Tuesday, June 4, 2019
History of Education in Afghanistan
History of Education in AfghanistanEarly ultramodernism to Present Day PoliciesThis chapter presents a chronological narrative about the growth and changes in Afghan field learning goals and outcomes and issues related to ascertainer education in a cultural/historical context. Traditional views regarding education goals and practice brook the basic foundation for lowstanding the progress and quarrels toward universal education in the nation.The historical discipline in this chapter is well documented in numerous sources, as well as having been part of the authors own education as a child and adolescent in capital of Afghanistan domesticates. Important references from which reli able objective nurture was drawn include the Ministry of Education (1968) report on the last fifty years of education, as well as other makes, reports, and documents (Dupree, L., 1973 Poullada,1973 Rashid, 2008 Rotberg, 2007 Rubin, 2002 Sadat, 2004 Samady, 2001 and 2013 Sarvi, 2003 Tomsen, 2011). T hese sources were consistent in their reporting of events related to education progress or decline. Their general agreement on facts enab direct me as author to weave together this history without always attributing the information to a specific source. Other, less central, historical sources are included as citations where appropriate.Although not an Arabic nation, Afghanistan does share the religion of Islam with Arab Muslim nations, as well as the Arabic script essential to reading the Holy Quran. Dari and Pashto, the two chief(prenominal) languages of Afghanistan, are derivatives of Indo-European (Indo-Aryan), not Semitic (Arabic/Hebrew) languages. Afghanistan is part of the historical stream of Islamic finis embracing the centuries of advancement of knowledge in science, mathematics, philosophy, poetry and literature during the historical era when Europe was locked in what historians now refer to as the Dark Ages. The literature of Plato, Aristotle, and other Greek thinkers were preserved and expanded by Islamic scholars who made original contributions in scientific and literary fields. Afghanistan, before modern internal boundaries were outlined, was the place of birth or radix of numerous scholars of renown such as Avicenna and Al-Biruni, as well as the poet, Rumi, whose works are revered even today.This information is offered as a prelude to provide a better understanding of the pride of Afghanistan in its educational and cultural roots, and the determination to restore or theorise the educational legacy and intellectual vitality of its people. The study presented in this dissertation explores the responses to present day crises and chaos in a war-ravaged country as it pillow slips the challenges to urinate a youthful national schema of education that both respects the past and wants to be respected in the global society. Afghanistan now attempts to overcome the overwhelm gap between what is left after massive destruction and what needs to be d hotshot to catch up with the rest of the modern world.Before the Modern EraTraditional education and apprenticeships for Afghan children and youth in previous centuries was centered on the home and the mosque. When and where madrassas (religious schools) became available, they were also accessible to boys. Signs of modern education did not appear in Afghanistan until the early 1900s, around 1903, under the reign of Amir Habibullah who founded the counterbalance secondary school, Habibia Lycee. This school was modeled after the Indian laid-back school program which itself was adopted from the British who copied it from the French. Habibullah took locomote to increase literacy through increases in print media, newspapers, journals, and the reassert of libraries. any(prenominal) school-age childs from Habibia were sent abroad for study, especially to British India. Habibia high school gained a reputation over the years for its role in providing a large number of leaders for the nation. However, the pace of educational change and modernisation was slow.Steps Toward ModernizationA method for teaching literacy was developed in 1906 including new textbooks and a teachers guide. This led to the creation of the Office of Textbooks in 1907 in coordinate to provide uniform school textbooks for the increasing number of schools.It became clear that a standard curriculum, with new textbooks, require instruct teachers knowledgeable in the text real(a) therefore, the prime(prenominal) teacher learning institute, Dar-al-Malimin, was established in Kabul in 1912. In the following year a Department of Education was established to wait on to the issues of promoting chief(a) education. Amir Habibullah appointed his son as department head. Education, free school supplies, and a small stipend were available to the manful students selected to attend. In 1912, the first normal school was established in Kabul to train teachers for primal schools (Ministry of Educat ion, 1968, p. 6).In 1919, Shah Amanullah became the ruler by succession, and actively supported the movement toward widespread national education. He elevated the Department of Education to the Ministry of Education and appointed his son, Prince Abdur Rahman, as the countrys first Minister of Education.Mahmud Tarzi, a reformist educated statesman and the father-in-law of Shah Amanullah, held an influential situation in the Amani (Amanullah) government activity pushing especially for education reform and for the em business officement of women. Tarzis daughter, Queen Soraya, in 1921 with her mother, Rasmiya, founded the first high school for girls, Masturat. Rasmiya was