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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

34.Quality Concerns in Education


On National Education Day (11 Nov 2011), the Department of Education, University of Calicut, organized a National Seminar on Quality Concerns in Education.
Prof.(Dr.) Raveendran P.C, Pro Vice Chancellor of University of Calicut in his  inaugural address said:
·        Changes have to happen if  our students  are to become capable of  competing  in the global job market.
·        e-governance of educational institutions have to be undertaken  for better  management of institutions.
·        Campuses should be made wi-fi, where information is easily available. The focus should be on converting information into knowledge and  that knowledge should be used  for research.
·        There is a need for a research monitoring forum too.

From the Key note address by Prof.(Dr.) KKN Kurup, Former Vice Chancellor, University of Calicut:                                                                                 
·        All said and done, we need to admit that  one cause of terrorism is that  resources are  not equally distributed.
·        Education should not be seen as a product, but  a process for benefit of society.
·        Quality of education is related to many aspects of life- social milieu, social environment, Economics etc.


From the felicitation offered by Prof.(Dr.) Laser , Member Syndicate
·        The potential of our students  have often been appreciated...Our primary education system is excellent, but there are shortcomings in our secondary education.
·        We have to  find out why our students are not good when they have to compete globally... We need not re-invent things ...Why not accept the curriculum of foreign countries... adopt what others are doing. In  Science perhaps infrastructure is essential..but in case of Social science it should be feasible.
·        We need to make competition an essential aspect of education.
From the felicitation offered by Prof. (Dr.) M.S.Talawar, of Bangalore University, during the Valedictory session:
·        It is a pity that not a single university in India comes under the top 100 universities...Forty  universities of our neighbouring country, China finds a place in the top 100 universities!
·        Quality we need to admit is a relative term. “ It is my personal conviction that educability, employability and adaptability are the three most essential indicators for quality”.
·        It is worth recalling what was once quoted in the NPE 2006: “ A  teacher should teach and a student  should learn".


I shall quote two Nobel Prize winning authors for the reader to ponder on:
"It is because modern Education is so seldom inspired by a great hope that it so seldom achieves great results. The wish to preserve the past rather than the hope of creating the future dominates the minds of those who control the teaching of the young." - Bertrand Russell     




"You are in the process of being indoctrinated. We have not yet evolved a system of Education that is not a system of indoctrination. We are sorry, but it is the best we can do. What you are being taught here is an amalgam of current prejudice and the choices of this particular culture. The slightest look at history will show how impermanent these must be. You are being taught by people who have been able to accommodate themselves to a regime of thought laid down by their predecessors. It is a self-perpetuating system. Those of you who are more robust and individual than others, will be encouraged to leave and find ways of educating yourself-educating your own judgement. Those that stay must remember, always and all the time, that they are being moulded and patterned to fit into the narrow and particular needs of this society."-  Doris Lessing      

Do post your valuable comments...

Sunday, October 09, 2011

33. Save our UG stream



The two day  National Conference on emerging trends in Arts and Science, concluded at Nesamony Memorial Christian College, Marthandam on 08 October 2011. During the Valedictory session,  Dr. A.  Meenakshi Sundararajan, the Acting Vice Chancellor of MS University, Tirunelveli,  addressed the audience.

 
 
The following are excerpts from his speech:

65% of  Indian population is in the age group of 25 and 35. But the research articles produced  with quality at the international level is only  0.1%.  Our youngsters seem to  have developed a downloading, cut and paste culture. Gone are the days when  researchers  used to spend years  collecting data from varied sources.

We may march ahead in Information Technology but we are hopelessly dependent on foreign countries  in drawing ideas for disciplines such as Economics, Science and Social Science.

Developing  a research culture is possible only if the prime focus is on the Basic Sciences offered at the Under Graduate level. Unfortunately, the brighter ones join courses such as Engineering and Medicine. Only the dregs join the UG programme and ideas rarely get percolated to these students. Until and unless the quality of the students undergoing the UG programme changes  quality research programmes will never be born.

Blaming students is not a panacea. Teachers should vow  to become  researchers. For, to  write a quality research paper, the teacher will have to read at least fifteen books. The information which the teacher gains will automatically flow to students who become inspired to do serious work.

Any comments?

32.What is life without research?


The Nesamony Research Forum was inaugurated  in Nesamony Memorial Christian College, Marthandom  on Friday, 07 October 2011.   Dr. James   R. Daniel, [former Principal of  Scott Christian College,  Nagercoil], who is  blessed  with a gift of the gab,  enlightened the audience through  anecdotes and   hard hitting facts which evoked in everyone present that  the need of the   hour in  campuses across India is nothing but   research with a social relevance.


