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Girl students catch up, will soon overtake boys in India

RISING SUN

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Girl students catch up, will soon overtake boys in India
India is about to reach an important milestone shortly. Half of its gigantic student population, the world's largest, will be made up of girls. In 2015-16, the last year for which data is available, girls comprised 48% of the student population of about 300 million.

There has been a dramatic increase of girls enrolled in educational institutions from schools to colleges and universities over the past years. Starting from a mere 25% in 1950-51, the share of girl students inched up slowly for the next 40 years to reach 39% in 1990-91. Then, in the next decade it moved up to 42%. Since 2000-01, it has increased to within touching distance of the halfway mark. Once enrolled, girls are more likely to be conscientious in their studies and complete the course. Hence more girls get degrees than boys.

Why is this significant? For one, this puts India in the company of most advanced countries. In the EU countries, 54% of higher education students are women, in the US 55% and in China about 54%. But in these countries the status of women in society also improved simultaneously. More participation in jobs, more representation in political, administrative and economic decision making bodies, and a better status in society went hand in hand with better education.



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In India, there is a bizarre mismatch between the education attainments of women and their participation and status in all other aspects of the country's life. Participation in work is just 27%, representation in Parliament is 11% and 8.8% in state legislatures, and only 17 CEOs of 500 largest listed companies are women.

This situation represents not just a tragic waste of educated and productive talent of the country's citizens, but also a fraught and unjust situation where a huge educated segment of society is forced to play second fiddle and sit on the sidelines.

While the number of girls in schools steadily increased in the 1990s and early 2000s as a result of programs like the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and the mid-day meal scheme, there has been a dizzying expansion in the number of girls entering higher education. They made up about 35% of students in 2000-01 which shot up to 46% in 2015-16. A large chunk of those that went to school in earlier years, continued into higher education.

Girls outnumber boys in post graduate courses while they are on the brink of overtaking boys in undergraduate courses. In many states and universities this has already taken place. For several years now, more girls are enrolled in arts subjects than boys, but lose ground in science and commerce.
In professional courses, boys outnumber girls by almost 3:1 in engineering but they are ahead of boys in medical science disciplines, mainly because of very high numbers in some sub-disciplines like nursing, dentistry, physiotherapy and traditional systems of medicine.

The large and growing number of girls doing general arts and humanities courses in colleges across the country represents both a lack of opportunity to enter into less accessible technical and professional courses and also the desire of families to equip their daughters as much as possible for future life. Many feel that getting a graduate degree is now part of the preparation for better marriage prospects as there is at least a better potential for employment.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ium=social&utm_campaign=TOI&utm_content=om-bm
 
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the pressure to study and have a degree comes from marriage market... being educated is seen as desirable trait..
boys use education as a stepping stone to labour market, degree is sufficient for most, same for girls but with additional option of getting married and starting a family(no job)... this explains why a lot of girls are in postgrad, their parents are looking for a candidate, and postgraduation is merely a intermediate arrangement.
 
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the pressure to study and have a degree comes from marriage market... being educated is seen as desirable trait..
boys use education as a stepping stone to labour market, degree is sufficient for most, same for girls but with additional option of getting married and starting a family(no job)... this explains why a lot of girls are in postgrad, their parents are looking for a candidate, and postgraduation is merely a intermediate arrangement.
That is a stereotype thinking and way too much of generalization. Maybe you need to reconnect with both urban and rural people to see the Changing realities in our life, I am a example for this myself. Let me Know if you need to understand a bit. Thank you.
 
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That is a stereotype thinking and way too much of generalization. Maybe you need to reconnect with both urban and rural people to see the Changing realities in our life, I am a example for this myself. Let me Know if you need to understand a bit. Thank you.
i believe the generalization holds true, and you are probably among minority...
i forgot to mention that the working woman has higher premium in marriage market compared to non-working one(everything else being same), as boy's side have the option of choosing, whether to boost family finance with second income or not. You might get discount in dowry just based on that factor.
 
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i believe the generalization holds true, and you are probably among minority...
i forgot to mention that the working woman has higher premium in marriage market compared to non-working one(everything else being same), as boy's side have the option of choosing, whether to boost family finance with second income or not. You might get discount in dowry just based on that factor.
Point by point rebuttal.
1. What you believe is true only if you consider whole history since independence however if you look at only the decade data, you will find the figures are very much encouraging and I am talking about things seen at personal level including family and outside of family both. So I may be a minority on whole population basis, however if you narrow it to recent decade, it will be still minority but a significant and increasing minority which is not hesitant in taking things head on.
2. If you are going to treat marriage based on only money or premium, that will not be appreciable to people like me. Marriage is a union of two people thoughts and acts which are performed to make it happen by them. If you don't believe in that, rest is irrelevant to talk about.
3. Dowry is a historical thing which allows girl or boy parent to give them gifts a token of remembrance. It could mean a lot of other things as well but as I am not much knowledgeable one on that, I can't comment in its diversity & benefits.
4. I faught with my mummy against forced dowry and it had nothing to do with the things you claimed in your post. I did it because I believed a working wife will have a better understanding and challanges I face in my work field. A non-working wife might not understand that probably.

