Why education is most important in society in nepali language?
Answers
Explanation:
Nepal's 1971 education plan hastened its development in the country.[1] In 1951 Nepal had 10,000 students in 300 schools and an adult literacy rate of five percent.[1] There were 49,000 schools in 2010,[1] and by 2015 the overall adult literacy rate was 63.9 percent (males 76.4 percent and females 53.1 percent).[3] It has already been more than half decade that public schools started imparting the education in the country. Curriculum developed in the country is not oriented towards the practical education. Public schools are criticized for not being able to provide quality education. Lower-caste discrimination, and indigenous bias are now the primary barriers to equitable access to education. After thorough review of secondary literature, analysis through macro perspective under the influence of critical pedagogy, the following problems were identified: lack of physical and infrastructures, textbooks, a unified national curriculum, monolingual instruction, and a lack of constructive and critical pedagogical strategies. Furthermore, poverty and social exclusion are the major factors contributing to poor performance.