional
Capacity Building -The SSA conceives a major capacity building
role for national, state and district level institutions like
NIEPA / NCERT / NCTE / SCERT / SIEMAT / DIET.
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Improvement in quality
requires a sustainable support system of resource persons and
institutions.
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Improving Mainstream
Educational Administration - It calls for improvement of
mainstream educational administration by institutional
development, infusion of new approaches and by adoption of cost
effective and efficient methods.
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Community Based
Monitoring with Full Transparency - The Programme will have a
community based monitoring system. The Educational Management
Information System (EMIS) will correlate school level data with
community-based information from micro planning and surveys.
Besides this, every school will be encouraged to share all
information with the community, including grants received. A
notice board would be put up in every school for this purpose.
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Habitation as a Unit
of Planning - The SSA works on a community based approach to
planning with habitation as a unit of planning. Habitation plans
will be the basis for formulating district plans.
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Accountability to
Community - SSA envisages cooperation between teachers, parents
and PRIs, as well as accountability and transparency to the
community.
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Priority to Education
of Girls - Education of girls, especially those belonging to the
scheduled castes and scheduled tribes and minorities, will be one
of the principal concerns in Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan.
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Focus on Special
Groups - There will be a focus on the inclusion and participation
of children from SC/ST, minority groups, urban deprived children
disadvantaged groups and the children with special needs, in the
educational process.
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Pre-Project Phase -
SSA will commence throughout the country with a well-planned
pre-project phase that provides for a large number of
interventions for capacity development to improve the delivery and
monitoring system. These include provision for household surveys,
community-based microplanning and school mapping, training of
community leaders, school level activities, support for setting up
information system, office equipment, diagnostic studies, etc.,
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Thrust on Quality -
SSA lays a special thrust on making education at the elementary
level useful and relevant for children by improving the
curriculum, child-centered activities and effective teaching
learning strategies.
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Role of teachers - SSA
recognizes the critical and central role of teachers and advocates
a focus on their development needs. Setting up of Block Resource
Centres/Cluster Resource Centres, recruitment of qualified
teachers, opportunities for teacher development through
participation in curriculum-related material development, focus on
classroom process and exposure visits for teachers are all
designed to develop the human resource among teachers.
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District Elementary
Education Plans - As per the SSA framework, each district will
prepare a District Elementary Education Plan reflecting all the
investments being made and required in the elementary education
sector, with a holistic and convergent approach. There will be a
Perspective Plan that will give a framework of activities over a
longer time frame to achieve UEE. There will also be an Annual
Work Plan and Budget that will list the prioritized activities to
be carried out in that year. The Perspective Plan will also be a
dynamic document subject to constant improvement in the course of
Programme Implementation.
1.7 PUBLIC-PRIVATE
PARTNERSHIP IN SSA
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
takes note of the fact that provision of elementary education is
largely made by the government and government aided schools. There
are also private unaided schools in many parts of the country that
provide elementary education. Poorer households are not able to
afford the fees charged in private schools in many parts of the
country. There are also private schools that charge relatively
modest fees and where poorer children are also attending. Some of
these schools are marked by poor infrastructure and low paid
teachers. While encouraging all efforts at equity and 'access to
all' in well-endowed private unaided schools, efforts to explore
areas of public-private partnership will also be made. Government,
Local Body, and government aided schools would be covered under the
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, as is the practice under the Mid Day Meal
scheme and DPEP. In case private sector wishes to improve the
functioning of a government, local body or a private aided school,
efforts to develop a partnership would be made within the broad
parameters of State policy in this regard. Depending on the State
policies, DIETs and other Government teacher-training institutes
could be used to provide resource support to private unaided
institutions, if the additional costs are to be met by these private
bodies.
1.8 FINANCIAL NORMS
UNDER SARVA SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
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The assistance under
the programme of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan will be on a 85:15 sharing
arrangement during the IX Plan, 75:25 sharing arrangement during
the X Plan, and 50:50 sharing thereafter between the Central
government and State governments. Commitments regarding sharing of
costs would be taken from State governments in writing.
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The State governments
will have to maintain their level of investment in elementary
education as in 1999-2000. The contribution as State share for SSA
will be over and above this investment.