appointed as the first principal. Between 1921 1928, more than 800 females were enrolled. In 1928, the first co-education classes were introduced at Amaniyya Lycee for grades one and two.Under Tarzis leadership other primary schools were established in major towns, villages, and cities. In addition to schools in ea ch province there were also schools for the countrys nomads, the Kuchis. Several new high schools (Lycee) were founded between 1922 and 1930, some teaching foreign languages such as German or English as an attempt to provide an education comparable to that of Europe and other advance nations. Two vocational schools were opened in 1924, one for business and administration and another for fine and applied arts. The goal was to have a national system of schools with a modern curriculum. The beginning of a network of government-run intermediate and secondary schools was achieved in 1928 as many another(prenominal) as 40,000 students were enrolled.However, since higher(prenominal) education was missing in Afghanistan the government began to allow top male students (sons from elite families) to study outside of the country, for example, in India, Germany, France, Egypt, and Turkey. Ten girls were allowed to go to Turkey in 1928 for university study, but this practice was soon aborted re quiring the girls to return home as a conservative backlash grew strong.Unfortunately, conservative sectors in society believed that government schooling was unreligious and if children attended those schools, they became infidels. Conservative traditional sectors opposed changes in the education system they viewed as western, modern, urban, and against Islam. The opposition included clergy, tribal leaders, some rural ethnic groups, and government opposition groups.The unpopularity of Amanullah became so strong, threatening civil upheaval, that in early 1929 he abdicated and desire refuge in Italy. Taking his place as ruler for only nine months was the militia commander, Habibullah Kalakani, who reversed the educational reforms made under Amanullah. Among the first steps harborn by the new Kalakani monarchy were the closure of female schools and the disbanding of the Womens Association of Kabul. The Irshad-e Naswan, the only newspaper published for women, also was banned. The gove rnment recalled the female Afghan students from Turkey and required them to put on the veil.The government replaced the language of instruction, Dari, with only Pashtu in an attempt to bolster the states claim to Pashtunistan, Pakistans Northwestern Frontier Province.Education returned to traditional practices. tender and economic measures, including education policy, aimed at sustaining a traditional agricultural society. The majority of rural communities had no schools and continued the education of their children, in the traditional way, at home and in the mosques.All government schools were closed briefly during this period in 1929 however, schools were re-opened in late 1929 when Nadir Shah became king after capturing and executing Kalakani. Although he at one time had been Minister of Education, education under Nadir Shah was not a central priority. However, one progressive step was taken in 1931 when women were allowed to take health classes at the Masturat Hospital in Kabul . Nadir Shah did support the establishment of Kabul University in 1931 despite the persistence of the anti-modern conservative resistance. In addition, in 1932, the force of medicine was founded.Nadir Shah was assassinated at a high school graduation ceremony in 1933 (Dupree.L.,1973. p. 174). His nineteen year-old son, Prince Zahir, was immediately crowned king, but for many years a proxy rule by older male relatives characterized his leadership. Zahir Shah was king for four decades, from 1933 to 1973, during a period that was relatively free of civil unrest. Some favorable trends started to emerge in the late 1940s. Advances were made in education, the economy, and civil society especially in urban areas during much of his reign, although the conservative Islamic anti-modern component remained strong even as the Communist influence became a dominant disruptive factor. In 1964, a Constitution was created enabling greater citizen participation under a Constitutional monarchy.Higher education introduced in the 1940s included embryonic universities in major cities, most notably Kabul University supported by the United States, and the Polytechnic University founded by the Soviet Union for vocational/technical advanced training. Faculties were established in law (1938), science (1942), and letters (1944). In 1947, Kabul University was formally established. Three years later, the departments of theology, agriculture, and economics were founded. Some departments were affiliated with foreign universities in Germany, France, America, and the Soviet Union University admission gave priority to sons of the ruling aristocracy or sons of top bureaucrats (Sadat. 