  
In the course of his speech,  Dr. Daniel  presented a few facts about  research in general and teaching in particular which should interest  teachers in institutions of Higher Learning. The following are excerpts from his speech:

It is  the duty of the teacher to constantly ask critical questions to his students. Teachers should compliment research with teaching and develop a research mindset and attitude. The research you undertake should  be local, indigenous and  be related to issues which the people face. You should learn to integrate yourself with humanity,  think globally and  act locally. That is, you should  learn to implement your programmes  in your place, your city  or your district.  You should strive to fuse, integrate ideas and focus on drawing material  from the primary sources and  not just by downloading as many researchers do.

Remember the popular APPLE motto “Think Different”.

What is important is ‘Quality’... in presentation, citation and in the impact factor.  Unfortunately the trend seen is  that :

 
You copy from one book   and it becomes plagiarism
You copy from ten books and   write a thesis
You copy from hundred books and publish two books!

True,  the ‘publish or perish’  trend in the West is catching on. During the Pan IIT Summit held recently, the goal for IIT students have become ‘Deliver or Die’. 

 





Mr. N. R. Narayana Murthy  of Infosys Technologies Limited who addressed the IIT alumni is supposed to have made two startling statements:
 

1.     The quality of students coming out of IIT’s is a grave concern for all of us... there is a tremendous deterioration in quality. Only 20% of those who pass out are good  and 80% are devoid of  any quality despite the huge investments the  government makes  for IIT’s.


2.     The most obvious reason for the fall in standard is  the tenure system of the faculty. The time has come to introduce  the five year contract appointment system. The tenure system stagnates and corrupts .

Dr. Daniel concluded his  enthralling address by substituting the word ‘research’ for the word ‘money, in a  popular doggerel :
Research is honey
My dear sonny
Without research
Life is funny

.... So, what is life for teachers without  research ?  Any comments ??

Thursday, October 06, 2011

31. What course of action will you take?


Gandhi Jayanthi  celebration is on this week [02 to 08 October]. Unfortunately the college cleaning programme  which the teacher trainees of my college undertake  every year is  likely to be postponed  as many of them have gone on a Study Tour. Usually a speaker from the local Gandhi Bhavan addresses the students of  the college this week. And on  such occasions we are reminded of the relevance of the  teachings of Gandhiji.


As a teacher  educator, I have tried my best to nurture in my trainees certain Gandhian values, particularly the ones related to the seven social sins which Gandhiji insisted we should abstain from:  Politics without principles; Wealth without work; Commerce without morality; Education without character; Pleasure without conscience; Science without humanity and Worship without sacrifice.

 Now... teachers, do we really ensure that our new generation learners imbibe  Gandhian values?

In July 2011, Dr.Shashi Tharoor MP,  delivered a special lecture organized by the Kerala Gandhi Smarak Nidhi, College of Gandhian Thought, Research and Action. The Lecture was entitled Emerging Kerala : Some Candid Thoughts.



The  programme was organized by  the Gandhi Bhavan, Thiruvananthapuram. In the course of  his lecture, several facts and  figures were presented by  the honourable MP to support his line of argument. It made the audience feel that what we need is a sustainable model of development.

Given below are some  facts and figures  which would interest a  teacher-cum-curriculum developer in God’s Own Country, Kerala: 

·             *   Our social development indicator is remarkable...Life expectancy in the United  
         States is 72 and in Kerala 70 ; Literacy  in the US is   98% and in Kerala 96%
·     
*             *  It is a ‘Malayalee miracle’: Rights  have been given to workers and  to women.

 Yet Kerala failed to move...The best in the country flee, migrate...
·         
      * Kerala records the highest suicide rate and alcohol consumption rate.
·         
*    * We import work force  from Orissa and Bihar and we speak of  the educated   unemployed.
·         
*    * The  two crore eggs  and the tonnes of vegetables  we consume everyday comes from Tamilnadu.
·         
*   * We dump waste in places of  pristine natural beauty.



Before concluding his lecture, Dr. Shashi Tharoor insisted on the need for developing a competency in the English language. To illustrate  the necessity of becoming fluent in English,  the honourable MP narrated a story about cats and rats which  his parents told him as a child:

Once  there were some cats who used to be troubled by  rats. [or  cats that troubled rats?...my memory fails me] One day, a new cat joined the fold. On seeing the  fold, scamper after hearing a squeaking sound, the new cat cleared its throat and barked ‘Bow Wow’... and the rats fled. When a member of the fold asked the cat what was that, it said: “You’ll never know when  a new language would become handy!”.
Well,... I must  confess that I am incapable of  capturing  the impressive style of delivery of  the  highly acclaimed writer, Dr. Shashi Tharoor.  What I have done is to recall from memory certain facts and figures that got imprinted in my mind which I am sharing now. 