Last & closing statement:- Dowry isn't a good or bad thing, it depends how we apply it into our life. And working women are preferable simply not only they understand working husbands but also they add into country's GDP.
Thank You.
 
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Point by point rebuttal.
1. What you believe is true only if you consider whole history since independence however if you look at only the decade data, you will find the figures are very much encouraging and I am talking about things seen at personal level including family and outside of family both. So I may be a minority on whole population basis, however if you narrow it to recent decade, it will be still minority but a significant and increasing minority which is not hesitant in taking things head on.
2. If you are going to treat marriage based on only money or premium, that will not be appreciable to people like me. Marriage is a union of two people thoughts and acts which are performed to make it happen by them. If you don't believe in that, rest is irrelevant to talk about.
3. Dowry is a historical thing which allows girl or boy parent to give them gifts a token of remembrance. It could mean a lot of other things as well but as I am not much knowledgeable one on that, I can't comment in its diversity & benefits.
4. I faught with my mummy against forced dowry and it had nothing to do with the things you claimed in your post. I did it because I believed a working wife will have a better understanding and challanges I face in my work field. A non-working wife might not understand that probably.

Last & closing statement:- Dowry isn't a good or bad thing, it depends how we apply it into our life. And working women are preferable simply not only they understand working husbands but also they add into country's GDP.
Thank You.
thanks for essentially agreeing with me.. the emotional personal side stories are of little interest to me. Do reply when the generalization is no longer applicable(taking whole of india into consideration not just your area/tribe/extended family/you). cheers.
 
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thanks for essentially agreeing with me.. the emotional personal side stories are of little interest to me. Do reply when the generalization is no longer applicable(taking whole of india into consideration not just your area/tribe/extended family/you). cheers.
Sorry if you again trying to manipulate my views, these are just not in sync with your views.
 
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Congratulations India.

And you did not even need a Malala for that.

Women by the looks of it are fighting the female infanticide problem philosophically.

Nice
 
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the pressure to study and have a degree comes from marriage market... being educated is seen as desirable trait..
boys use education as a stepping stone to labour market, degree is sufficient for most, same for girls but with additional option of getting married and starting a family(no job)... this explains why a lot of girls are in postgrad, their parents are looking for a candidate, and postgraduation is merely a intermediate arrangement.
Agree with you. For some education (literacy ?) is just a past time until marriage. These ppl study but % of ppl who really step out or step for the education they have had is very less.
Instead of education I would say labor market would be better indicator of equality.

Half knowledge is a dangerous thing so is this education for past time. Until ppl go out prove themselves in real world whatever education they have is good as useless.
 
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by your own estimation, what percentage of India will fit my generalization, > 50% or <50%?
I didn't give any estimate that we know of, did I? I have countered your off topic opinions with my real life opinions. And I don't want to derail my own thread for some measuring contest! Thank you.

Agree with you. For some education (literacy ?) is just a past time until marriage. These ppl study but % of ppl who really step out or step for the education they have had is very less.
Instead of education I would say labor market would be better indicator of equality.

Half knowledge is a dangerous thing so is this education for past time. Until ppl go out prove themselves in real world whatever education they have is good as useless.
No denying what you are saying but is changing since last decade and its impact I noted not in urban but rural area from where I was born & brought up. We have a challenging time ahead where we will require the elders guidances but will have to apply our own mind & thoughts. Thank you.
 
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i believe the generalization holds true, and you are probably among minority...
i forgot to mention that the working woman has higher premium in marriage market compared to non-working one(everything else being same), as boy's side have the option of choosing, whether to boost family finance with second income or not. You might get discount in dowry just based on that factor.

Not true. Girls are more eager to study and pursue higher degrees out of their own wish.
 
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Not true. Girls are more eager to study and pursue higher degrees out of their own wish.
are you suggesting that boys are more into monetizing knowledge and girls acquire for the sake of it? what can explain the reason for more girls going into postgrad courses... is it because career in teaching/academia seems safe profession for girls?
 
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