Away from Alienating Education
Saumitra
Mohan
There was a time when the Indian students
pursued education for learning life skills and acquiring knowledge. The pursuit
of learning then was not about mugging facts and information, but was directed
to lead the learners to wisdom thereby enriching the entire society. It was a
time when none needed Govt permission for opening an educational institution and
when no formal degrees or diplomas were awarded to students by the renowned
Gurus through once famed ‘Gurukul’ system of education. The willing parents
sent their wards to the concerned Gurukuls where there was no screening test
for admission. The students’ sole criterion for acceptance as a learner by the
Guru was their penchant for acquisition of learning and knowledge.
The knowledge acquired at such
Gurukuls was never linked to particular jobs or services as mechanically done
today. The number of such Gurukuls was less, yet there was no hue and cry for
admission into those institutions because the concept of education was never
confined to the three Rs (reading, writing and arithmetic). Those interested in
trade, business, commerce, arts and crafts learnt the same directly on the job
through the practitioners of the respective professions. The caste and class
system in the Vedic Age is said to have been open and afforded lateral movement
for people depending upon their trade and profession.
Knowledge was pursued for the
pleasure of learning depending on the interests of the learners. Trades and
professions were learnt mostly on the job through practical experience. Those
pursuing education derived pleasure in sharing the same rather than using their
knowledge to earn their thirty pieces of silver. Education was never deemed as
a product or a means to earning one’s livelihood only, but was more of a way to
nurture one’s creative muses and faculties. Perhaps that is why, India of yore
was much more advanced economically, socially, spiritually, materially and
intellectually. Ancient India excelled in science, metaphysics, literature and
commerce. Our ancient thinkers are still much more revered for their
originality and path breaking discoveries than neo Indians as product of modern
education system are known today. In fact, many of us have made their marks
after they have crossed geographical boundaries and reached foreign shores.
But today we have come to a point
where schooling and pursuing education have become tedious, mundane and joyless
even though our numerous educational policies over the years have emphasised
the need to make education joyful while linking it to the acquisition of life
skills. However, we are still far way from realising the hallowed objectives.
As a country of over 1300 million people where about two third populations is
below 35 years of age, we have millions of degree and diploma holders without
any worthwhile life skills, without any employability or without any confidence
to think of a career beyond the formal, organised or classical sectors of
livelihood. It is these directionless youths without a vision and self-belief
who have become a ticking time bomb waiting to explode, thereby also nixing our
entire demographic dividends. They are often used and abused by different
vested interests as they, despite acquisition of formal education, don’t have
the capacity or ability to tell the chaff from the grain and hence, become a
cannon fodder for nefarious and negative activities.
It is here that we need to pause and
ponder about the way we are evolving as a society and a polity. If we
immediately don’t intervene and take corrective measures to bring in the
desired changes in our education system, we will continue languishing as the
world’s Back Office for doing the menial chores for rest of the world and by
also becoming a supplier of skilled labour/brain power. We need to wrest the
initiative to retrieve our intellectual leadership position in the Comity of
Nations by reworking our education system by carefully nurturing creativity and
originality among our children by acting on the myriad recommendations based on
the problem diagnoses made by the various experts and specialists on the
subject.
It is notable here that the National
Curriculum Framework 2005 conceived of evolving a National System of Education ‘capable
of responding to India’s diversity of geographical and cultural milieus while simultaneously
nurturing our common values’. Our National Education Policy, as changed from
time to time, has always endeavoured to make school education comparable across
the country in qualitative terms in sync with Constitutional values and also
make it a means of ensuring national integration without compromising on the
country’s pluralistic character.
While many changes have been
introduced over the years into our education system, more often than not, they
have been cosmetic and piecemeal in nature. Our education system, like any
other, has been status quoist, trying to sustain the age-old societal consensus
and wisdom on different aspects of life. So, even though we have more schools, more
class rooms, more playgrounds, better
infrastructures, better facilities and services, more teachers, more training,
more students in the schools in keeping with the parameters laid down in the
Right to Education Act, 2009, we don’t have quality and class in our education
system.
Our youths often have degrees and
formal qualifications, but they don’t have skills required to survive numerous
life situations and ergo, expect to be spoon-fed by the Govt through doles,
patronage and other populist govt programme like parasites. Where our education
policy should be such which could equip our youths for facing every life
situation confidently to see every challenge as an opportunity, on the
contrary, because of a contorted priorities, the emergent difficulties and
hardships of life often break them to resort to negative paths including
increased alienation and frustration.
The increasingly developing
(economically) India has also seen a vertical split in our society what people
like Andre Gunder Frank would call ‘Core’ and ‘Periphery’ or ‘Metropolis’ and
‘Satellite’. So, while people from the ‘Core’ are no longer dependent on the
Govt for their needs and comforts, those from the ‘Periphery’ are completely
dependent on the Govt for meeting their basic needs including education. So,
the children from the two backgrounds have different cultural capital of their
respective sub-cultures and have access to two different education services:
one in the Govt sector and the other in the private sector even though both are
informed by the same educational policy. The expectations and priorities of
respective clienteles also vary due to differential backgrounds. Hence, the
differential outcomes in their educational attainments.
Most of our children are
disadvantaged or handicapped right from the inception because of the accidental
births in inferior or lower sub-cultures with value system other than those of
the mainstream or dominant value system. So, those from the private schools do
better in a highly prejudiced social pecking order, while those from the Govt
schools often fall by the wayside unless their motivational capital nudge them
enough to break through the glass ceiling of status and class. But all said and
done, the basic thrust or thread running through both kinds of schools remain
the same as they are both guided and informed by the same educational policy
and social consensus on education. Hence, even the youths with the superior
cultural capital have a utilitarian and instrumental view of education.
