Indian schools in Pre British period were flexible institutions. Every village had a school. Each would have a teacher and around 20 pupils. The teachings was oral, no attendance was taken, no fixed timings, no exams and no written notes. During harvest season as children had to work in fields schools would be closed.
The British wanted to reform this system and so they appointed government Pandits to inspect schools and enforce rules. The Government also gave grants to all those who followed norms laid by it. The Teachers who didn't accept this were forced to look for other resources and often couldn't compete with government aided schools.
Gandhiji was critical of the Education policy and rejected the English medium schools. He felt they would lead to Indians developing Western tastes, speaking alien languages and worshiping western culture. Such people would have no value for the nation. He wanted education to be more practical oriented and based on vernacular languages.
Rabindranath Tagore also had similar view but key difference was that he wanted to assimilate the best of both cultures in Education. He wanted schools to teach Indian art, culture and western science and philosophy.
EFFORTS OF THOMSON , James Thomson, lieutenant-governor of NW Provinces (1843-53), developed a comprehensive scheme of village education through the medium of vernacular languages. In these village schools, useful subjects such as mensuration and agriculture sciences were taught. The purpose was to train personnel for the newly set up Revenue and Public Works Department.
WOOD'S DESPATCH (1854) , In 1854, Charles Wood prepared a despatch on an educational system for India. Considered the "Magna Carta of English Education in. India", this document was the first comprehensive plan for the spread of education in India.
It asked the Government of India to assume responsibility for education of the masses, thus repudiating the 'downward filtration theory', at least on paper.
It systematised the hierarchy from vernacular primary schools in villages at bottom, followed by Anglo-Vernacular High Schools and an affiliated college at the district level, and affiliating universities in the presidency towns of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras.
It recommended English as the medium of instruction for higher studies and vernaculars at school level.
It laid stress on female and vocational, education, and on teachers' training.
It laid down that the education imparted in government institutions should be secular
It recommended a system of grants-in-aid to encourage private enterprise.
In 1857, universities at Calcutta, Bombay and Madras were set up and later, departments of education were set up in all provinces. The Bethune School founded by Bethune at Calcutta (1849) was the first fruit of a powerful movement for education of women which arose in 1840s and 1850s. Bethune was the president of the Council of Education. Mostly due to Bethune's efforts, girls' schools were set up on a sound footing and brought under government's grants-in-aid and inspection system.
The ideals and methods of Wood's Des-patch dominated the field for five decades which saw rapid westernization of education system in India, with educational institutions run by European headmasters and principals. Missionary enterprises played their own part. Gradually, private Indian effort appeared in the field.
HUNTER EDUCATION COMMISSION (1882-83) : When education was shifted to provinces in 1870, primary and secondary education further suffered because the provinces already had limited resources at their disposal. In 1882, the Government appointed a commission under the chairmanship of W.W. Hunter to review the progress of education in the country since the Despatch of 1854. The Hunter Commission mostly confined its recommendations to primary and secondary education. The commission
emphasised that state's special care is required for extension and improvement of primary education, and that primary education should be imparted through vernacular.
recommended transfer of control of primary education to newly set up district and municipal boards.
recommended that secondary (High School) education should have two divisions — literary—leading upto university. Vocational — for commercial careers.
drew attention to inadequate facilities for female education, especially outside presidency towns and made recommendations for its spread
Raleigh Commission wass set up to go into conditions of universities in India: to suggest measures for improvement in their constitution and working. The commission precluded from reporting on primary or secondary education. Based on its recommendations, the Indian Universities Act was passed in 1904. As per the Act
universities were to give more attention to study and research
the number of fellows of a university and their period in office were reduced and most fellows were to be nominated by the Government
Government was to have powers to veto universities' senate regulations and could amend these regulations or pass regulations on its own
conditions were to be made stricter for affiliation of private colleges
five lakh rupees were to be sanctioned per annum for five years for improvement of higher education and universities
Curzon justified greater control over universities in the name of quality and efficiency, but actually sought to restrict education and to discipline the educated towards loyalty to the Government. The nationalists saw in it an attempt to strengthen imperialism and to sabotage nationalist feelings. Gokhale called it a "retrograde measure".
