Education
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If
you ask any family in K.V.Kuppam what is most important to them they
will invariably answer ‘Money’. Not because they want expensive
holidays or to buy the latest fashion or computer games but because
money gives security (there are no state hand-outs for the unemployed)
and most important of all it gives their children access to a good education.
Indian families believe that the best way out of poverty is through
education. If families can afford it they will pay for extra tuition
throughout a child’s education in order to prepare them for exams
each term. Class sizes are large, children are taught by rote and they
are not able to ask questions during a lesson. Additional tuition is
essential for them to pass end of term exams. |
| Most
children in K.V.Kuppam are now able to attend school until at least
10th Standard, when they are 15 years old, although there are still
some children, usually girls, from lower income families who do leave
sooner because of financial pressures. Many villagers value education
so highly they will even take on debts which are difficult to pay back
in order to give their children a chance of a better education. |
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Many families are now choosing to give their daughters, as well as their sons, the best education they can afford and a small minority of girls even marry and carry on with their education if their husband is willing to support this. |
| Government
incentives such as free bicycles and books have also helped to persuade
parents to keep children at school beyond the age of 15 years. |