Saturday May 31, 2025
Friday, 30 May 2025 03:05 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Introduction:
There was a time – not so long ago – when being a teacher in Sri Lanka was a badge of honour. Our grandparents often told stories of how the village teacher was second only to the doctor or judge. Teachers were highly respected, decently paid, and often the most learned member of the community. Students bowed in respect. Parents listened attentively. The entire village treated teachers as custodians of wisdom and dignity.
Today, that story is heartbreakingly different.
Our teachers – especially in the public system – are overworked, underpaid, undertrained, and undervalued. And in that neglect lies the greatest danger to our nation’s future.
Section 1: From dignity to despair – the decline of the teaching profession
For decades, teaching was the career of choice for some of the brightest minds in Sri Lanka – not just because of passion, but because of respect, security, and adequate compensation. But something changed. Inflation soared. Salaries stagnated. Budgets were slashed. And respect slowly eroded. What was once a noble, middle-class profession has become one of daily economic struggle.
Consider this:
The result? Top university graduates increasingly avoid teaching. The best minds are moving to IT, banking, marketing, or migrating altogether. What’s left is a profession in crisis – one that the country has not prioritised.
Section 2: Salary is just the beginning – we need to invest in human capital
Let’s be clear. This is not just about giving teachers a raise. It’s about recognising teaching as a strategic national investment.
We are not just paying salaries. We are shaping the future workforce.
Section 3: The global and regional benchmark – how far behind we are
When we compare Sri Lanka to our regional peers and global examples, the picture is sobering:
Meanwhile, in Sri Lanka:
Section 4: What needs to change – the 3 pillars of a national teaching reform
1.Pay teachers what they deserve
2.Train and upskill teachers continuously
3.Restore dignity and prestige to the profession
Section 5: The economic multiplier of great teachers
This is not just about fairness. It’s about smart economics.
Every rupee invested in teacher quality yields exponential returns:
And yet, Sri Lanka still spends less than 2% of GDP on public education - well below global standards.
The numbers don’t lie – public education is the heartbeat of Sri Lanka
Let us look at the numbers – not just as statistics, but as the pulse of a nation.
Over 96% of all students in Sri Lanka – nearly 4 million children – attend government schools. They are taught, mentored, and shaped by over 236,000 public school teachers. In contrast, only around 3% attend private schools, and an even smaller number attend international schools.
These aren’t just figures. They are the future farmers, engineers, entrepreneurs, artists, civil servants, and leaders of our country.
If we neglect the public education system, we are neglecting the majority of our people. If we underpay our teachers, we are underinvesting in the very architects of our human capital. If we leave public schools to survive on scraps, we will breed inequality and despair, not innovation or unity.
Because at the end of the day: A nation is built by its people. People are built in their childhood. And childhood is shaped in classrooms – by teachers. This is why the path to national greatness doesn’t begin at the top. It begins in every school, every village, every chalkboard, and every teacher who believes in their students.
Conclusion:
If we want a better Sri Lanka, start by empowering its teachers
A nation cannot rise without those who teach it to walk. If we want better schools, we must first value the people who run them. If we want to close the inequality gap, it starts with well-paid, well-trained teachers. If we want innovation, ethics, and excellence in the next generation – then invest in those shaping that generation today.
Let this be the decade we turned the tide.
Call to action:
If you are a parent, a citizen, a student, a policymaker – this concerns you.
(The writer is an Educator, Harvard Alumnus, Founder – Academics Group, President – Harvard Club of Sri Lanka.)
Discover Kapruka, the leading online shopping platform in Sri Lanka, where you can conveniently send Gifts and Flowers to your loved ones for any event including Valentine ’s Day. Explore a wide range of popular Shopping Categories on Kapruka, including Toys, Groceries, Electronics, Birthday Cakes, Fruits, Chocolates, Flower Bouquets, Clothing, Watches, Lingerie, Gift Sets and Jewellery. Also if you’re interested in selling with Kapruka, Partner Central by Kapruka is the best solution to start with. Moreover, through Kapruka Global Shop, you can also enjoy the convenience of purchasing products from renowned platforms like Amazon and eBay and have them delivered to Sri Lanka.
Discover Kapruka, the leading online shopping platform in Sri Lanka, where you can conveniently send Gifts and Flowers to your loved ones for any event including Valentine ’s Day. Explore a wide range of popular Shopping Categories on Kapruka, including Toys, Groceries, Electronics, Birthday Cakes, Fruits, Chocolates, Flower Bouquets, Clothing, Watches, Lingerie, Gift Sets and Jewellery. Also if you’re interested in selling with Kapruka, Partner Central by Kapruka is the best solution to start with. Moreover, through Kapruka Global Shop, you can also enjoy the convenience of purchasing products from renowned platforms like Amazon and eBay and have them delivered to Sri Lanka.