Coimbatore: With greater than 1,000 executive higher secondary faculties left without full-time computer science lecturers and the state executive reluctant to nominate enough choice of lecturers, the students are suffering.
Only one computer teacher is allocated per school, a government school teacher said. “There are over 2,700 higher secondary faculties in the state. But just one,438 regular lecturers are working in the faculties. The vacant posts are stuffed either with lecturers appointed by means of oldsters and lecturers associations (PTA) or part-time lecturers. The part-time lecturers work simplest three half days per week,” he said.
“It is difficult for even the full-time lecturers to make the students understand the ideas in detail earlier than December with the allocated sessions. We conduct special classes to complete the parts. But the location used to be not tough until the state executive introduced public examination for Class XI and cut up the computer syllabus into three – Computer Science, Computer Technology and Computer Application. We have been taking combined classes for the entire groups. But we can not accomplish that,” he said.
While even the regular skilled lecturers struggle to show, how may the part-time lecturers manage, requested T Arulanantham of the Tamil Nadu High and Higher Secondary school Government Teachers Association (TNHHSSGA). Reciting the new executive direction that states that the science lecturers can be skilled to take care of Computer Science for classes as much as Class X, he said that most of the science lecturers have simplest peripheral knowledge in regards to the subject they usually cannot be skilled to show the it within days.
Insisting that the state executive must appoint separate lecturers for Computer Science, V Kumaresan of the Tamil Nadu Unemployed Computer Teachers Association said that they're willing to show the students if the government lets in, as there are greater than 50,000 Computer Science teacher aspirants in the state. “In 2011, the state executive had recruited about 3,000 part-time Computer Science lecturers to take care of classes from VI to VIII. Half of them had finished diploma courses. The department has deputed such lecturers to take care of higher secondary classes because of teacher scarcity,” he said.
“If the government is reluctant to nominate us on regular basis, we are even ready to show the students full-time and obtain part-time teacher’s salary,” he added.
Only one computer teacher is allocated per school, a government school teacher said. “There are over 2,700 higher secondary faculties in the state. But just one,438 regular lecturers are working in the faculties. The vacant posts are stuffed either with lecturers appointed by means of oldsters and lecturers associations (PTA) or part-time lecturers. The part-time lecturers work simplest three half days per week,” he said.
“It is difficult for even the full-time lecturers to make the students understand the ideas in detail earlier than December with the allocated sessions. We conduct special classes to complete the parts. But the location used to be not tough until the state executive introduced public examination for Class XI and cut up the computer syllabus into three – Computer Science, Computer Technology and Computer Application. We have been taking combined classes for the entire groups. But we can not accomplish that,” he said.
While even the regular skilled lecturers struggle to show, how may the part-time lecturers manage, requested T Arulanantham of the Tamil Nadu High and Higher Secondary school Government Teachers Association (TNHHSSGA). Reciting the new executive direction that states that the science lecturers can be skilled to take care of Computer Science for classes as much as Class X, he said that most of the science lecturers have simplest peripheral knowledge in regards to the subject they usually cannot be skilled to show the it within days.
Insisting that the state executive must appoint separate lecturers for Computer Science, V Kumaresan of the Tamil Nadu Unemployed Computer Teachers Association said that they're willing to show the students if the government lets in, as there are greater than 50,000 Computer Science teacher aspirants in the state. “In 2011, the state executive had recruited about 3,000 part-time Computer Science lecturers to take care of classes from VI to VIII. Half of them had finished diploma courses. The department has deputed such lecturers to take care of higher secondary classes because of teacher scarcity,” he said.
“If the government is reluctant to nominate us on regular basis, we are even ready to show the students full-time and obtain part-time teacher’s salary,” he added.
Govt schools lack computer teachers
Reviewed by Kailash
on
July 16, 2018
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