Monday, 26 March 2012

Time for an 'Educational revolution'


Is school education all about securing a seat in premier institutions? At the present scenario, the obvious answer seems to be a “YES!!! What else?” In a famous novel, where the author mentions about getting into the premier institutes, he says, “If you can lock yourself in a room with book for two years and throw the key away, you can ‘probably’ make it there”. This line perfectly explains the situation in our country.
Making advantage from this situation and mentality of parents and students, the coaching institutes are perfectly making a fortune. The parents with the expectation and fear of providing their child a promising future, joins their child in coaching institutes. They are nothing but a locked room with books, not to leave aside the lucrative fee structure depending upon the lock up (!) period, and their proposed coaching method, which gives the parents an elevated confidence that their child will be a Newton, at the end of the course!
                It is after this stage, where the mental attitude of students towards education and learning changes from “joy” to “concepts and formulas”. They are cranked up again and again over years stuffing the formulas into their head, to crack their ultimate competitive exams.
                It’s similar to merely feeding large varieties of datum and algorithm into the memory of a robot, instructing it to perform a predefined set of tasks under respective conditions, which can be technically referred as ‘artificial intelligence’. And it is this sort of intelligence that is being imparted to children at coaching institutes and even at school. This ‘artificially stuffed knowledge’ will have no use except in clearing exams and scoring marks.
                What is the use of solving same conventional problems which has been over a number of times already by number of people? The schools also contribute an equal part in promoting such rotten educational practices. And over the time, the school itself took the role of coaching institutes also, by offering intensive class room programs for competitive exams along with the academic curriculum. Are they providing those programs for wellness of students???... NO, but purely for money. Thus those schools have forgotten their fundamental cause. The sad plight is that such schools are increasing in numbers.
                The middle school level (Grade VI-IX), is the age when students are exposed to fundamental building block concepts and wonders of science and universe. It is at this stage where they should be encouraged to question, experiment, analyze, and feel the science without fear and stress of exams. But unfortunately it is at this age, the children are forced or encouraged to join variety of coaching centers ranging from, IIT-JEE, SAT, to specialized coaching on Mathematics, Physics, and chemistry for their school exams too. At this situation, most of the students get diverted to exam oriented study and forget the real reason for which they should learn.
                It is the part of teacher to kindle the curiosity by asking questions, and not by giving the answers straight away. Teachers should make way for the students to find the answers, as a Chinese proverb goes, “It is better to teach a hungry man, how to fish, rather than feeding him a fish.
               
There is a question ‘How?’ and ‘Why?’ hiding behind everything we come across in our daily life from, ’Why birds fly?’ to ‘How ships float?’ Education is not about last night preparation or two month crash course. It is a continuous process like a rolling stone gathering mass. It begins from day we born and lasts until we die. “Not even a single day should pass without improvement”.
                The solution to all the above issues neither can be given simply in a series of bulletins, nor are the solutions simple to be identified by a single person. As it is a problem which had grown gradually over the years, as should be its eradication too. Like the recent change in CBSE curriculum, a complete evaluation of our education system and redesigning is the need of the hour, as time is racing towards ‘Vision India: 2020’. If this problem is overlooked, then it can pose a serious threat to our nation’s future knowledge resource. To sum it up, an “Educational revolution” Is the need of the hour.

4 comments:

  1. Hi really very nice article... Good thinking.... yes we should improve our education style... Also its our responsibility to guide the students in proper way....:)all the best...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Exactly you are correct,Good post........

    My suggestion is CBSE curriculum is a better alternate to that one but now the situation is most of the teachers in the Govt and some private institutions are don't have enough knowledge to capable of taking their subject which they are specialized and how to handle the subject in the application point of view. So first of all our Govt and pvt institutions take a focus to train them and make them to handle any level standard.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ya yu are right...as per tdy's statistics, only meager 4.5% of today's teacher's have qualified National eligibility test for teaching profession. Which perfectly explains the situation

      Delete