2004).In 1946, a Womens Institute was started in Kabul to provide classes for a few privileged girls and women. A year later, two girls high schools were created and in 1947, a womens faculty of education was established. Further steps were taken when, in 1949, the first group of girls having the equivalent of a hi gh school diploma began to teach in girls schools.By 1950 there were 368 primary, secondary and vocational schools, and one teacher training school with a national total of 95,300 students. The enrollment of children in primary education was 6% of the entire age group, 6 through 12 years, in an estimated population of 11 million people. (Samady 2001),In the 1950s efforts to expand education and improve its quality were initiated. In 1949, the Afghan government asked UNESCO to send a Mission to study its educational system. In 1954, USAID and Columbia University Teachers College focused efforts on the soft improvement of teacher education in Afghanistan. In 1955, the Institute of Education was created and later integrated into Kabul University.According to Wilbur (1962), in 1960 there were 175,600 pupils in 1,110 primary schools of whom 19,000 were girls. Among the 11,300 students enrolled in grades seven to nine, 2,500 (22%) were girls. Approximately 193,000 Afghan students were en rolled in schools in Afghanistan and abroad, a figure double that of a decade earlier in 1950. Nepotism, favoritism, and corruption were familiar complaints regarding the awarding of foreign scholarships (Wilbur, 1962, pp. 85-87).Soviet Assistance and InterventionBy the early 1970s, about 90% of the Afghan armed forces were being trained by the Soviets. Thousands were trained in the Soviet Union as well as more thousands in Afghanistan. Russia also sent arms and military experts to Afghanistan. Afghan university graduates received fellowships for advanced study in the USSR and Warsaw Pact nations. From this aid and experience a growing elite of Afghans emerged with modern ideas as well as social and governmental sympathies in harmony with Communism. Slowly but surely the Sovietization of Afghanistan was occurring. vertex Minister Daoud enthusiastically encouraged Soviet engagement in Afghanistan, earning himself the nickname the Red Prince.At the time of Prime Minister Daouds rei gn in the 1970s, three boarding high schools were introduced in Kabul Ibn Sina (later becoming Lycee), Khushal Khan Khattak Lycee, and Rahman Baba Lycee. Ibn Sina served as a teachers training institution equipping male rural students to return to their villages to become teachers. Khushal Khan Khattak Lycee and Rahman Baba Lycee enrolled students from the tribal areas as part of the attempt to integrate unlike tribes into the government.In the late 1970s Afghanistan had a functioning education system comprising over a million students including 20% girls in primary, secondary and higher education. presidential term expenditures on education came to constitute 40% of the national budget.In 1977, the education infrastructure could not support the educational demands. By 1978, there were more than one million students in primary and secondary schools and other educational institutions in Afghanistan. Of there, there were 152,750 girls (about 14%) and 5,070 female teachers in primary schools. In an attempt to thin out constrict on both the education system and the labor market, the government instituted the, Kankurexam (from the French word concours), the university entry test at the end of the 12th grade. The main purpose of the Kankur was to select potentially successful university students from the rest of the student population. This test became a controversial but established screening mechanism for reducing pressure on the overstrained university system. (Other spellings will be found for this exam including Concord, Konkor.)In 1978, the constitutional monarchy was abolished by a palace coup dtat declaring former Prime Minister Mohammed Daoud as the countrys President of the first republican government. The Soviets immediately recognized the new government. Not only was the new constitution of the government styled after that of the Soviet Union but also changes in academia began to resemble the Soviet approach to education including introducing co-educ ation, especially at the university level, but also in the reduce schools.However, in April 1978, President Muhammad Daoud was overthrown in what is referred to as the Saur Revolution. Nur Muhammad Taraki, head of the Peoples Democratic casey of Afghanistan (PDPA) replaced Daoud as President. Taraki instituted even broader Marxist style reforms including a rural literacy campaign expanding educational opportunity to masses of uneducated farmers and women. He was not intimidated by the internal conflict between groups supporting traditional systems against the modernization movement. Taraki continued to affront those determined to maintain traditional customs. He pushed forward drastic social and economic measures, including land reform, womens rights and modern education. These ideological conflicts led within the year (in 1979) to his qualifying of male monarch.Prime Minister Hafizullah Amin ousted him as president. Amin took firm steps to quell any opposition such as imprison ing and executing individuals and groups who were viewed as unsupportive. He did not intermit to go after his own party constituents such as former President Taraki or his sympathizers. Opposition, however, and dissatisfaction were broiling up throughout the nation making the Soviets apprehensive about the stability of the rapidly changing government.In December 1979 Soviet tanks rolled into Afghanistan. In 1980, President Amin was removed and Babrak Karmal, former 1960s parliamentarian, became the countrys fourth president.The educational system, over several decades, became increasingly influenced and funded by the USSR. After the Soviet invasion of 1979 this trend increased dramatically. Literacy courses and programs educating about health and technology were expanded throughout the country. Part of the reforms included the creation of a pedagogical research center. In 1981, the Central Institute for the Retraining of Teachers was established. In 1982, the Kabul Pedagogical In stitute was founded. Further academician exchanges were established with Eastern Bloc countries. American