Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Response by Ram, Chief, Samanvaya to Reflections by Prasanna

The debate on education is never ending, at least criticisms are not new. I would like to react to some of the observations made yesterday.
1. On relevance of this group
2. Meaning of Education
3. Who is being educated?
4. They Vs us
5. Tradition, families, values, and modern schooling.

This group I believe sets to achieve understanding of education, learning, schooling. This is not new; we have seen these kind of initiatives before, we very well understand the shortcomings of the curriculum, schooling, and one need not be a rocket scientist or traditional panchayat or caste (community) leader to understand. The relevance of this group is not understanding and learning, because many in the group have strong view points, inspite of lofty motives it will end up in debates, arguments, and any research undertaken will be to prove already existing views. I suggest let us join a group of active members who are working for the poor, whose sole aim in their life is to make others join mainstream schools, come out of traditional occupation and who aspire to attend English schools. Let us join them as participants not as a dialogue initiator, not as a moderator. Let us fight there, argue with them and try to convince them of our ideas.

[Chief:>]" I agree that there have been others who have debated education before, as a system, process, methodology, experience, ad nauseum. I also agree that there is always a need to broad base the forum, yes, when there are people with strong views and ability to articulate them, often we end up only with discussions that are down the no way street. I however will caution out the 'pro poor' kind of view which has been the bane of our government policies as well as on completely negating out the role of a thorough analysis."


For me need of education has three components:
1. Employability
2. Ability to face challenge
3. Grow as a concerned citizen

I am not bothered whether he understands atman, or whether it makes him eternally happy, or whether he understands tradition, history, or whether he is indianised. I am westernized, I am not ashamed of that fact. So far I have not read any Tamil classics. I don’t think I have missed any great knowledge or values. I may enjoy reading them, but still the values are largely western liberal, individualistic and rational thinking. Indian system may have it, advaita, naya, and Buddhist might have perfected the art of logic and rationalism, but I learnt it from the books of western authors, and films. I don’t think I am in any way worse than the traditionalist. "Kural" perhaps suggest that discerning truth is knowledge. Ironically Tamil Nadu doesn’t have a tradition of critique as an art, I have never seen or read any books critically examining Thirukkural, kambaramayanam etc. today there are voices questioning the relevance of those doctrines, this is essentially because of western education.


[Chief:>] " I need to again caution this attitude, with all respect to Prasanna, he has the attitude of many of us who with the sense of having 'arrived' acquire the view, 'I am this this and this (and I am fine/o.k./perfect/good enough) and so, if I am this (a system produced me / a lack of that that and that didn't affect me) then this is good enough for everyone else. I think he has articulated the objectives rather clearly, that is fine.

And then there are contradictions in his statement, if one of the objectives is to 'grow as a concerned citizen' I am not sure if that is possible without knowing the history, tradition or be Indianised. When Prasanna makes the statement that he is westernised, I think he once again exhibits the dichotomic view that is owned up without much application of mind. He is no 'western' as in some one who can be western in his attitude, priorities and perceptions. What he implies is that he has been through an education that was designed without challenging or questioning the notions, assumptions and priorities of a western life. If he hasn't read any Tamil classics, he cannot say what he has missed, that is again rather contradictory. I am happy that he has pride in being 'western', 'liberal' (or 'western liberal' which is different), 'individualistic' and 'rational thinking' and ascribes all these to western authors. I think many of us have acquired and indeed realized the value of our own traditions only because we were exposed to the western authors and through their influence realized that the traditional scriptures too had these and perhaps much more than this. A 'traditionalist' is often a streotypes image of someone who wants to 'go back to traditional times' and Prasanna seems to reflect that view. Unfortunately, these acquired categories of understanding are the beginning of many problems. There is no going back to 'tradition' today as there is no memory of this society ever being fully 'traditional', such ethereal 'traditional times' have been portrayed only in literature. If anything one can only provide the tradition as another option to learn the values of liberal, rational and individualistic apart from other values which may also possible be carried in them.

I will not respond to the issue of absence of critic in art, it is presumptuous in a state whose political discourse (and indeed survival) of more than half a century is founded in faulty scholarship and the only way any academician could prosper is by either escaping this state or adhering to the political line."


Who is being educated?

Well everybody is: questions like who are we to educate them, were not they educated before the schools were established, is not traditional wisdom superior. Points well taken but i don't think it serves any purpose. People send their children to schools for money, and career (apart from other things), they send them to schools hoping their children don’t meet the same fate, not just to get wisdom. To expect a school kid to have wisdom of philosopher is ridiculous. If an IIT student is asked about the possible solutions to solve problems of world, he would think in terms of technology. To expect a 17 year old student to critically examine the implications is a bit too much. Schools are not multi dimensional, it approves certain kind of intelligence and abilities, in fact it admits only certain kind of people, but I guess this will always be there. I wish to quote the old and famous pandit and boat man story.

