10Feb 2018

INCULCATION OF MORAL VALUES AMONG SCHOOL CHILDREN IN TELANGANA: THEN AND NOW.

  • Lecturer in Sociology, Department of Agricultural Science & Rural Development, Loyola Academy Degree & P.G. College, Secunderabad, Hyderabad, Telangana State, India.
  • Professor, Department of Sociology, School of Social Sciences, University of Hyderabad, Prof. C.R. Rao Road, Hyderabad, Telangana State, India.
Crossref Cited-by Linking logo
  • Abstract
  • Keywords
  • References
  • Cite This Article as
  • Corresponding Author

School is an important agent of socialization process to the human beings. That is why school education plays an important role in one?s life. It is the foundation for development of any society. The teacher is the renowned person in the process of education. According to Hindu mythology, teacher is called as Guru, who is treated as Lords Brahma, Vishnu and Maheshwara. The Guru used to train his disciples at his ?Ashrams? which were also called as ?Gurukula? during Vedic period in India. The teacher has given utmost priority and received great respect from the society during those days. A Sanskrit shloka, ?Mathrudevobhava, Pithrudevobhava, Acharyadevobhava, Athididevobhava? indicates that mother, father, teacher and guest are treated like god. Only the Brahmins were eligible to work as teachers during ancient period. After India got freedom from the British, educational facilities were expanded in a massive manner throughout the country. So that most of the educated youth belong to various castes have chosen the teaching profession by interest. Hence there is a shift in the teaching profession in India i.e. ?from Brahmin to Bahujan?. But in the case of Telangana region, which formed as 29th State of Indian Union on 2nd June, 2014, the teaching community has been changing for the last several decades. During the Nizam period, where Telangana was part of Hyderabad state, majority of the teachers were Muslims. After it was merged with Indian Union in 1948, the government has recruited Hindu teachers as part of promoting Telugu as medium of instruction at school level. Currently, most of the parents are sending their children to private schools. According to Durkheim society is the source of all moral authority. Man is a rule-making animal, and the customs, laws, maxims and opinions of the group are the basis of morals. He sees teacher as the representative of the authority of society, who must take the role of a leader, and develop in his students a taste for the morality of group life. The school itself is a small society acting as a link between the family and outside world. He proposed a model of the teacher today is that of a fellow worker with his pupils, a planner of learning situations and one who works with far less assurance of the desired result than the teacher of the past.


  1. Archer, Margaret S. 1984. ?Social Origins of Educational Systems?. Sage Publications, New Delhi.
  2. Blackledge, David and Barry Hunt. 1985. ?Sociological Interpretations of Education?. Croom Helm, New Hampshire.
  3. Chugh, Sunitha. 2014. ?Schooling of Children Living in Slum Areas: An Analysis of Selected Households from Hyderabad and Ludhiana?. Indian Educational Review, 52 (2), pp 31-52.
  4. Gore, M.S. 1982. ?Education and Modernization in India?. Rawat Publications, Jaipur.
  5. Hai, Abdul. 2016. ?History of Nizams Rule and Education before Independence?. Quest Journals 4 (8):21-23.
  6. Joseph, Uma T. 2006. ?Accession of Hyderabad: The Inside Story?. SundeepPrakashan, Delhi.
  7. Ottaway, A.K.C. 1968. ?Durkheim on Education?. British Journal of Educational Studies 16(1):5-16
  8. Raj, Sheela. 1987. ?Medievalism to Modernism: Socio-Economic and Cultural History of Hyderabad ? 1869-1911?, Sangam Books Limited, New Delhi.
  9. Rajagopal, M.V. 1974. ?Andhra Pradesh District Gazetteers, Karimnagar?. The Government Printing Press, Kurnool.
  10. Ramanaiah, Jaishetty. 2008. ?History and Culture of Karimnagar District (A.P.)?. Jaishetty Publications, Jagtial.
  11. Rao, P. Raghunadha, 1994. ?History and Culture of Andhra Pradesh: From the Earliest Times to the Present Day?. Sterling Publishers Private Limited, New Delhi.
  12. Rao, Y. Vittal. 1979. ?Education and Learning in Andhra under the East India Company?. VidyaranyaSwamy, Secunderabad.
  13. Reid, Ivan. 1978. ?Sociological Perspectives on School and Education?, Open Books, London.
  14. Robins, Kevin and Webster, Frank. 1989. ?The Technical Fix: Education, Computers and Industry?, St. Martin?s Press, New York.
  15. Snarey, John and Thomas Pavkov. 1991. ?Beyond Socialization Versus Development: Kohlberg?s Approach to Moral Education?. Sociological Focus 24 (2):105-115.
  16. Superintendent of Government Printing. 1909. ?Imperial Gazetteer of India?. Provincial Series Hyderabad State, Calcutta.
  17. Vaikuntham, Y. 1982. ?Education and Social Change: Andhra 1880-1920?. New Era Publications, Madras.
  18. Vaikuntham, Y. 2002. ?State, Economy and Social Transformation: Hyderabad State (1724-1948). Manohar Publishers and Distributors, New Delhi.
  19. Vaikuntham, Y. 2004. ?Studies in Socio-Economic and Political History: Hyderabad State?, Karshak Art Printers, Hyderabad.
  20. Vaikuntham, Y. 2004. ?Studies in Socio-Cultural and Political History: Modern Andhra?. Karshak Art Printers, Hyderabad.

[Sreeramulu Gosikonda and Nagaraju Gundemeda. (2018); INCULCATION OF MORAL VALUES AMONG SCHOOL CHILDREN IN TELANGANA: THEN AND NOW. Int. J. of Adv. Res. 6 (Feb). 625-634] (ISSN 2320-5407). www.journalijar.com


SREERAMULU GOSIKONDA
LECTURER IN SOCIOLOGY, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT, LOYOLA ACADEMY DEGREE & PG COLLEGE, ALWAL, SECUNDERABAD, TELANGANA STATE, INDIA

DOI:


Article DOI: 10.21474/IJAR01/6481      
DOI URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.21474/IJAR01/6481