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The Government of
India would release funds to the State Governments/Union
Territories only and instalments (except first) would only be
released after the previous instalments of Central government and
State share has been transferred to the State Implementation
Society.
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The support for
teacher salary appointed under the SSA programme could be shared
between the Central Government and the State government in a ratio
of 85:15 during the IX Plan, 75:25 during the X Plan and 50:50
thereafter.
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All legal agreements
regarding externally assisted projects will continue to apply
unless specific modifications have been agreed to, in consultation
with foreign funding agencies.
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Existing schemes of
elementary education of the Department (except National Bal Bhawan
and NCTE) will converge after the IX Plan. The National Programme
for Nutritional Support to Primary Education (Mid-Day-Meal) would
remain a distinct intervention with foodgrains and specified
transportation costs being met by the Centre and the cost of
cooked meals being met by the State government.
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District Education
Plans would inter–alia, clearly show the funds/resource available
for various components under schemes like PMGY, JGSY, PMRY,
Sunishchit Rozgar Yojana, Area fund of MPs/MLAs, State Plan,
foreign funding (if any) and resources generated in the NGO
sector.
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All funds to be used
for upgradation, maintenance, repair of schools and Teaching
Learning Equipment and local management to be transferred to VECs/
School Management Committees/ Gram Panchayat/ or any other
village/ school level arrangement for decentralisation adopted by
that particular State/UT. The village/ school-based body may make
a resolution regarding the best way of procurement.
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Other incentive
schemes like distribution of scholarships and uniforms will
continue to be funded under the State Plan. They will not be
funded under the SSA programme.
The major financial
norms under SSA are:
NORMS FOR INTERVENTIONS
UNDER SSA
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INTERVENTION |
NORM |
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1. |
Teacher |
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One teacher for
every 40 children in Primary and upper primary
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At least two
teachers in a Primary school
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One teacher for
every class in the upper primary
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2. |
School /
Alternative schooling facility |
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3. |
Upper Primary
schools/ Sector |
- As per
requirement based on the number of children completing
primary education, up to a ceiling of one upper primary
school/section for every two primary schools
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4. |
Classrooms |
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A room for every
teacher in Primary & upper Primary, with the provision that
there would be two class rooms with verandah to every
Primary school with at least two teachers.
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A room for
Head-Master in upper Primary school/section
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5. |
Free textbooks |
- To all
girls/SC/ST children at primary & upper primary level within
an upper ceiling of Rs. 150/- per child
- State to
continue to fund free textbooks being currently provided
from the State Plans.
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6. |
Civil works |
- Ceiling of
33% of SSA programme funds.
- For
improvement of school facilities, BRC/CRC construction.
- CRCs could
also be used as an additional room.
- No
expenditure to be incurred on construction of office
buildings
- Districts to
prepare infrastructure Plans.
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7. |
Maintenance and
repair of school buildings |
- Only through
school management committees/VECs
- Upto Rs.
5000 per year as per specific proposal by the school
committee.
- Must involve
elements of community contribution
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8. |
Upgradation of
EGS to regular school or setting up of a new Primary school as
per State norm |
- Provision
for TLE @ Rs 10,000/- per school
- TLE as per
local context and need
- Involvement
of teachers and parents necessary in TLE selection and
procurement
- VEC/
school-village level appropriate body to decide on best mode
of procurement
- Requirement
of successful running of EGS centre for two years before it
is considered for upgradation.
- Provision
for teacher & classrooms.
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9. |
TLE for
upper-primary |
- @ Rs 50,000
per school for uncovered schools.
- As per local
specific requirement to be determined by the teachers/
school committee
- School
committee to decide on best mode of procurement, in
consultation with teachers
- School
Committee may recommend district level procurement if there
are advantages of scale.
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10. |
Schools grant |
- Rs. 2000/-
per year per primary/upper primary school for replacement
of non functional school equipment
- Transparency
in utilisation
- To be spent
only by VEC/SMC
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11. |
Teacher grant |
- Rs 500 per
teacher per year in primary and upper primary
- Transparency
in utilisation
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12. |
Teacher training |
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Provision of 20
days In-service course for all teachers each year, 60 days
refresher course for untrained teachers already employed as
teachers, and 30 days orientation for freshly trained
recruits @ Rs. 70/- per day
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Unit cost is
indicative; would be lower in non residential training
programmes
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Includes all
training cost
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Assessment of
capacities for effective training during appraisal will
determine extent of coverage.