Inspite of the shortcoming I refuse to believe that schools are bad. Schools have kept the spirit of questioning and learning. Today we find the kids more enterprising than before, every parent vouches for that. In fact it is better than ever before. It is in the school the child learns to be a rebel, the relationship with the teachers are better. The modern fathers and mothers are liberal, friendly they may read books about parenting that is because they want to do and be the best.

[Chief:>]" I agree that every one is getting educated and that it is wrong to expect students to critically examine everything. The problems are not with the power of knowing as much as the power of doing things often at the cost of others based on what one knows. It is not the student of certain type of technology as much as an ambitious professional with that knowledge wanting to generate profits / successes.

I agree that schools are not bad. I would add that they can be better. I am against the schools that drive the students into an uni-dimensional idea of 'employability', 'facing challenge' and 'citizenship'. I quote the same pundit and boat man story. I am not sure whether the statement that 'today kids are more enterprising' means anything, perhaps it was 'kids are more artistic' before or 'kids are more warrior-like' before. It is the overall environment in which we all grow up that highlights certain values more than others, it could be enterprise, arts, literature, ...these the priorities of our times and the emphasis on current issues extends to the kind of orientation (expectation and exclamation too) that education acquires. Perhaps Parents today have access to more information about more things, but, access does not either guarantee practice or quality."

Traditionally sons and fathers never converse. Fathers and gurus were authoritarians. Perhaps under the strict guru and father, they learnt it better. Today we may not have produced great musicians and dancers but we have more musicians, dancers. Look around us people are experimenting with everything. I see this as the best period for art, music and literature. If schools were just schools as we assume to be, then how do our kids have their spirit?

[Chief:>] "The first part is his personal opinion and I don't want to respond. Far too many assumptions here too, that volume is better than quality, volume is good, experimentation in many things (and excelling in none) is better, school is responsible or encourages this experimentation and this spirit is because of this."

Education and schooling to Dalits are not as same as these are for others. Concerns about he losing his traditional knowledge and occupation is farcical at best. In fact attempts are made to put them to schools to move out of traditional occupations. I am bored of listening stories about the dying art of pottery, weaving and other traditional community work. I would like to hear us talk about asking Brahmins to send their kids to veda paatashala, today we don’t find have enough sama vedis, how about we taking up this art. This would be much easier for us to do because many in the group are Brahmins, there are mutts teaching this, and this could be a lucrative one.

[Chief:>] "It cannot be denied that the oppressed communities in this countries and those who have been relegated to do repulsive tasks on the basis of their being born in a certain community have used education as a tool to raise their social status, repeatedly. It is important to realize that education, schools have played a major role in their lives. It has opened up options that are otherwise not available, nay, denied to them. I agree that the talk about dying traditional arts is not to be given too much emphasis at least as a traditional occupation. The advent of modern 'pottery galleries' in Mumbai and people from NIFD taking to traditional weaving as an career option is an indication that arts that can be valued and appreciated find their space in modern careers too. However, the problems will be for a poor person from potter family to go through an education of 15 years to get a job as a night watchman outside the same gallery, to realize that there is value for his traditional skill and yet failing to understand how come no one told him so. Today schooling opens up a set of options and blinds one to other options. Same with brahmins, but, many brahmins start at a different level. It is a reality that there are brahmins who have lived abroad and come back and dropped out of their careers and have joined veda pataashaalas, I know of three cases in my immediate surrounding. But, the problem is their security is not at risk. They start at a different level, the potter's son doesn't. Traditional skills/occupation as viable options are negated from more than one platform, maybe, we understand it to be a natural course and say that if already the NIFD and others are doing these arts, then there is no problem, that traditional people can get out of this and that is fine. This argument extends to farmers can get out of farming, now that corporate houses do large scale contract farming, traditional water management can be dropped out, now that corporates can own water bodies, etc. and as long as the modern, liberal, individualistic, rational mind can understand from its western (market) paradigm that cost of living is conditioned to grow always in the upward direction and willing to work for it, then I think this trend should be welcomed. But, the newer western thoughts are talking about 'holistic living' 'green house emissions', about 'carbon footprints', etc. and one of the reasons is the corporatization of everything - agriculture, arts, appreciation of arts, water, etc. Do we wait for these current western thoughts to percolate to us over a period of time or lookout for alternatives while we still have existing alternatives?"

And I would like the communities to be referred as caste not as communities, Nadar is a caste, it is not a community. It is misleading to refer it like that.