The insistence on learning by rote,
cramming of facts and passing an examination often numb the thinking faculties
of our children as they are all made to run the rat race of landing a gainful
employment. As one can gather, often the syllabi of the formal education and
requirements of an employment have no practical relation to each other. Most of
the jobs including civil services, running a business or a profession require
certain basic skills including linguistic, numerical and common sense with a
dash of ‘good character’. If one has good command over language, know basic
maths and have some common sense, one can do most of the works required for the
day to day life. If specialised jobs like engineering, medicine etc had more of
the practical and empirical components than the formal, theoretical components,
we would not have the instances of buildings or flyovers collapsing.
In his celebrated work, ‘Deschooling
Society’, Ivan Illich posited self-directed education, supported by intentional
social relations in fluid informal arrangements. He believed that the
pedagogical alienation in society is worse than the alienation of labour as
suggested by Karl Marx. He further said that the schools condition people to be
consumers of packages produced by other people and to accept ideas of endless
progress, thereby bringing us to a precipice of an environmental catastrophe. Illich
thinks deschooling central to the adjustment to bring society to a more humane
level.
Illich’s practical vision for
learning in a deschooled society is built around what he calls ‘learning webs’.
Illich envisages three types of learning exchange; between a skill teacher and
a student, between people themselves engaging in critical discourse and between
a master (a master practitioner like Dronacharya) and a student. This latter
kind of relationship, which can occur in intellectual disciplines or the arts,
but can also materialise in crafts or skills such as mountain climbing is
stifled in a schooled society where non-accredited (read non formal) learning
is looked at askance.
So, our education system should be
suitably transformed to regain our leadership position in the world. Instead of
aspiring to be an economic or military superpower, India should aspire to be a
knowledge superpower, a position now occupied by the United States of America
and the rest would automatically follow. But for that, we need to get away from
the sundry inflexibilities suffused in our institutionalised school practices
which neglects the present of a child for future, while also neglecting different
ways to help the child evolve into a complete person. For this, we need to
adopt a holistic approach through a child-centric pedagogy by connecting
knowledge to life beyond schools. Such an education system should have a sufficiently
reduced curriculum load which ought to nurture creative thinking and
originality among our children.
The inclusive, friendly, peaceful
and democratic school environment should be made accessible to learners from
all sections of our society. Our schools, both Govt and private, should also have
adequate room for pushing a child’s imagination and thinking, for inciting her
inquisitiveness and questioning faculties during instructions. Children should
not be made to simply accept things as in books or as told by the teachers.
They should be made to learn through active questioning about the rationale or
correctness of a concept or an idea. Had Raja Ram Mohan Roy or Vidyasagar
accepted the given wisdom, we would still have a heinous ‘Sati’ custom continuing
or ‘Widow Remarriage’ would not have been possible.
We should also ensure provisioning
the same quality of education in Govt schools as in the private schools. The
quality of education imparted in European and American Govt schools is much
better than those in ours. Unless and until we realise it, we would be missing
to reap our demographic dividends. The
learners should actively construct their own knowledge with help from the
teachers as facilitators and coordinators by relating new ideas to existing
ideas and the same should happen through collaboration, negotiation and sharing
of views.
Also, as and where needed,
participation of community members for experience and knowledge sharing should
be encouraged. The teachers and instructors should engage learners through experience,
making and doing, experimenting, reading, discussing, asking, listening, active
thinking and listening and by encouraging them to express themselves. Teaching
should be contextualised with the local knowledge, with real life socially
relevant examples. Respect for differing viewpoints in open discussions should
be encouraged, something which has been on discount in our country these days.
The curriculum should be carefully
crafted and so should be the related textbooks. Such curriculum should be in
sync with the universal human values of a civilised society rather than
confining children to a parochial nationalistic discourse, away from our
philosophy of ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world is a family)’. Love and respect
for fellow human being should come first and foremost than narrow, primordial
identities. The examination system should be accordingly customised to be more
flexible and integrated with classroom life without creating situations of
stress or pressure for the students.
Our education should also somehow be
linked to spirituality. After all, if we all have to die one day, why do we
need to be chasing life’s goodies and comforts beyond one’s need. A highly
religious society which believes in rebirth, Karma theory (Doctrine of Just Deserts),
peaceful coexistence, principle of Nar Narayana (where every human being is
perceived divine) and where divine is supposed to pervade any and every
dimension of our life, India today is bursting at the seams, moving far away from
its historic and philosophical moorings. We are getting more used to perceive
things in duality of ‘we’ versus ‘they’, something which repudiates our
civilisational heritage and eclectic wisdom.
Demonising others, hating fellow
human beings, anomie and lawlessness, violence and other negative developments can
not be the outcomes of a healthy education system. Hence, our education system
should also help the learners understand and appreciate the purpose of human
life which is nothing but continuous spiritual development of each human being by
going through the countless cycles of births and deaths. Emphases on formal
education and degrees should end to link education to practical life
requirements to make it socially more relevant. The time could not be more
opportune for further pushing the boundaries of our education system when
rightist and revanchist forces are on the rise across the globe and when
Quantum Physics and spirituality are converging. Indian leadership need to synergize
their efforts with likeminded leaders of the world to build a consensus on
protecting the universal human values through a humane education system
promising a more fulfilling life for everyone.
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