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Support for
SCERT/DIET under existing Teacher Education Scheme
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13. |
State Institute of
Educational Management and Training (SIEMAT) |
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One time
assistance up to Rs. 3 crore
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States have to
agree to sustain
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Selection
criteria for faculty to be rigorous
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14. |
Training of
community leaders |
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15. |
Provision for
disabled children |
- Upto Rs.
1200/- per child for integration of disabled children, as
per specific proposal, per year
- District
Plan for children with special needs will be formulated
within the Rs. 1200 per child norm
- Involvement
of resource institutions to be encouraged
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16. |
Research,
Evaluation, supervision and monitoring |
- Upto Rs.
1500 per school per year
- Partnership
with research and resource institutions, pool of resource
teams with State specific focus
- Priority to
development of capacities for appraisal and supervision
through resource/research institutions and on an effective
EMIS
- Provision
for regular school mapping/micro planning for up dating of
household data
- By creating
pool of resource persons, providing travel grant and
honorarium for monitoring, generation of community-based
data, research studies, cost of assessment and appraisal
terms & their field activities, classroom observation by
resource persons
- Funds to be
spent at national, state, district, sub district, school
level out of the overall per school allocation.
- Rs. 100 per
school per year to be spent at national level
- Expenditure
at State/district/BRC/CRC/ School level to be decided by
State/UT, This would include expenditure on appraisal,
supervision, MIS, classroom observation, etc. Support to
SCERT over and above the provision under the Teacher
Education scheme may also be provided.
- Involvement
of resource institutions willing to undertake state specific
responsibilities
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17. |
Management Cost |
- Not to
exceed 6% of the budget of a district plan
- To include
expenditure on office expenses, hiring of experts at various
levels after assessment of existing manpower, POL, etc.;
- Priority to
experts in MIS, community planning processes, civil works,
gender, etc. depending on capacity available in a particular
district
- Management
costs should be used to develop effective teams at State/
District/Block/Cluster levels
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Identification of personnel for BRC/CRC should be a priority
in the pre-project phase itself so that a team is available
for the intensive process based planning.
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18. |
Innovative
activity for girls' education, early childhood care &
education, interventions for children belonging to SC/ST
community, computer education specially for upper primary
level |
- Upto to Rs.
15 lakh for each innovative project and Rs. 50 lakh for a
district per year will apply for SSA
- ECCE and
girls education interventions to have unit costs already
approved under other existing schemes.
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19. |
Block Resource
Centres/ Cluster Resource Centres |
- BRC/CRC to
be located in school campus as far as possible.
- Rs. 6 lakh
ceiling for BRC building construction wherever required
- Rs. 2 lakh
for CRC construction wherever required - should be used as
an additional classroom in schools.
- Total cost
of non-school (BRC and CRC) construction in any district
should not exceed 5% of the overall projected expenditure
under the programme in any year.
- Deployment
of up to 20 teacher in a block with more than 100 schools;
10 teachers in smaller Blocks in BRCs/CRCs.
- Provision of
furniture, etc. @ Rs. 1 lakh for a BRC and Rs. 10,000 for a
CRC
- Contingency
grant of Rs. 12,500 for a BRC and Rs. 2500 for a CRC, per
year
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Identification of BRC/CRC personnel after intensive
selection process in the preparatory phase itself.
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20. |
Interventions for
out of school children |
- As per norms
already approved under Education Guarantee Scheme &
Alternative and Innovative Education, providing for the
following kind of interventions
- Setting up
Education Guarantee Centres in unserved habitations
- Setting up
other alternative schooling models
- Bridge
Courses, remedial courses, Back-to-School Camps with a focus
on mainstreaming out of school children into regular
schools.
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21. |
Preparatory
activities for microplanning, household surveys, studies,
community mobilization, school-based activities, office
equipment, training and orientation at all levels, etc. |
- As per
specific proposal of a district, duly recommended by the
State. Urban areas, within a district or metropolitan cities
may be treated as a separate unit for planning as required.
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