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| Format: | Recurso educativo Open Access |
| Language: | en |
| Published: |
2020
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1267976 |
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Table of Contents:
- Pedagogical Reform at Primary Schools in Nepal: Examining the Child Centred Teaching Shah, Rajendra Kumar Educational Change Educational Quality Buddhism Religious Cultural Groups Access to Education Foreign Countries Educational History Religious Education Student Centered Learning Cultural Context Barriers Equal Education Educational Improvement Teaching Methods Educational Development Elementary Schools Classroom Environment In the history of Nepalese education, 1853 AD marked the entry of the English system of education by the establishment of Durbar Elementary School by Jung Bahadur Rana after his return from his visit to Great Britain. The English type followed the British model of India, which was at one time accredited based on the Oxford and Cambridge examinations. Several other types of education, such as Buddhist Bihar, Hindu Ashram, and Gandhian Basic Education, existed side by side. Present-day, Nepalese school education has been facing two major enduring challenges: increasing access to education and improving the quality of education, which has now been put together as quality education for all. Explicitly or implicitly, Nepalese education documents forward learner-centered education (LCT) to improve the quality of education. Indented quality needs to be implemented at the classroom level, which yet seems not been materializing in the Nepalese context. It is, therefore, essential to analyze various facets of the LCT in the Nepalese context to weave different aspects together to achieve LCT in the Nepalese school classrooms. The major objective of the present article is to analyze the pedagogical reform at primary school from LCT perspectives in Nepal. Thus the present study was descriptive. Library documents and online documents were used as tools for the collection of data. The results of the present study indicated that what has been intended LCT practices have not been implemented. Still, there is a need to clarify envisioned LCT pedagogical approaches and its effective implementation. It will be worthwhile to plan a step by step implementation and development plan and execute it incrementally with emphasis on building upon successes and expanding.