RISE Working Paper 15/002 - How Do Systems Respond to Disruptive Pedagogic Innovations? The Case of Pratham in Bihar

Author follows a disruptive pedagogic innovation in Bihar, India, from its introduction in 2012 to the current time

Abstract

This paper, authored by Rukmini Banerji, director of the NGO Pratham, offers an on-the-ground narrative of how an idea navigated its way through a changing landscape and played out in the context of established mind-sets as well as entrenched systems and interests.

Tracking the path of the “Pratham-Jehanabad model” of “teaching at the right level,” Banerji follows a disruptive pedagogic innovation in Bihar, India, from its introduction in 2012 to the current time. Any intervention is also embedded in a larger web of cross-cutting interests and institutional structures. On a smaller scale, an individual at the right level of authority can maintain the momentum for at least a school year. But for the approach (the goals and the activities) to become ingrained into the habits of people and workings of the system may require longer run, intensive work, digging deeper into the roots of people’s perceptions and practices. Detailed studies of government officials at different levels of the system – school, cluster, block, district and state – provide vivid illustrations of how different people react to a new intervention especially a disruptive pedagogical innovation like “teaching at the right level

This paper was funded under the Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE) Programme.

Citation

Banerji, R. (2015). RISE Working Paper 15/002 - How Do Systems Respond to Disruptive Pedagogic Innovations? The Case of Pratham in Bihar. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE).

RISE Working Paper 15/002 - How Do Systems Respond to Disruptive Pedagogic Innovations?

Updates to this page

Published 23 October 2015