Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

#TeachersDay: Thoughts on Reforming Education



It is another Teachers' Day on Sept. 5th, at least in India. I believe it is celebrated on several different days around the world. Whatever be the date, the idea is similar: celebrate and honor the contribution of teachers in our lives.

But, does the world really value teachers highly today? How have teaching and the teachers around us changed over time -- over years, decades, centuries? And what about the students? Are they really putting their best foot forward and giving it their best shot -- like Arjuna did when he pierced the eye of the revolving fish with his arrow in that famous story from the Indian epic Mahabharata?

In a world getting hotter, more crowded and ever more chaotic with each passing day, these are questions worth pondering -- because the students of today will inherit that world and make it worse or less worse (making it better seems a slippery possibility, but that is for another blog post :)

As far as India is concerned, what I have noticed is that the overall quality of teaching and teachers has been coming down -- ironically, in the midst of an abundance of knowledge available through the greatest library ever created on Earth, the Internet. Barring perhaps a few hundred schools in a country of 1.3 billion people, the quality of teaching -- and consequently, of learning -- is of grave concern, as survey after survey has pointed out in recent times.

On the brighter side, there seems to be a new movement in education that talks about things like blended learning, self-paced learning, life coaching and other progressive ideas. Driven by online lectures, knowledge repositories and the growing capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI), new education ventures seem to be sprouting up all over.

However, in the midst of these mushrooming novelties, I think some fundamental things are still missing and we have quite a distance to cover before we can bridge the gap between a child's true potential and helping her realize it to the full or near-full level.

First of all, we need to completely overhaul how we currently build and run schools. We have all heard of that famous quote about not letting our "schooling" interfere with our "education" (the quote is often attributed to the writer Mark Twain but possibly it was Grant Allen who first expressed such sentiments as long back as the 1890s).

Whoever said it, we are still stuck with the dissonance between the two: schooling and education.
I was fortunate to have met or studied under some honest and dedicated teachers. I'm reminded of this definition by one such teacher (with inspiration possibly from the Swiss educational reformer Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi): he once told us that true education is the harmonious development of the three H's -- hand, head and heart.

Unfortunately, the schools we so earnestly built became places where hundreds of thousands of students "reluctantly went" to "mug up or cram their lessons" by rote learning. Some of those students developed keen interest in studies and turned out to be the brightest ones, acing the toughest competitive exams (and often going abroad for "higher research or studies" to succeed commercially). But they did so mostly on their own initiative and supported by private coaching/tuition, etc. The typical institution of school had little to do with their success.

In today's knowledge-rich world, (super) specialization is very much required. But I think we need to relook at the stage a child is encouraged or nudged to pursue such a specialization and not take the cookie-cutter approach (10+2 or whatever) we have traditionally been taking.

Rather than build walled classrooms where students are bunched together and given (mostly) insipid, boring "lessons" -- which most teachers now, by the way, are just too keen to "finish off" so that the syllabus is "covered" -- we must make schools into happy, joyous, fun-filled "sanctuaries for children" if you will, where they discover the importance of learning in life, are given multiple chances to identify their interests and pursue those interests with the guidance of teachers genuinely interested in their life-success.

Alas, what we have in most places in India is the spectacle of students ferrying bagfuls of books and notebooks back and forth between home and school. The things they most look forward to when going to school is not the joy of learning but the company of their friends (which is fine as an important add-on).

The curricula, too, need to be totally revamped for New Age learning. The question of why they are learning something and its practical applications (or significance of applications) is as important as what they are learning -- in order for them to show genuine interest and be more curious about the subject at hand.

Chinese philosopher Confucius is said to have remarked, "I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand," way back around fifth century BCE (that's when he lived, right?) But in India the majority of schools are ill-equipped to show their students how things work or enable them to "understand by doing." Their typical approach? "Here, take these dense texts and just mug them up."

This is not to belittle the role of memory in learning. In fact, India has the oldest (and at its peak the most advanced) tradition of auditory learning -- writing of the texts came much later. But the keyword in all learning is "understanding" -- which goes for a toss when the emphasis is merely on cramming, even in higher grades when students have better grasping and perspective prowess.

The need of the hour is a revolution, not just an evolution, in learning.

Happy Teachers' Day -- nay, change that to Happy Teaching and Learning Age!

(Image: Google.com)


Friday, July 27, 2018

How to Be Your Own Guru

Image: Pixabay.com

Can you recall a teacher you have studied under or met in your life whom you can call a true guru? One who not only taught a subject - but guided you through the ups and downs of life? Do you know someone who is up there among the highest mortals, imbuing you with their intelligence and helping you grow some of your own?

In the ancient Indian culture, the Sanskrit word 'guru' means one who shows you the light.