HARTOG COMMITTEE (1929) : An increase in number of schools and colleges had led to deterioration of education standards. A Hartog Committee was set up to report on development of education. Its main recommendations were as follows.
Emphasis should be given to primary education but there need be no hasty expansion or compulsion in education
Only deserving students should go in for high school and intermediate stage, while average students should be diverted to vocational courses after. VIII standard.
For improvements in standards of university education, admissions should be restricted.
SERGEANT PLAN OF EDUCATION The objective was to create within 40 years, the same level of educational attainment as prevailed in England. Although a bold and comprehensive scheme, it proposed no methodology for implementation. Also, the ideal of England's achievements may not have suited Indian conditions.
pre-primary education for 3-6 years age group; free, universal and compulsory elementary education for 6-11 years age group; high school education for 11-17 years age group for selected children, and a university course of 3 years after higher secondary; high schools to be of two types: (i) academic and (ii) technical and vocational.
adequate technical, commercial and arts education. abolition of intermediate course.
liquidation of adult illiteracy in 20 years.
stress on teachers' training, physical education, education for the physically and mentally handicapped.
European artists introduced painting in India which was based on realism - The artist would faithfully render what he observed into a canvas. The oil painting were introduced to Indian artists. However European artist emphasized the superiority of their culture, traditions in their art. British artist also drew paintings of British territory in India. India was depicted as an ancient grand civilization that was now declining but it could be modernized only by British governance.
Portrait painting - Face and expression of the Person is prominent became popular now. Indian art used to paint miniature portraits but now life sized portraits were made. Some were used to show grandeur, majesty and indicated status and lifestyle of the subject. Englishmen were the center of such portraits and Indians were shown as servants or submissive. Some portraits were made by Princes of India who used to portray themselves as figures of authority although they had lost it to the British.
History paintings too were a form of popular art. The British victories were shown in them. They were appreciation of British valor, courage and victory however they never showed the true story behind the victory which would be the cunning and the treachery.
Effect on Indian Artists
Raja Ravi Verma
A search for modern art that would be national emerged and Raja Ravi Verma became the first to qualify for such a distinction. He had mastered western style of oil painting and realistic paintings. But he used this to paint scenes from Indian mythologies like Ramayan, Mahabharat. The popularity of such paintings was so high that Princes, Nawabs filled their courts with his paintings. He also started a printing press so that color paintings could be mass printed and cheap painting copies could be obtained. Even the poor could afford this.
Abanindranth Tagore
People rejected Ravi Verma's art in some parts as they felt a truly nationalist art must be obtained from non western forms. They felt the Ravi Verma couldn't capture the essence of Eastern art. Indian art should draw inspiration from the traditional art forms like miniatures and murals paintings like the Ajanta caves.
Abanindranath Tagore drew art inspired by such forms and drew images of mythologies and old stories. But he too was criticized as some felt that mythology wasn't the center of Indian art and artists should depict real life.
British felt that India could be used to grow crops needed in Britain. The dye of blue was needed for rich blue color in clothes. The tropical indigo plant gave this color. However the indigo that reached Europe was in small quantities and costly. Hence Europeans preferred a temperate plant called woad. The European textile owners asked the government to ban entry of indigo into their countries.
However soon it was realized that woad gave a dull blue unlike the richer variety given by indigo. Hence the indigo trade resumed. Initially Caribbean countries and India were the only sources but revolt in Caribbean nations made India the sole source of indigo.
Plantation system of indigo
Ryoti system became the reason for peasant oppression. Riots followed in such areas as discontented peasants protested against the European traders. British government wanted to avoid a large scale uprising so soon after 1857 riots and so formed a commission for looking into the matter. The commission recommended an end to this system and so the indigo riots ended.