We are currently witnessing numerous positive outcomes of free education across various sectors, including politics.As Sri Lankans, most of us are blessed with the free education of this country. If you compare this blessing word of “free education” with the globe you would understand the value of this. And we have seen people consider free [...]

Education

Honouring the Legacy of Free Education: The Unseen Value and Oath to Dr. C.W.W. Kannangara

View(s):

We are currently witnessing numerous positive outcomes of free education across various sectors, including politics.As Sri Lankans, most of us are blessed with the free education of this country. If you compare this blessing word of “free education” with the globe you would understand the value of this. And we have seen people consider free education as “education for free” and think it is merely like a product or service given free of charge. In this context, Jayawardena (2013) defined free education as “Free Education is not only to provide ‘education’ at free of cost but to provide equitable access to every child irrespective of the demography, exploit the individual strengths and cultivate good values to become a law-abiding citizen”. The actual meaning of “Free Education”  needs to be the communicated for all who blessed with this as we can see people could not understand the real value of it in Sri Lanka. As per Khosla(2019), “Sri Lanka has shocked the world with its success in its system of education. Within less than forty years of independence, the number of schools has increased by 50 percent. The number of students has increased by 300 percent”.

With this Blessed “free education”, we should not forget the name of the “Blessed person”, Dr. C.W.W Kannangara ,Father of Free Education. This is what I have extracted from the site of  United Nations Sri Lanka  “In 1943, Dr C. W. W. Kannangara the Minister of Education, introduced the Free Education Bill in the State Council. After much debate, it was approved for implementation and on 1 October 1945 the Free Education Policy came into effect. This policy states that every child above the age of five and not more than sixteen is entitled to free education. It has benefited generations of students and has enabled Sri Lanka to succeed in achieving the Millennium Development Goal of Universal Primary Education”. I have seen many scholars on the globe (only a few can be seen in Sri Lanka) write about Dr. Kannangara and his remarkable contribution to the education sector. This country should read and respect this “unsung hero “ .One Scholar Willemijn Wuister( Colonial & Global History, Leiden University, Netherlands) in his study in 2018 titled “Colonial Education: A Case Study of education in late-colonial Ceylon from the  1930s Until Independence” allocated one section for Dr Kannangara and his contribution to the education sector  . Refer to the excerpts  below

“Kannangara proposed the idea of free education, in which education would be free ‘from Kindergarten to  University’, for every citizen of Ceylon.11 It meant that every pupil was free of paying any fees for  education. It took him 16 years of lobbying and advocating in the State Council, before his plan of free  education became reality in Ceylon in 1945. The implementation of this free education scheme put an end to the social inequality that was inherently promoted by the colonial education system. For this reason, Kannangara is remembered as ‘the Father of Free Education’ in Sri Lanka nowadays. Wuister(2108) argued that “A lot has already been written about education in the Commonwealth Countries. For unclear  reasons, Ceylon always seems to be left out of these studies. This is remarkable since a system of ‘free education’ was set up in Ceylon in the 1930s and implemented in the 1940s. The ‘system’ refers to all the primary and secondary schools in Ceylon and other forms of education that were offered, for  example, the University of Ceylon which was established during this period as well. An important outcome of the implementation of free education is that the literacy rates in Sri Lanka have become very high compared to other Commonwealth Countries like India, Bangladesh and Pakistan.Nowadays, the literacy rate in Sri Lanka is much higher in comparison with the worldwide standard. The period in which the fundaments of this system were laid is therefore important to analyse (Wuister,2018).”

It is important to note that “Immediately the educational reports presented in 1944 M.S. Aney who had come as a representative of India to listen to the Free Education Bill walking to Dr. Kannangara stated that had he presented this Bill in India as an Indian, he would have been worshipped as a god. Giving the right of free education to all the children in Sri Lanka was implemented”(Sedere,2016).As Sedere(2016) vividly elaborated our “father of Education” lost his seat within 2-3 years after he introduced free duction to this country “ To the surprise of many the hero Dr. C. W. W. Kannangara who brought about free education and liberated the rural poor, lost his seat at the next parliamentary elections in 1947. Mr. Wilmet A. Perera defeated Dr. Kannangara with the help of the affluent rich and the socialist camp(Sedere,2016)”.

“In Sri Lanka, we often celebrate many heroes. I propose that all those who have benefited from free education should take ‘The Oath of Kannangara,’ pledging: ‘In recognition of the gift of free education, we vow to faithfully serve our nation by contributing to the welfare of the public and the country at large, now and forever.’”

(The writer is a Professor in Management Studies Open University of Sri Lanka and You can reach Professor Abeysekera on nabey@ou.ac.lk )

 

Share This Post

WhatsappDeliciousDiggGoogleStumbleuponRedditTechnoratiYahooBloggerMyspaceRSS

HitAd.lk is the best and biggest mobile phone market in Sri Lanka, and we guarantee you will find what you need here from our extensive listing of mobile phones for sale in Sri Lanka. Whether it’s a budget-priced smartphone for communication, or higher end features with advanced connectivity, there are many different options from which to choose from on our site!

Advertising Rates

Please contact the advertising office on 011 - 2479521 for the advertising rates.