This Article is From Feb 10, 2018

In New Dress Code, Madhya Pradesh Teachers To Get NIFT-Designed Jackets

Madhya Pradesh's education minister Vijay Shah said the logic behind this decision was because teachers "should feel they are doing a great job" and so that they can be identified as government teachers.

All government teachers will have to wear jackets with a nameplate saying "Rashtra Nirmata".

Bhopal: Around 2.5 lakh government school teachers in Madhya Pradesh will soon have a compulsory dress code. An order coming from the state's education ministry, says that all government teachers will have to wear jackets, designed by National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), with a nameplate saying "Rashtra Nirmata". The order comes after the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government had conceded last year that over a lakh schools in the state had no electricity, over 17,000 government schools had only one teacher and over 50,000 teaching posts were lying vacant.

Madhya Pradesh's education minister Vijay Shah said the logic behind this decision was because teachers "should feel they are doing a great job" and so that they can be identified as government teachers.

"We are just designing a jacket so that teachers can be identified and they should feel they are doing a great job," he said.

The order, which will come into effect from the next academic year, has been criticised by the Congress, the main opposition party in the state.

The Congress attacked Mr Shah, saying the minister has ignored the real issues over the poor state of education and is instead only looking for ways to please the BJP's idelogical mentor, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or RSS.

"Sometimes they talk about saffron then orange or blue jacket when there is no black board! It seems they are not running a sarkaar but a circus," said KK Mishra, a Madhya Pradesh Congress spokesperson.

In a report tabled in parliament in 2016, Madhya Pradesh had received the dubious distinction of accounting for one-sixth of "single-teacher" schools in India.

In an NDTV investigation last year, many government schools in Madhya Pradesh's Shajapur, Aagar-Malwa and Shyopur districts were seen to have dilapidated buildings, leaky roofs, and dingy rooms.

Many other schools were seen to have computers gathering dust and teachers, who had responsibility of teaching only one subject, taking teaching responsibilities for as many as three or four subjects.
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