Introduction
Sri Lanka has a proud history of valuing education. Yet in recent years, political turbulence and shortâterm policy swings have left our schools underfunded, overâcrowded, and misaligned with realâworld needs. Today, education is not much. In this post, Iâll unpack the key issuesâand share my own perspective on what must change.
1. Political Instability & Curriculum Chaos
Every election cycle brings new promisesâfor a better exam system, reformed syllabi, or cuttingâedge textbooks. But when governments change, so do curricula:
- Math & Science Syllabi Flips: Students learn one exam format for a year, then must relearn fresh content the next. This wastes precious classroom time.
- History & Civics Revisions: Political parties ârewriteâ national narratives to suit their ideologies, confusing both teachers and pupils.
- My Take: We need a bipartisan Curriculum Stability Commission that locks in core frameworks for at least 5â7 years, insulating learning from electoral politics.
2. Chronic UnderâFunding
Despite constitutional guarantees, our education budget often gets held hostage by political bargaining:
- Delayed Allocations: School building repairs, lab equipment and resource grants routinely arrive months late.
- Maintenance Neglect: Leaky roofs, broken desks, and computer lab shutdowns are common news.
- My Take: A fixed âEducation Minimum Spendâ of at least 6% of GDP, enforced by law, would ensure reliable financingâno matter whoâs in power.
3. RuralâUrban Divide
Populist ministers target swing districts with flashy new âmodel schools,â while remote villages languish:
- Resource Hoarding: Urban schools enjoy smart boards and scholarshipsârural ones scrape by with chalk and slates.
- Teacher Postings: Highâperforming educators avoid hardship postings, leaving hinterlands understaffed.
- My Take: Introduce a Rural Teaching Incentive: tax breaks, housing support, and career fastâtracking to draw talent where itâs needed most.
4. Teacher Morale & Brain Drain
Low salaries, political interference in appointments, and frequent transfers sap teacher enthusiasm:
- Frozen Pay Scales: Teachersâ wages havenât kept pace with inflation, pushing many abroad.
- Political Posting: Appointments based on party loyalty rather than merit leave classrooms with underqualified staff.
- My Take: Establish an Independent Teachersâ Board to oversee postings and career progression, free from political meddling.
5. Students at the Frontline
Our children bear the brunt of this dysfunction:
- Exam Stress: Constant syllabus changes and roteâlearning focus lead to burnout rather than genuine understanding.
- Lack of Life Skills: Critical thinking, digital literacy, and creativity are sidelined for âpassing the test.â
- My Take: Shift from examâcentric models to projectâbased learning in senior grades, with portfolios and community projects replacing oneâoff highâstakes tests.
My Personal Opinion
Iâve seen the flaws in the system firsthand. Growing up in Sri Lanka, I witnessed the constant shifting of policies and the crumbling infrastructure in rural schools. Teachers were often overworked, underpaid, and most importantly, disillusioned. Despite all this, some teachers still managed to inspire a generationâbut we can't expect this level of resilience to last forever.
Today, education is not much. In my opinion, the real issue lies not in the lack of effort but in the inability of our political system to commit to long-term, non-partisan reforms. Itâs time we stopped using our childrenâs education as a pawn for political leverage.
We need a comprehensive, non-partisan educational reform that focuses on:
- Stability and Consistency â Curriculum and syllabus reforms should not change with every election.
- Sufficient Funding â Political parties must prioritize long-term investment in schools, especially rural ones.
- Teacher Welfare â Teachers must be supported, not just in pay, but also in career growth, job security, and respect.
- Focus on Skills Development â Prepare students for the future by emphasizing critical thinking, creativity, and practical life skills, rather than rote memorization.
I firmly believe that education in Sri Lanka can be great, but only if we make education a priority over political maneuvering. If we donât take action now, we risk further disadvantaging an entire generation.
âToday, education is not muchâbut with bold, nonâpartisan action, we can revive our schools and empower every Sri Lankan child.â
â Posted on 2025â05â02