Committed to cause: Principal gifts van to flagging school
CHENNAI:
As a teacher, how much would you give your students? Your time, your
love, chocolates? All of the above? The principal of George Venugopal
Middle School in Mudaiyur, a village twenty kilometers from Chengalpet,
gave his students a van he purchased with his own money.
The Maruti Omni van picks up students from the nearby villages — Narapakkam, Kattur, Thathalur every morning and drops them home in the evening. Each village gets an exclusive trip and 41 students benefit from the newly introduced service.
“I don’t have to walk 6 kilometers every day,” declares the lean 12-year-old with curious eyes. Teachers of the school agree that the free transport service is just a temporary solution to keep the prestigious school afloat.
In the meantime, the teachers of this little school, tucked away in
Mudaiyur, are breathing life into it by giving their students free
rides.
The Maruti Omni van picks up students from the nearby villages — Narapakkam, Kattur, Thathalur every morning and drops them home in the evening. Each village gets an exclusive trip and 41 students benefit from the newly introduced service.
Teachers in
the school have followed the principal’s lead and pitch in for petrol
costs. They have even taken driving classes to fill in for the driver in
case he takes leave. However, Karunamurthy, the principal has taken the
additional burden of paying the van driver himself.
When
Karunamurthy became principal of the government-aided school in 2007,
it had 780 students. Ten years later, there are barely 50 students.
Students have left the 65-year-old Tamil medium school for other
government/private English medium schools in their neighborhood.
“Students
who study here now are from the poorest families in the village. Their
parents can’t afford transport for their children,” said Karunamurthy.
“If you bring a horse to water, it may not drink but if you bring a
student to school, he will study.”
The
van, the newest addition to the school, has become a matter of pride
for students. Shyam, a student of Class VIII is the self-proclaimed
cleaner who helps other students with their bags stowed on the roof.
“I don’t have to walk 6 kilometers every day,” declares the lean 12-year-old with curious eyes. Teachers of the school agree that the free transport service is just a temporary solution to keep the prestigious school afloat.
“We have
to upgrade according to the times. English medium education has become
the norm over the years. We want to begin teaching in English soon,”
said Illango, a senior teacher.
This
government-aided school, like many others in the State, has been stopped
from upgrading to English medium. However, a petition filed by
Pasupathy School in Pandanallur, Thanjavur district, which has been
facing the same problem, was taken up by the Madras High Court on June
27. He has asked the government to respond to this and 19 other queries
pertaining to the state of education in Tamil Nadu.
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