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The silent practitioner

Pakistan Observer · Jun 24, 2026, 1:56 AM

Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.

Every morning, a teacher walks into a classroom carrying more than books. There are crowded benches, restless minds and the quiet burden of shaping futures. Yet beyond the classroom walls, where policies are drafted and decisions are made, that same teacher is nowhere to be found. This is the paradox of Pakistan’s education system. Those who give life to policy are rarely allowed to give it voice. Educational policymaking in Pakistan is largely an elite exercise. It takes shape in conference rooms, policy briefs and consultancy reports. Academics, bureaucrats and development partners lead the conversation. Their perspectives matter. But the absence of the classroom teacher leaves a silence at the heart of the system, a silence that no data set can fully capture. For the teacher working in a public school, whether in a remote village or an urban settlement, education is not an abstract idea. It is a daily negotiation with reality: too many students, too few resources, multiple languages and constant pressure to deliver results. These are not footnotes to policy; they are its testing ground. Yet an invisible hierarchy persists. Knowledge is assumed to flow from universities, authority from bureaucracy and implementation from schools. In this arrangement, the teacher is reduced to a functionary. But the classroom tells a different story. It is here that theory is challenged, reshaped and made meaningful. Every lesson improvised, every child understood, every method adjusted—these are acts of knowledge creation. Still, teachers remain absent from curriculum boards, textbook development and policy consultations. Many are highly qualified, professionally trained and intellectually capable. Yet their role is confined to execution. The system trains them to think but does not trust them to contribute. The consequences are visible. Policies arrive polished but impractical. Reforms promise transformation but deliver fatigue. Teachers comply, but they do not own the change. An

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