A REPORT
Home Page

The Vision

The Children

The School

The Costs

The Needs

How can we help?


Further details:

Stephen Petter
281 Redcatch Road
BRISTOL
BS3 5DY
Telephone: 0117 972 8054


Dr Eleanor Nesbitt
Institute of Education
University of Warwick
Coventry CV4 7AL
Telephone: 024 7652 2579


This page revised 2002-10-24 by SP

 

SANGAM SCHOOL

Sangam School is a fascinating educational experiment. Situated in an educationally backward area in the village of Indri, Haryana Province, India, it was the brainchild of its principal, Kamla Sawhney, who set it up as a foundation fourteen years ago. The land for the school 10 acres was donated by the village in a quiet rural spot in the hills: a lovely space which sets off to great effect the purpose-built pink brick buildings. The nine-person board includes founder-member and British Friend, Eleanor Nesbitt as well as an Indian Friend, Hari Khurana.


The interest of Quakers in the school is not surprising, for its guiding principles are very close to Friends' beliefs. Sangam's motto is "Quality and equality in education". It seeks to provide a good basic education for 5 to 13 year olds within a caring environment, without any divisions or prejudice according to religion or caste. The word "Sangam" means "integration". No child is turned away for lack of money; parents are asked to contribute what they can, and the foundation provides the rest. The school seeks to provide "a balance between the material and the spiritual; the rural and the urban; and the aesthetic with utilitarian; the traditional and the modern". It attempts to do this by emphasising co-operation not competition, and fostering a spirit of interdependence and mutual respect; stimulating self-learning by use of small groups, sharpening perception of the environment and encouraging the enjoyment of beauty in nature, in human relations and in achievement.


It is easy to underestimate the achievements of Sangam and its staff. Its aims seem so commonsensical, so central to any idea of good education that it is hard to imagine that it is revolutionary or extraordinary in any way. But in the context of the public school system in India, particularly in rural areas, it is extraordinary. Many schools are set up to make money for their administrators with very little concern for the quality of the education offered. Teachers are often cynical and uncaring; a large number of children do not attend school. The result is a system that fails the children of India with a collossal wastage of talent. While we were there, the newspapers reported underspending of public schools' budgets, so that even the basic fabric of the buildings is crumbling.


When my partner and I spent 10 days teaching English at the school alongside the teachers, we were struck by the high morale of the children, who evidently come to school not least because they want to, bright and crisp in their blue and white uniform. Classes are small and the teachers dedicated necessarily so since there is not enough money to pay them the same salaries as public school staff.


The monthly costs of the school, including the salaries of the 10 teachers and 5 other staff are around 500 pounds. Funding is entirely from private donation (except for a small proportion contributed by some parents) which leads to a worrying hand-to-mouth existence for Kamla Sawhney who, at the age of 71, is in need of a personal assistant and, in due course, a successor. A recent donation to provide a sorely needed school bus to enable children from outlying villages to attend, has relieved an immediate need, but reliable ongoing funding such as that provided by regular donations/sponsorship would set the school on a more reliable footing.


But the vision of Sangam Foundation is not for one school in isolation. It is for a style of education that, should it spread through the villages of India, would provide all its millions of children with a first-rate education based on fundamental humanitarian values.


Pic of JKJennifer Kavanagh, Westminster Monthly Meeting, Summer 2002.