Environmental Sciences, asked by ohedabibi225, 2 days ago

give 5 point of disadvantages of segregation​

Answers

Answered by vaishnavipatil21jan
1

Answer:

Explanation:

“Men and women of all races are born with the same range of abilities. But ability is not just the

product of birth. Ability is stretched or stunted by the family that you live with, and the

neighborhood you live in—by the school you go to and the poverty or the richness of your

surroundings. It is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing upon the little infant, the

child, and finally the man.”

President Lyndon B. Johnson

Answered by mayekararyan2010
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

The manner in which privatisation in elementary education in India changes student composition, which then creates segregation across school types, is analysed. A unique situation where reproduction of the already existing advantage–disadvantage continuum across social groups gets reinforced, children from the historically deprived socio-economic groups are largely confined to public-funded schools.

The socio-economic diversity among students in a school has a critical role in developing an effective school system. The composition of students in school by ethnicity and social class may influence students’ academic performance, emotional development, attitude towards others, as well as the effective preparing of people for democratic citizenship (Croxford and Paterson 2006). Efforts at developing a singular public education system with participation from every corner of society has been systematically undermined due to the growth of multi-modal and plural management systems, particularly in the school education sector. In India, besides the binary of the public—state/local bodies—and private, there are several grades of public institutions, each drawing its clientele from specific classes of households and occupational categories. At the bottom of the school system are schools those run by the village panchayats, municipalities and other local bodies; education departments of the respective states; Kendriya Vidyalayas; schools by various wings of the defence forces and police departments, railways, and social welfare departments; tribal councils; and various private but government-aided schools. It is also true that the private sector is equally diverse and therefore cannot be considered as a monolith. In all such institutions, the representation of socio-economically deprived groups tends to vary significantly.

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