DUNYA NEWS
Live
Entertainment

Shehzad Roy's new song highlights problems in education system

Updated on:

The music video opens with an unsettling but familiar scenario, as Roy questions parents about enrolling an unborn child into school.

(Web Desk) - Shehzad Roy used World Education Day to question whether Pakistan’s education culture is nurturing children or quietly overwhelming them.

Accompanied by students from schools run by his Zindagi Trust, Roy released his new song ‘Late Ho Gaye.’

The music video opens with an unsettling but familiar scenario, as Roy questions parents about enrolling an unborn child into school.

When the confused parents hesitate, Roy appears onscreen delivering the blunt reminder, “Late ho gaye,” setting the tone immediately.

Through satire and storytelling, the song highlights pressures children face long before classrooms ever begin shaping their personalities.

One of the earliest concerns raised involves elite school admission deadlines that compel parents to present toddlers for interviews.

A young girl’s plea in the video reflects this anxiety as she begs for time to simply exist before expectations arrive.

The narrative then shifts toward linguistic confusion faced by children navigating English classrooms while speaking other languages at home.

Roy uses this contrast to underline emotional stress, where discipline arrives in different languages but understanding rarely follows.

The song also critiques the relentless routine of tuition culture that leaves little room for rest or curiosity.

Children in the video visually represent exhaustion, moving directly from school obligations into evening academic drills without pause.

Another segment calls out distracted parenting, where screens replace conversation and children are pacified instead of being understood.

Roy concludes the video with a clear appeal, urging families to rethink education as growth rather than constant competition.  

Recommended For You

Follow Us on Social Media