Some traditional pictures depict gurus sitting under the banyan or peepul tree, surrounded by ardent disciples listening intently to the often-bearded figures (the Buddha, the Jain Tirthankaras and a few others, however, are usually shown clean-shaven and radiating wisdom).

Such gurus could expound on the science of archery or the dilemmas of a king as easily as the ethical questions arising in the mind of a spiritual seeker.

Alas, in our current age of electricity, smartphones and artificial intelligence, trying to find a true guru sounds like a dumb idea. Why, haven't we already seen too many babas - bearded or otherwise - falling prey to the lure of lust and lucre? And while these 'fake gurus' are often glib-talkers who have mugged up tons of religious literature, listening to them involves more pain than pleasure - forget about spiritual delight.

Rather than radiate wisdom, they exude wealth.

Instead of simplicity, their appearance reveals affectedness.

No thatched huts and long walks for them - but a retinue of confidants officiously commanding the Mercs and the Audis to take them to their mansions often as palatial as their egos.

Enough madness.

Where does that leave you, a seeker in search of a spiritual guru? How on earth are you going to find a divine persona to show you the light and guide you on a path you can proudly call your dharma?

It doesn't look likely in this largely chaotic, greed-infested world where anyone you may repose your faith in today could turn out to be just another impostor tomorrow: there are too many of them in the swindlers list!

(Also read: My Experiments with Sudarshan Kriya, Pranayama and Meditation)

What, then?

Who, where, how, when?

Now, just do as I say. Stand in front of a mirror. Take a deep, penetrative look at the face staring at you. Frown, smile or make faces for a while if that helps. But come back to the gaze. You gazing at you - like never before.

Do it for a few seconds, minutes, hours...length of time does not matter, strength and sincerity of the gaze does. (But hey, don't do it for days or weeks, okay :)

What words come to your mind, what thoughts? How do you regard yourself when seen in the mirror like this perhaps for the first time?

Now do another thing. Sit down in a relaxed pose, close your eyes and think thoughts of yourself.

Both in front of the mirror and while sitting with closed eyes, try and sift through the major attributes of your personality. The defining moments of your life. Your decisions that mattered to you and to those around you who you loved and cared for.

I am reminded of a famous quote of leadership coach and author John Wooden: "The true test of a man’s character is what he does when no one is watching."

As you look deep inside yourself and no one but you is watching, you will find a rare clarity emerge. You will know, in hindsight in this 'exercise' - which can gradually turn into here-and-now-wisdom and maybe foresight over time - you will know why those decisions and choices turned out the way they did.

You will know the warts in your thoughts and not just on your face. You will know that perhaps the little things gave you more joy than the big rewards - and the problems that once seemed insurmountable are all but gone now (That there are new problems now is another matter).

More important, you may realize how foolish you were to blame others or fate for your own doing.

Spending more time like this in the honest reflection of your thoughts will help you see the power of your own inner light.

In fact, most of us know - through intuition and traditional wisdom passed down the generations irrespective of religious leanings - the ever-presence of such an inner light in the core of our being.

While our upbringing, the social and economic environment we live in, and the life imperatives we have bound ourselves to, may have some impact on the brilliance and the frequency of 'visibility' of this light, it is my belief that the light itself is integral and essential to us.

I tend to be in agreement with Mark Twain's words: "In the little world in which children have their existence, whosoever brings them up, there is nothing so finely perceived and so finely felt as injustice."

This inner light imparts a keen sense of perception, of what is right and wrong at any given moment, what one should or should not do in certain circumstances. It can indeed prod us to higher, better versions of ourselves - much like the collective wisdom of open source programmers these days can shape a beautiful piece of code.

Guiding yourself by your own inner light is perhaps how you can be your own guru.

So, why not give it a try?

Happy Guru Purnima to You!

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Bounce: An Amazing Book for Parents, Teachers...Anyone!


A quick review of a truly amazing book, Bounce, written by an equally wonderful author, Matthew Syed

After you read this book, you'll think a thousand times before making statements like “How talented that guy is; excellence is in his genes.” Or, “Oh, she's such a gifted child – no wonder she won the figure skating championship.”

Matthew Syed (himself a Commonwealth table tennis champion) bursts several myths and lays down the principles associated with extraordinary achievement: the popular but ill-conceived idea of talent as a mystic, elusive thing; the myth of the child prodigy (Mozart, Tiger Woods, Shakuntala Devi); the workings of a motivational spark; and the most important of them all – relentless practice.

Unlike the schmaltzy self-help books, Bounce reveals in beautiful precision the inspiring examples of world-class performers and players. What's more, the author relates how “purposeful practice” followed by champion sportsmen can be applied to business or society – and what a lot of good it can achieve. This book can indeed change the way we look not only at the wonderkids of sport but also at the defining principles of education and success.

I highly recommend it...