and Western exchanges stopped.Amins presidency lasted six years. In 1986, Dr. Muhammad Najibullah, former head of the Afghan intelligence agency (the secret police), became the countrys fifth president. President Najibullah, a graduate of the school of medicine at Kabul University realizing the need for more higher education throughout the country, opened three new universities Balkh (1986), Herat (1988), and Kandahar (1991). However, Najibullah, seen to be brutal and ruthless, alienated many Afghan groups including his own army, but in particular the Islamic conservative groups that became united as the party of the Taliban. Najibullah was obligate out of office in 1992, taking refuge for four years in the UN compound. His own brutal execution at the hands of the Taliban in 1996 precipitated the well-behaved War that eventually led to the empowerment of the Taliban.Impact o f Soviet Defeat, the civilized War and the Demise of Modern EducationBefore the civil war in the 1990s, the Afghan higher education system was largely intact and thriving. UNESCO estimated university enrollment in 1990 at more than 24,000, with women making up one third of the student body. Much of the destruction of Kabul in 1992-1994 was in the area around Kabul University classes were seriously disrupted as virtually all faculties fled Kabul or were killed. During Taliban rule (1995-2001), the provision of higher education was limitedto men only, mainly at what remained of Kabul University, and concentrated on Islamic studies.In April 1992 the Afghan government transferred power to the Islamic Jihad Council (IJC) which was designated by the Peshawar Accords. Within days the various factions collided and Kabul was engulfed in civil war cascading throughout the country. To make matters worse, schools and universities, specifically Kabul University, became the stages for warfare a nd pillage.This had an immense impact on education. With no uniform curriculum, religious education was given priority over all other subjects. Equal education opportunities of boys and girls were snub while religious schools for boys were encouraged. Due to fighting and the security situation the universities and schools were frequently closed. There was damage to buildings and insecurity, which affected school attendance as teachers, administrators, and students became displaced. Even laboratories, furniture, and the electric car wiring from inside the walls of its classrooms were stolen.The rival factions targeted the libraries and thousands of volumes were both plunder or burned rare titles were smuggled and sold off for high prices in the antiquarian book markets outside the country. In an article entitled Raping the Libraries of Kabul details of how the various factions burnt or sold millions of hand written books on religion, history, poetry, and autobiographies of great scholars. From that million-volume compendium only 20,000 books survived. (Hussain, 1998).By 1995, the Taliban shoot downed other fighting groups in the Civil War, and took over the government with pledges of peace and order. However, they introduced strict social policies based on their commentary of proper practices in Islam. The Taliban completely closed down most government schools, especially those for girls. Only religious studies in religious schools (madrassas) were allowed for boys. Still, many Afghans educated their children, including their girls, illegally and secretly at home using pieces of the modern, already discarded, curriculum.In 1999 the enrolment in primary education was 811,500 with only 7% girls. The enrolments in secondary and higher education were limited and the universities were often closed and did not function effectively. Thousands of teachers and education administrators became victims of war, underwent intellectual apartheid, or left Afghanistan d uring the Soviet occupation, the Civil War, and especially after the Taliban came to power.The 9/11 Call to ActionThe Chase for bin Laden, Defeat of the Taliban, and Western OccupationThen on 9/11/01 Osama bin Laden and his pursuit known as Al Qaeda planned and carried out a major attack on the United States. Bin Laden was a member of the Saudi ruling family. He had become radicalized against the West, particularly against the United State. He and his armed men used remote areas in Afghanistan (and Pakistan) for hide-away bases. The destruction of 9/11 resulted from care to the full planned attacks using commercial airlines as suicide bombers, destroying both of the Twin Towers in sassy York City as well as a simultaneous attack on the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. A third part of the plan involved the use of another airliner for a third target in the Capitol, probably the White House, but the plane crashed as a result of passenger intervention. These attacks resulted in the deaths of more than 5,000 Americans in one brief morning.By October, 2001 the government of the United States retaliated, seeking revenge on bin Laden. Other sympathetic nations joined to make an allied force that stormed Afghanistan, taking the country from Taliban control. After the defeat of the Taliban in 2001 many Afghans who had fled as refugees during the years of conflict, returned to Afghanistan to help rebuild their country.As the school year started in March 2002, the capacity to supply education had been decimated in both quantity and quality. The situation of the country was described in this way by a joint report of international organizationsThe Afghan education system has been undermined by 23 years of war, by widespread physical destruction, by restructuring under