The Burmese Junta has been doing an excellent job of ensuring there will be no more student uprising. Heck, if there are no students, there can't be an uprising! Ridiculously low teacher salaries, government controlled curricula and costs of tuition have made it so that only those with connections to the military can get a decent education in Burma. Everyone else is left to choose between their schooling and their livelihood.

Here's an excellent article on education in Kachin State, from Irrawaddy Magazine.


School’s Out in Kachin State
By Khun Sam
August 2005

Bleak future for students and teachers in Burma’s northernmost state

Mai Mai gave up on education after her first year as an English major at Myitkyina University and has no plans to revive her academic career. “I don’t want to continue university,” she says. “It’s worthless.” Instead, she spends her time trying to earn money to support her family—something that has occupied her since childhood, when she routinely skipped class to work at nearby jade and gold mines.

Having left Burma for Thailand in 2003, 23-year-old Mai Mai now works as a human rights activist in Chiang Mai and is pragmatic when it comes to how she might have benefited from completing her studies. “Nothing would change,” she says. “Apart from having photos of a graduation ceremony.”

Drop out rates in Burmese schools are among the highest in Asia. A Unesco report from 2004 noted that “only half of children who enter primary school will reach grade 5.” While the military government crows about improvements in education—the opening of new schools and colleges and burgeoning IT facilities—the truth of the matter is that almost 40 percent of Burma’s public sector spending goes towards defense, with combined spending on health and education less than half that amount.

Most schools in Kachin State lack basic classroom equipment, never mind proper libraries or laboratories. Teachers are paid an average of less than the equivalent of US $5 a month—a wage unattractive enough that, even in poverty stricken Burma, there are many schools left with no choice but to recruit unqualified staff on a short term basis. As one teacher at Na Mawn Junior High School in Hopin Township put it: “I feel unhappy for the students because they are being taught by new teachers who only come here to work on their skills.”

Though the Kachin traditionally place great value on education, the reality is that anything beyond learning how to read and write often requires great sacrifice and commitment.

Read the rest of the article here

Technorati Tags: , ,