Why India Must Rebuild Its Educational Foundations
The history of great nations demonstrates that enduring civilisations are ultimately sustained not by the abundance of their natural resources or the magnitude of their military power, but by the quality of education imparted to successive generations. Education is the principal instrument through which societies cultivate scientific temper, constitutional morality, economic productivity and enlightened citizenship. Whenever educational institutions become captive to political expediency, bureaucratic rigidity or commercial exploitation, the consequences transcend classrooms and eventually weaken the very foundations of democracy. Contemporary India, despite possessing the world’s largest youth population, finds itself confronting precisely such a historic inflection point. The recurring controversies surrounding public examinations, declining learning outcomes, expanding inequalities, commercialisation of coaching, and institutional inertia have collectively exposed the urgent necessity for comprehensive educational reconstruction rather than episodic administrative improvisation.
Deconstructing the Classroom
Few contemporary public intellectuals have articulated this crisis with greater moral authority than Sonam Wangchuk. Internationally recognised for his innovations in sustainable engineering and community-based education, Wangchuk has consistently argued that India’s educational dilemma is fundamentally structural rather than administrative. His celebrated observation—“Bad schooling is much worse than not having any. I could see the seeds sprout before my eyes, which children only read about in textbooks”—captures the profound disconnect between experiential knowledge and textbook-driven instruction. His philosophy rejects the reduction of education into the mechanical memorisation of disconnected facts and instead advocates an educational ecosystem where curiosity, observation, experimentation and social responsibility become the principal instruments of learning.
Beyond Electoral Calendars
At the heart of Wangchuk’s critique lies the conviction that meaningful educational reform cannot be achieved merely by replacing ministers, transferring bureaucrats or periodically revising syllabi. Such measures resemble cosmetic treatment applied to a chronic institutional illness. He argues that education must be elevated above electoral politics and transformed into a permanent national mission commanding bipartisan consensus across successive governments. Frequent policy reversals accompanying political transitions undermine continuity, discourage institutional innovation and reduce long-term planning to partisan contestation. A republic aspiring to become a global knowledge power cannot afford an educational system whose priorities fluctuate according to electoral calendars rather than developmental necessities.
Guarding the Future
Consequently, Wangchuk’s vision begins with the establishment of an autonomous National Education Reform Commission possessing constitutional credibility, professional independence and long-term continuity. Such an institution would establish measurable national benchmarks, periodically evaluate learning outcomes, monitor implementation across states and insulate educational policy from transient political pressures. Much like independent constitutional institutions safeguard elections, finance or judicial integrity, educational governance too requires an institutional guardian capable of preserving continuity across generations rather than governments.
The Fragile Architecture of High-Stakes Testing
Perhaps no dimension of India’s educational crisis has attracted greater national concern than the architecture of examinations themselves. The repeated controversies surrounding the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), including allegations of paper leaks, irregularities in evaluation, litigation and administrative lapses, have severely eroded public confidence in meritocratic selection. These incidents are not isolated procedural failures; they expose systemic vulnerabilities embedded within an excessively centralised, high-stakes examination regime where the aspirations of millions depend upon a single day’s performance. Such concentration of opportunity inevitably magnifies the consequences of every administrative lapse.
Systems Over Reputations
Within parliamentary democracies, the constitutional doctrine of ministerial responsibility occupies a central place in preserving public confidence. Ministers are expected to assume moral and political accountability for systemic failures occurring within their departments irrespective of their personal involvement. It is within this constitutional tradition that demands for accountability following the NEET controversies acquire significance. Those advocating ministerial responsibility argue not merely for individual resignation but for reaffirming the principle that public institutions exist to protect citizens rather than merely defend administrative reputations. The aspirations of millions of students represent a public trust whose erosion cannot be addressed solely through departmental inquiries or bureaucratic explanations.
For Administrative Consumption Only
Wangchuk further argues that the deeper pathology extends beyond isolated examination scandals into what may appropriately be described as education paralysis—a condition wherein an educational system becomes institutionally incapable of meaningful evolution despite widespread recognition of its deficiencies. This paralysis manifests itself through the staging of educational success rather than its authentic achievement. Public discourse increasingly celebrates board examination percentages, institutional rankings, inspection ceremonies and promotional campaigns while neglecting the actual intellectual development of learners. Educational performance becomes a spectacle designed for administrative consumption rather than an instrument for human development.
The Cult of Certification
Equally destructive is the transformation of learning into an environment dominated by extreme psychological pressure. When a student’s future depends almost exclusively upon a single competitive examination, education gradually ceases to be an intellectually rewarding journey and instead becomes an exercise in anxiety management. Those unable to conform to this unforgiving system are frequently labelled as failures despite possessing talents that remain invisible within conventional evaluation frameworks. Such a system systematically marginalises creativity, practical intelligence, emotional resilience and vocational aptitude while rewarding mechanical memory.
The persistence of rote memorisation further compounds this crisis. Although policy documents increasingly invoke concepts such as innovation, creativity, entrepreneurship and skill development, classroom practice frequently remains dominated by passive reproduction of information. Students acquire certificates without corresponding competencies, producing an expanding mismatch between formal educational qualifications and labour-market expectations. Employers increasingly report shortages of practical skills despite unprecedented expansion in higher educational enrolment, exposing the widening gulf between certification and capability.