a communist regime, and by its use as a semipolitical and religious pawn by succeeding governments. The concept of secular education has been under constant attack for decades-first as a source of foreign ideas that led to the communist takeover and then by the Taliban who banned education for girls entirely, and promoted and expanded the system of religious schools at the expense of secular schools (AIA, 2002).The results of the US response, with international support especially from western governments, led to the defeat and withdrawal of the Taliban and the institution of a new western supported (and many believe controlled) interim government. A national Shura (representative convention) was held, a new Constitution for the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan was written, elections were scheduled, and commitments made for a decade of international funding and support in rebuilding the nation as a democratic, modern, technologically equipped participant in the global community.The challenges were overwhelming including rebuilding the entire governmental infrastructure, rebuilding roadways and creating new lines of transportation and communication, restoring and upgrading electrical power a s well as water and sanitation systems, rebuilding or removing destroyed structures, establishing a banking system, and modernizing commerce including all types of products imported for human survival and comfort.The biggest challenge was that of re-building the totally destroyed education system from the bottom up and from the top down. The education system reformed by the Soviets to include the masses had never been fully operational. Educational opportunity was left largely to those who had access to urban areas where even girls were allowed to attend schools at the university in Kabul where co-educational classes had been the Soviet policy. However, by the end of the Civil War and certainly by the end of the Taliban rule, the universities had been destroyed and were barely functional when offering classes at all. As described earlier, faculty had fled or were dead, buildings were gutted and marauded. Campuses were denuded either by soldiers trying to eliminate hiding places for opposition forces, or by civilians seeking firewood. Furniture was stolen and broken up to use for home heating equipment was looted even the electrical wiring was stripped from buildings still standing and taken for sale in the black market. Libraries and laboratories were ghostly artifacts attesting to the destruction of symbols of learning.As the attempt to re-open universities began in 2002, the flow of citizens from the country began to reverse with many Afghans returning from refugee camps in Pakistan and Iran or from other countries in which they were exiled including the United States, Canada, Iran, Great Britain, Germany and other countries. Some of these returning were able to take positions of leadership in the new government headed by President Karzai in a democratic election, and some were capable of restoring the universities and the schools. Stories from students who began to study again at Kabul University tell of walking across human bones on the tall grasses of the university campus that had earlier been a site of warring groups.The next chapter, relating the efforts to rebuild a nation, provides the heart of the dissertation describing the responses to the enormous challenges to the recruitment, preparation, education, deployment of teachers in post-conflict education in Afghanistan. The specific initiatives, policies, programs and problems in building a national corps of professional teachers for Afghanistan in the face of enormous limitations of human capacity, financial resources, cultural and social value differences, are expanded upon in the following dissertation chapters.ReferencesAIA Afghanistan Interim Administration. (2002). Comprehensive Needs perspicacity for the Education Sector in Afghanistan. Kabul Afghanistan Interim Administration.Amin, Sakai. (2012). Modern Afghanistan A History of Struggle and Survival. London I.B. Taurus.Baize, Y. (2013). Education in Afghanistan developments, Influences and Legacies since 1901. Florenc e, Kentucky Routledge/Taylor and Francis.Dupree, L. (1973). Afghanistan. Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press.Hussain, I. (1998). Raping the Libraries of Kabul. Diplomat Magazine.Vol. 8. 6.Ministry of Education. (1968). Education in Afghanistan during the Last Fifty Years I. Primary, Secondary. Kabul MoE Planning Dept.Poullada, L. (1973). Reform and Rebellion in Afghanistan, 1919-1929 King Amanullahs Failure to Modernize a Tribal Society. Ithaca, NY Cornell University Press.Rashid, A. (2008). Descent into chaos. hot York Viking.Rotberg, R. I. (ed.). (2007). Building a new Afghanistan. Washington, DC The Brookings Institution Press, The World Peach Foundation.Rubin, RB. (2002). The Fragmentation of Afghanistan State Formation and Collapse in the International System. New haven Yale University Press.Sadat, M. H. (2004). History of education in Afghanistan. Retrieved from http//reliefweb.int/report/afghanistan/history-education-afghanistanSamady, S. R. (2001). Education and Af ghan Society in the 20th Century. UNESCO.Samady, S. R. (2013). Changing profile of education in Afghanistan.Sarvi, J. (2003). A New Start. Manila, Philippines Asia Development Bank.Tomsen, P. (2011). The wars of Afghanistan Messianic terrorism, tribal conflicts, and the failures of great powers. Public Affairs Perseus Books Group.Wilbur, D., (1962). Afghanistan. New Haven Yale University Press
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