I watched the short clip — a child standing, fanning an adult in a classroom while the adult sat with earphones on — and felt the familiar knot of anger, embarrassment and sorrow. The footage, now widely shared online, has become shorthand for something far larger than a single moment: a failure of care, dignity and institutional accountability in a place meant for learning Times of India. I call it out plainly: this isn’t education.
What the video reveals (and what it hides)
- At face value the clip is about misuse of authority and the indignity of a child asked to do a personal favour for an adult during school hours. Social media reacted quickly — outrage, calls for suspension, and demands for inquiry Amar Ujala.
- But the clip is also a symptom: understaffed schools, weak supervisory systems, lack of accountability, and a culture that sometimes tolerates — or looks away from — humiliations of children.
- Viral videos shape public sentiment rapidly; they force inquiry. Yet a viral frame can’t replace measured investigation. We must balance immediate action to protect the child with a thorough, transparent probe that establishes context and responsibility.
Why I’m reminded of earlier warnings
This moment resonates with themes I’ve written about before: the gulf between policy promises and on-ground realities; the need for data-driven oversight; and the moral imperative to preserve the dignity of each student. In an earlier piece I urged that reforms begin with clear measurements and accountability, not just rhetoric — and that basic infrastructure and monitoring are first-order problems in many government schools (Transforming Education). That diagnosis still stands.
Immediate steps we should demand
- Protect the child first: a prompt, child-sensitive inquiry; counselling and support for the student and family; ensure no retaliation.
- Transparent investigation: an independent local inquiry with clear timelines and public findings.
- Administrative accountability: if misconduct is found, discipline must follow the rulebook — suspension pending inquiry, retraining or removal where appropriate.
- Communicate with the community: parents and village stakeholders must be informed and engaged in remedial steps.
What this incident says about long-term fixes
A viral clip cannot be the only mechanism that surfaces such acts. To prevent recurrence we need structural reforms:
- Strengthen on-site supervision and random audits of school processes.
- Invest in teacher training that includes classroom ethics, child rights and dignity, not only pedagogy.
- Make basic infrastructure (fans, electricity, clean classrooms) non-negotiable — neglect creates perverse situations in hot seasons.
- Build local grievance systems that are easily accessible to parents and children, with anonymous reporting and protection clauses.
- Use data: routine, public dashboards that record complaints, investigations and outcomes for every school. Public visibility raises the cost of negligence.
A cultural question, not just a bureaucratic one
This moment compels us to examine how we view authority in schools. If respect for adults becomes permission to humiliate or use children for personal comfort, then the moral foundation of schooling — to nurture, protect and teach — is eroded.
We must cultivate professional pride among educators. Teachers and leaders who see their role as service to children — trained, supported and held accountable — are the best safeguard against such abuses.
My simple test for any school
- Are children safe and treated with dignity?
- Is there a clear, public mechanism to report misconduct?
- Are basic facilities guaranteed (shade, fans, water, electricity) so children aren’t pressed into service for comforts they should never provide?
If any answer is no, the school fails.
Closing — outrage should lead to reform
I understand the anger. Viral outrage is justified when we see a child diminished. But let that anger be channeled: insist on protection for the child, demand a transparent inquiry, and push for systemic changes so that a moment like this becomes impossible rather than merely punished.
We can do better. We must.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
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