Is Free Education the Reason Students Don’t Take It Seriously?
The answer is: Partly yes, but not completely. Let’s look at both sides.
️ 1. Yes – Free Education Sometimes Leads to Carelessness
Because:
No financial sacrifice is made, so students and parents don’t feel the cost.
Free items are often undervalued — human psychology tends to respect what we pay for.
No accountability from families when everything is provided without responsibility.
Lack of fear of loss — If a book is torn, they think they’ll get a new one without effort.
2. But Free Education Is NOT the Only Reason
Other major factors are:
Lack of parental involvement – parents are not monitoring or guiding the children.
Poor motivation or goal-setting – children don’t know why they are studying.
Peer influence and distractions – friends, phones, games distract them.
Weak teaching methods – teachers may not be inspiring or managing the class well.
Community environment – if the community doesn’t value education, children won’t either.
️ So, What’s the Solution? Free + Responsibility
Instead of removing free education, we should combine free support with student and family accountability:
Practical Remedies:
- Parent-Teacher Contracts
Parents sign a commitment form to monitor child’s attendance and behavior.
- Performance-Based Rewards
Free items (uniforms, books, etc.) are given only if students maintain attendance and discipline.
- Discipline System
Students who misuse books or furniture must replace or repair them.
- Community Awareness Drives
Campaigns in villages/towns to show how wasting free education is wasting a life opportunity.
- Introduce Small Symbolic Payments
Even just 10–20 rupees per month — not to earn money, but to create a sense of value and ownership.
- Make Students Responsible
Give them class jobs: book monitor, board cleaner, library helper — to feel connected to the school.
- Celebrate Role Models
Show examples of local students who studied hard in free schools and now have good jobs.
"Free education is a gift — but a gift must be respected to give results."
Free education is not the problem, but the lack of respect and responsibility around it is. If we fix that, free education can truly change lives.