Gurukul and Deschooling: A Critical Comparative Inquiry into Alternative Education Models

Authors

Dr. Vikas Sharma

Department of Commerce, Bareilly College, MJP Rohilkhand University, Bareilly (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.1303000138

Subject Category: Education

Volume/Issue: 13/3 | Page No: 1597-1604

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-03-19

Accepted: 2026-03-24

Published: 2026-04-08

Abstract

The contemporary education system has come under growing scrutiny for its rigid institutional structure, standardised curriculum, and its overriding emphasis on certification rather than genuine learning. Students across the world are increasingly processed through systems that reward compliance and recall over curiosity, creativity, and character development. In response to these deep-rooted limitations, the Austrian philosopher Ivan Illich (1971) proposed the radical concept of deschooling — a fundamental reimagining of education that moves away from compulsory institutional schooling toward decentralised, self-directed, and community-embedded learning. Illich argued that schools, as currently structured, serve institutional interests far more than the interests of individual learners or society as a whole. Interestingly, many of the principles Illich articulated find a striking and largely unacknowledged parallel in the ancient Indian Gurukul system, which flourished centuries before modern schooling emerged. In the Gurukul tradition, students lived and learned alongside a wise teacher in a community setting, developing knowledge, character, and practical wisdom through direct engagement with life rather than through textbook instruction. This paper undertakes a critical conceptual analysis of the correlation between the Gurukul tradition and the deschooling philosophy, supported by real-world examples of contemporary initiatives. Through a systematic comparison of their foundational principles, pedagogical approaches, and social orientations, the study identifies significant areas of convergence — including experiential learning, the role of the teacher as guide rather than authority, the flexibility of the curriculum, and the centrality of community in the educational process. The paper also honestly acknowledges the points of divergence, particularly the Gurukul system’s deep-rooted exclusions of women and lower-caste communities, and connects both traditions to current global education reform debates. The study concludes that a thoughtful and inclusive integration of both models holds genuine promise for reforming contemporary education in ways that are more humane, equitable, and deeply meaningful.

Keywords

Gurukul System, Deschooling, Alternative Education, Experiential Learning

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References

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