Education

A discourse on a true educative blueprint

By Kit

September 19, 2012

― Jose Mario Dolor De Vega The Malaysian Insider Sep 19, 2012

SEPT 19 ― Once again we return to the perennial question of the kind of educational system that we have.

Indeed, it is not an exaggeration to state that our present academic set-up, instead of encouraging critical thinking, acquiring soft skills and other relevant intellectual weapons, sad but true, is precisely the very one that kills creativity, stifles innovation and impinges on independent dynamism.

Indeed, our prevailing exam-oriented, score-based, points-mindset educational system undeniably distorts motivation and learning by our zealot overemphasis on the importance of scores as outcomes and measures of students’ abilities.

Such distorted academic myopia is one of the root causes why our students lack personal confidence and intellectual creativity. Sadly, they are not even qualified enough to fulfil future tasks that requires beyond memorizing.

I am specifically referring to those employments that demands conversation, writing and oral/verbal communication. I doubt that receiving instructions, writing memoranda, engaging in a discourse, presenting one’s idea in a meeting, etc. can be memorised. I doubt if there is a book that will teach our kids to learn those methods, skills and craft?!

It is my ardent and firm contention that those skills can only be harness and cultivated by the very act of practicing them in everyday actuality inside the class room and even beyond the four corners of the university.

This is the irrefutable fact and they are indisputable! There seems to be a grave confusion with regard to what we want for our students as against the interest of the general system.

Extrinsically, we are encouraging them to memorise and aspire to get big marks, even perfect scores; yet intrinsically we are also demanding they must possess critical thinking, creativity and persuasive discourse.

This is a blatant contradiction and self-defeating to the utmost. How could we expect our lads to possess critical thinking when we are not encouraging them to speak their minds?

How could we expect our pupils to become creative if we consigned them to the borders of the lecture-notes and syllabus of the subjects? And most importantly, how could we expect our students to express and talk in a brilliant persuasive discourse if they lack the personality, the basic foundation and the necessary training (both the written and the oral form)?

I believe that it is unjust for the system and for the teachers to expect too much for the students, given the confusion and contradiction of the system. It follows that it is also unfair for the student to be expected to deliver when they are not even trained and nurtured in the first place.

How could one expect the horse to run fast if the trainer of the horse did not fully practise and exercise the maximum speed of the said horse? If we did not allow the horse to run freely in the plains to explore the vastness of the wild, but rather subjected the same to the four corners of enclosure, do we expect the said horse to perform well the day we release it for the race of life?

Lastly, if we did not give the “finest grasses” and the “best vitamins” to the said beast, do we have the right to expect the said beast to launch and unleash its full prowess and potentials? I do not think so!

At this juncture, I would like to talk about the paramount duty of the trainers, the mentors, the lecturers, yes indeed, the teachers. The base obligation of the teacher is to inspire and guide his pupils to think unlimitedly, to wonder unceasingly, to dare to ask question beyond imagination, to question without fear nor hesitation, to ask unafraid, to speak their minds courageously, to express themselves boldly and with fortitude, to be confident about themselves and so as their character, to open up both their hearts, so as their souls!

The teacher must pass this characteristic of wonder, a questioning mind and sense of awe to his pupils. It is my fervent belief that the ultimate duty of the teacher is to teach his lads not what to think, but how to think.

Not all students understand the rigorous process and the slow and laborious construction or the patient cultivation of the different thoughts and ideas that will lead them to a much higher plane of diverse views and more superior discourses.

If the pupils grasp the inner workings of this complicated, yet truly liberating and beautiful process by virtue of their meticulous efforts and painstaking endeavour to render justice to the whole enterprise and craft, to lay down the material basis of the whole process and consequently draw the comprehensive paradigm of the whole matrix of the interconnection and the interdependence of the different ideas and varied thoughts, as discuss in the class in a given session and correspondingly see to it the ultimate similarity and the profound interrelationship of these various and multifaceted elements; the whole class shall be happy, the teacher has won in his academic passion and this is indeed a victory for both the teacher and the rest of the students.

Theory without practice is dead, in the same vein that a good mark, without the confidence and the courage to justify an argument in an open discussion in a class room is not only detestable but also disgusting.

The dialectical relationship between the teacher and the student must always be present, from the beginning of the class up to its completion. A true teacher is the one who could gear his student to think for themselves independently of the teaching and the rearing and the training of the teacher himself.

He/she must teach them to craft their own paradigm, to discover and consequently construct their own truths, to nurture and create their own structures and foundations, to posit and to simultaneously to answer their own queries and questions.

Having explicated my thoughts let me dwell now on the other perennial problem of the whole matter and that is the issue of the view and focus of the system. Though, I already discussed this issue in passing, let me state that the ultimate problem of the whole academic system is our extreme emphasis and overzealous addiction to the extrinsic aspect of education as against the intrinsic element of it.

The extrinsic aspect refers to the memorization and rote learning of our children so that they will get big scores and good marks in the examination.

At the outset, there seems to be no problem here; however look at it again and analyze the whole spectrum. Getting good scores and full marks in the test is not bad in itself; it becomes bad and even evil the moment an educational system devoted its entire focus and energy to it at the expense of the intrinsic part of the whole general education!

In the critical words of Chris Hedges: We’ve bought into the idea that education is about training and “success”, defined monetarily rather than learning to think critically and to challenge. We should not forget that the true purpose of education is to make minds, not careers.

A culture that does not grasp the vital interplay between morality and power, which mistakes management techniques for wisdom, which fails to understand that the measure of a civilization is its compassion, not its speed or ability to consume, condemns itself to death.

The intrinsic part of education refers to those acts of the students such as speaking freely, engaging in a scholarly debate in class, presenting their ideas, appearing in the stage play, reciting a poem, singing a song, doing some extra-curricular activities, participating in sports competition, and other intellectual, cultural, artistic and aesthetic pursuits.

The intrinsic part of the education is precisely the key, in order for our lads to develop confidence and nurture creativity. These are necessary ingredients in order for them to develop soft skills and other inter-personal skills. The intrinsic aspect is the practice, the practical part or the practicum.

What we need is the rational and reasonable merging of these two elements for the benefit of our children! Henceforth, it is my humble suggestion to all the stakeholders concern to take a break and pause and think about what we truly wanted for our children.

Having said so, it is my firm belief and so hold that the Government, principally and the Education Ministry in particular must rethink, reevaluate and refocus their focus and views and correctively review the whole process of the educational system!

The stakes are high! Why? Because what we are talking here is not only the future of our children, but also the future of the whole country!