• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Architects of the nation or objects of pity? why the new generation is shunning teaching

by Sub News
March 8, 2026
Architects of the nation or objects of pity? why the new generation is shunning teaching
Share on WhatAppShare on XShare on Facebook
By: Dr. Muhammad Imran, Department of Education, PMAS-ARID agriculture university Rawalpindi

In the upscale cafes of Pakistan’s metropolitan hubs, if you ask a group of vibrant youngsters about their career aspirations, the air is filled with ambitious buzzwords: “Software Engineering,” “Data Science,” “Foreign Service,” or “Tech Startup.” Amidst these dozens of dreams, the mention of becoming a ‘teacher’ is conspicuously absent. A profound question arises: why has a profession once revered as ‘prophetic’ and placed on the highest pedestal become the absolute last resort for our youth?

What is the visual representation of a teacher in Pakistan today? It is often an old motorcycle, a tattered register in hand, and eyes heavy with the burden of domestic inflation. Unfortunately, we have transformed the teacher from a ‘stature of dignity’ into a ‘character of pity.’

When a young graduate witnesses their mentor struggling in the heat during election duties, administering polio drops door-to-door, or wandering streets for census data, their idealism shatters. They realize that after years of rigorous academic struggle, the reward is not intellectual leadership but administrative drudgery. Naturally, they pivot toward becoming ’empowered’ officers rather than ‘under-resourced’ educators.

In the wake of Pakistan’s current economic crisis, teaching has become financially untenable. In the public sector, the salary of a Grade 16 or 17 officer is dwarfed by that of a junior manager in a modest private firm. The private education sector is even more alarming; dominated by an ‘education mafia,’ it exploits the youth by offering pittance in exchange for grueling labor. When a PhD scholar is offered a meager twenty or thirty thousand rupees, they find more dignity in manual labor abroad than in a classroom at home.

The new generation is a product of the digital age—they are creators and innovators. Yet, our educational infrastructure remains shackled to a 19th-century colonial model. Teachers are suffocated by non-teaching duties, endless SOP compliance, and redundant paperwork. The youth do not want to be ‘clerks’ in classrooms; they want to be catalysts for change. However, our rigid system offers no room for such creative autonomy.

To attract the brightest minds back to our classrooms, we must move beyond rhetoric and implement structural reforms.The government must introduce a dedicated ‘Teacher Pay Scale’ that surpasses the general bureaucracy. Additionally, a ‘Teacher Card’ should provide educators with subsidized healthcare, travel (PIA, Railways), and utility discounts, ensuring they hold a distinguished financial status in society.Much like the PMDC for doctors or the Bar Council for lawyers, Pakistan needs a “National Teaching Council.” Teaching must be a licensed profession. A mandatory professional license will bar irrelevant entrants and elevate the seriousness of the vocation.Classrooms must be modernized. When a teacher is equipped with laptops, tablets, and digital tools, the tech-savvy generation will naturally gravitate toward the field. We must transition from ‘chalk and duster’ to ‘coding and creativity.’Stringent labor laws must be enforced on private schools to ensure a dignified minimum wage (at least PKR 50,000 or above) and job security.

We must acknowledge a hard truth: as long as a teacher enters a classroom worried about their child’s school fees or the monthly rent, they cannot cultivate an enlightened generation. The youth are ready to teach, provided we return the profession to its lost glory—where the teacher is seen not as an ‘underprivileged employee’ but as a ‘National Leader.’

Pakistan’s future lie within the walls of an assembly or a corporate office; it is hidden within the chalk and pen held by a teacher.

Tags: 'National Leader.'"Data Science""Software Engineering""Tech Startup"new generationPakistanteaching
Previous Post

Empowered women is a cornerstone of resilient and sustainable nation, Rawanda High Commissioner

Next Post

Pakistan reaffirms commitment to women’s empowerment on International Women’s Day: Ishaq Dar

Related Posts

The Power of community work: building unity, equality, and lasting harmony 
Opinion

The Power of community work: building unity, equality, and lasting harmony 

By Proffessor Dr. Shehzad Qureshi, London In an increasingly fragmented world, the importance of community work has never been more...

by Sub News
April 5, 2026
March 31 Genocide – A Crime Against Humanity Committed Against Azerbaijanis
Opinion

March 31 genocide – A crime against humanity committed against Azerbaijanis

By Farid Mustafayev Starting from the early 18th century, Armenian nationalists carried out a policy of genocide against the Azerbaijani...

by Sub News
March 30, 2026
The power to Give to Gain
Opinion

The power to Give to Gain

By Erum Masood, Global Media, Journalist. On this special day, March 8th, we celebrate the incredible women who inspire and...

by Sub News
March 4, 2026
Opinion

What the Spring Festival Gala robot showcase reveals about Chinese leap in new quality productive forces

By Belunn Se At the 2026 Spring Festival Gala, hundreds of humanoid robots moved in precise coordination across the stage....

by Sub News
February 19, 2026
Next Post
Pakistan reaffirms commitment to women’s empowerment on International Women’s Day: Ishaq Dar

Pakistan reaffirms commitment to women’s empowerment on International Women’s Day: Ishaq Dar

Breaking News

  • Pakistan LNG Limited issues first spot LNG tender since 2023 amid supply crunch
  • Naqvi meets US Charge d’Affaires, discusses US-Iran peace talks and regional stability efforts
  • Pakistan rejects India’s ‘baseless allegations’ over Pahalgam incident
  • PSL 11: Rawalpindiz beat Islamabad United to secure first win
  • Global Super League 2026 schedule announced; Lahore Qalandars to open campaign on July 23
Sub News

© 2026 subnewsenglish.com

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC

© 2026 subnewsenglish.com

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.