A few years ago I set off to villages in Rajasthan, Haryana and
Uttarakhand to do a study. I carried with me non-verbal IQ tests normed
on the US population. I administered these to children in the US,
children in English-medium urban schools and children in village
schools. In my sample, Indian village children outscored both Indian and
US urban children in IQ. In a small village Khandodra in Haryana, 30
per cent of the children scored above the 90th percentile. I
was stunned. When I spoke to the principal of the village, he spoke
about how the English class system in India affected the children’s self
esteem and their chances of future progress.
हमारा ग्रामीन क्षेत्र है। अगर हाईर
ऐडूकेशन से टच में है तभी बच्चा सफल हो पाएगा। जब वो आठवीं क्लास पास करता
है, दसवीं तक जाता है, उसमें इंगलिश की ऐसी हीन भावना आ जाती है, की ऊपर
जाता है—काॅम्पिटिशन में भी इंगलिश-मीडियम है।
(Ours is a rural area. To succeed these
children need to be in touch with higher education. However when the
child passes 8th class, goes into 10th, he experiences a feeling of
inferiority in dealing with English; to go higher the competition is in
English).