Well readers.., if  you are a teacher-cum-curriculum developer  what course of action  or development of our State would you take? How can Gandhian values be incorporated in the course of action you intend to take?







Sunday, September 18, 2011

30. Whither Gardens



 





In a  gloomy world filled with  strife and conflict, gardens become a space where peace and beauty reign. The colours and textures splashed on the ground lures birds and butterflies. Students will find a quiet place to  hang out… to  engage  their senses.

For the poetic-minded, gardens can offer visions of  the invisible, grasp the intangible and hear the inaudible…It’s a place to work with silence. According to a  British  garden designer and artist, Gertrude Jekyll (1843-1932),  A garden is a grand teacher. It teaches patience and  careful watchfulness; it teaches industry and thrift; above all it teaches entire trust.

Schools in Europe have found  multiple benefits for school gardening.  It has been found that gardens give  scope  for children to  learn about water and energy cycles, the food chain, and the peculiar needs of individual species. When children  feel a sense of connection to a certain species or individual plant, they  will even have a reason to care about all the forces that impact that plant’s future. Even teachers can benefit from gardening in schools.  If they so desire they can transfer the gardening skills  to their  own homes which would  benefit their own health and the health of their families.
 
Recently, Dr. Prabodhachandran Nair, a  former Professor of Linguistics,  was invited  to a Workshop  organized at  the Regional Institute of Education (NCERT), Mysore. He was   deeply impressed by the layout of the campus and particularly its garden. In a  casual chat he narrated to me, his failure to  fulfil a  simple desire of his viz; to have a garden in the campus of the institution where he served for decades: 

The Professor asked  a newly appointed gardener to clear the weeds and shrubs and plant flower sprouting seedlings around the campus. Without trepidation,  the gardener told the Professor: “Sir I come from an elite Nair family of North Malabar and we never do such menial task”. The Professor adept at repartees quickly retorted “…well then  why don’t you take up the Asst. Collector’s  post now vacant in the  District Collectorate?      

It is a pity that despite the multiple benefits of gardening,  gardens are fast disappearing from  campuses in God’s Own Country, Kerala. The ‘one child one plant’ scheme, introduced by the State government  recently is indeed  commendable, but...  what next? 
 
Any comments or suggestions dear reader?

Monday, August 29, 2011

29-Does environment affect a child’s temperament?












Today, 29 August 2011 was a Government declared holiday for educational institutions in Kerala State. I was planning to clear up some piled up work when I received a call to attend a function at Chempazanthy, the birth place of the saint Sree Narayana Guru who preached about one Caste, one Religion and one God for mankind.

I got the programme timing completely wrong and had arrived at the place as early as 9.30 AM for a function originally scheduled for 12.00 noon. On reaching the spot, now considered holy, I visited the thatched hut in which the Guru was born. This took hardly fifteen minutes and I had over two hours with nothing to do. I could have easily rushed home and returned after two hours. But something about the place made me linger. As I sat under an old tree taking a deep breath and relaxing in the gentle breeze, I noticed something unusual.

Though afflicted with asthma, I felt a lightness of being…The tall trees that surrounded the thatched hut were swaying in rhythm and the plants in the temple nearby was in full blossom spreading a faint fragrance. I gazed around… some ants were scrambling over me not once venturing to prick me. They were apparently whispering to each other and appeared forging an union with Nature. For a moment I recalled Emerson :“The greatest delight which the fields and woods minister is the suggestion of an occult relation between man and the vegetable…” 


I saw some children oblivious of adults in the vicinity engaged in games of their invention. The pleasure they gained from it appeared contagious. One child particularly drew my attention. It was playing in the sand and was engrossed in building a tiny ‘shrine’ with twigs and leaves. The child didn’t notice my attempt to capture the ‘structure’ using my Cell Phone Camera.

Returning home and gazing at the images I captured in the morning, thoughts about the nature of the environment of some leading schools in Thiruvananthapuram crossed my mind. An International school in the suburbs of Thiurvananthapuram city boasts of air conditioned high-tech classrooms and campuses with swimming pools. There are many schools in the city with three/four storey buildings and Smart Classrooms. And what do these kids play …? Video games and Cricket!! After all which modern-day parent would encourage his/her child to play in the sand?

Does environment really affect a child’s temperament??