Restoring Teacher Dignity through Structural Investment
No educational reform, however ambitious, can succeed without restoring the dignity, competence and professional autonomy of teachers. Wangchuk repeatedly emphasises that the quality of any educational system can never exceed the quality of those entrusted with teaching. Teacher preparation therefore demands comprehensive restructuring through rigorous pre-service training, continuous professional development, periodic pedagogical assessment and enhanced social recognition. Teachers must evolve from transmitters of prescribed content into facilitators of inquiry, experimentation and independent thinking. Simultaneously, academic institutions require greater curricular flexibility, pedagogical autonomy and research freedom if innovation is to flourish across India’s extraordinarily diverse educational landscape.
These institutional reforms must be supported by substantial public investment. Decades of underinvestment have left large sections of India’s government school system struggling with inadequate classrooms, laboratories, libraries, sanitation, digital infrastructure and teacher shortages. Equal educational opportunity cannot remain merely a constitutional aspiration while physical inequalities between institutions continue to widen. Raising public expenditure on education towards six per cent of Gross Domestic Product, alongside increasing research and development expenditure towards two per cent of GDP, would represent not merely fiscal commitments but strategic investments in national capability, technological self-reliance and long-term economic competitiveness.
SECMOL: Where Classroom Failure Transforms into Ecological Innovation
An equally significant aspect of Wangchuk’s educational philosophy emerges through the remarkable experiment undertaken at the Students’ Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh (SECMOL). Established to serve students who had failed within the conventional examination system, SECMOL rejects the assumption that poor examination performance reflects intellectual inadequacy. Instead, it views such students as casualties of an educational structure disconnected from their cultural environment, ecological realities and practical lives. Learning occurs not through passive classroom instruction alone but through active participation in community life, environmental stewardship and technological innovation.
Students construct passive solar mud buildings that remain comfortably warm throughout severe Himalayan winters without consuming conventional fuels, thereby internalising principles of thermodynamics through direct experience rather than abstract memorisation. They participate in developing Ice Stupas—artificial glaciers that preserve winter water for spring irrigation—thereby applying hydraulics, environmental science and climate adaptation in practical settings. Agriculture, livestock management, thermal insulation, food preservation and renewable energy become integral components of everyday education. Intellectual development is thus inseparably linked with ecological responsibility, community participation and productive labour.
The Convergence of Learning and Liberty
The success of SECMOL subsequently inspired Operation New Hope, a collaborative educational initiative designed to strengthen government schools across Ladakh by training teachers, localising curricula, introducing child-centred pedagogy and fostering community participation in school governance. The remarkable improvement in educational outcomes achieved through this approach demonstrates that sustainable reform emerges not from bureaucratic centralisation but from empowering teachers, communities and learners themselves.
Interestingly, Wangchuk’s educational philosophy mirrors the constitutional principles underlying his broader advocacy for Ladakh’s democratic aspirations. His campaigns for stronger constitutional protections, local self-governance and environmentally sensitive development reflect the same philosophical commitment that informs his educational vision: decentralisation, community participation, institutional autonomy and long-term stewardship. Both movements challenge excessive centralisation and argue that durable institutions flourish only when local knowledge, public participation and constitutional accountability converge.
Beyond Immediate Visibility
Ultimately, Wangchuk’s critique transcends education alone. It constitutes a broader reflection upon the priorities of democratic governance itself. Governments naturally gravitate towards initiatives producing immediate electoral visibility, whereas educational transformation yields dividends only across decades. Consequently, superficial administrative adjustments frequently substitute for structural reform. Yet history consistently demonstrates that nations investing patiently in educational excellence eventually reap extraordinary economic, scientific and social rewards. Those neglecting education, however prosperous they may temporarily appear, ultimately confront institutional decline.
Unlocking the Demographic Dividend
India presently stands at precisely such a civilisational crossroads. Possessing one of the world’s youngest populations, unprecedented technological opportunity and immense intellectual potential, the nation can either persist with an examination-centred bureaucracy producing degrees without competencies or embrace a new educational renaissance grounded in curiosity, constitutional values, scientific inquiry and experiential learning. Sonam Wangchuk’s vision does not merely advocate reform of schools or examinations; it invites India to redefine the very meaning of education itself. If adopted with seriousness, integrity and political courage, such a transformation could convert India’s demographic dividend into an enduring intellectual civilisation worthy of the aspirations of the twenty-first century.

M. Shiva Prasad, IPS (Rtd.) is a dedicated law enforcement professional who served the combined Andhra Pradesh cadre before opting for the Telangana cadre. Though a native of Andhra Pradesh, he considers himself a true Hyderabadi with an abiding love for the Telugu people. Driven by sincerity, fearlessness, and a lifelong fight against inequality and injustice, his ultimate strengths remain his goodwill and deep affection for the public and the police force. Today, he continues his mission by writing snippets and articles true to his conscience.
Email: Shivareach@yahoo.com
Mobile: 98480 38774
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