[Chief:>] "I realize that this is his personal problem with what I had to say during our earlier meeting. There are far too many debates on this subject in India. Caste presupposes an hierarchical system and all its negative connotations, communities are geographical location based groups, owning up to certain identity that could be occupational, cultural or familial. Wherever I refer to a community I am conscious of the differences, I mentioned the Nadars of Virudhunagar as an example, they are a community there, you need to visit them to understand this. I am not giving all the credit to tradition for this either. I refuse to use 'caste' unless it is applied in with all its connotations. I need to use a different term mainly to differentiate it to preconditioned (and strongly held views) minds. "

Finally if we are to be sincere to the problems of education, we need address the fundamentals of all the "Caste". Vaidya is not a vaidya by chance, he is by birth. Nadars worrying about their children not taking up trade, is a genuine concern, but are they willing to teach it to other castes, this way they can save their traditional "Trade". The question is not just about preserving traditional wisdom, it is also about that caste people willing to teach and share it to others. Perhaps all traditions occupations can be saved this way. I am sure there will be a dalit who would like to learn and become a purohit, and Brahmins to learn weaving etc. Of course some traditions and rituals associated with the art or occupation may go, be it. In the pretext of preserving traditions we can perpetuate caste differences.

[Chief:>] "Precisely this is what I meant by creating options for different types of careers, learnings and possibilities. Which a modern school with its limited understanding and articulation of 'livelihood' ends up curbing inadvertently. "

I sincerely believe that if the group has to have relevance we should disband this group and join other groups working for education cause perhaps groups promoting SSAs. I dont like the idea of just inviting others for a guest lecture. I hope the group motive is just not to talk about what is education, if be the case, i think should all buy JKs book and be satisfied with this.

[Chief:>] I think the group is relevant because it can produce this mail from Prasanna. I am interested in what is happening in education / learning / knowledge assimilation / schools / universities, because the formal education system is increasingly where many young minds acquire all that they know apart from the visual media. Nuclear families and both working parents as a growing trend, both in urban and rural areas has meant that the environment and opportunity to learn anything in the home front unless it is a well-off family doesn't exist. I recognize nuclear family as a changing reality and am not talking about a revolution to stop it. Similarly, the pressure to finish their syllabus, the pressure to ensure that the students acquire higher marks are part of the teaching career today just like the pressure to produce higher ranking students and 100% pass out is accepted as an achievement of schools and higher ranking students and very good jobs based on campus interviews are accepted as an achievement for colleges and universities. These are realities. Somewhere in these changing realities, common sense, joy of learning and the freedom of growing up strong are curtained / restricted / hidden / conditioned. If SSA is providing some options, we need to learn from them what are these, if NCERT is doing something, we need to know that too. I don't think the idea is to have guest lectures, I think it is to understand and express ourselves, because while I wait for my daughter to grow up as a 'concerned citizen', I cannot keep quite as a concerned citizen myself in understanding and expressing my concern on issues of this country / society. If we were involved in 'just talk' we will be a talk shop, we can understand by talking, doing, experiencing, silence, thinking,...the tools for us to learn about the changing realities of education are as many as the ways of learning themselves.

Paatashaala appeals to me because there are not many spaces where people gather to understand and explore things openly. The much denied 'critical thinking' that may produce critiq on arts, literature, etc. will only emanate if spaces for them are created and this is one such platform, it cannot extend its scope, nor constrict it.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Reflections after 5th May session, Prasanna

The debate on education is never ending, at least criticisms are not new. I would like to react to some of the observations made yesterday.

1. On relevance of this group
2. Meaning of Education
3. Who is being educated?
4. They Vs us
5. Tradition, families, values, and modern schooling.

This group I believe sets to achieve understanding of education, learning, schooling. This is not new; we have seen these kind of initiatives before, we very well understand the shortcomings of the curriculum, schooling, and one need not be a rocket scientist or traditional panchayat or caste (community) leader to understand. The relevance of this group is not understanding and learning, because many in the group have strong view points, inspite of lofty motives it will end up in debates, arguments, and any research undertaken will be to prove already existing views. I suggest let us join a group of active members who are working for the poor, whose sole aim in their life is to make others join mainstream schools, come out of traditional occupation and who aspire to attend English schools. Let us join them as participants not as a dialogue initiator, not as a moderator. Let us fight there, argue with them and try to convince them of our ideas.
For me need of education has three components:
1. Employability
2. Ability to face challenge
3. Grow as a concerned citizen

I am not bothered whether he understands atman, or whether it makes him eternally happy, or whether he understands tradition, history, or whether he is indianised. I am westernized, I am not ashamed of that fact. So far I have not read any Tamil classics. I don’t think I have missed any great knowledge or values. I may enjoy reading them, but still the values are largely western liberal, individualistic and rational thinking. Indian system may have it, advaita, naya, and Buddhist might have perfected the art of logic and rationalism, but I learnt it from the books of western authors, and films. I don’t think I am in any way worse than the traditionalist. "Kural" perhaps suggest that discerning truth is knowledge. Ironically Tamil Nadu doesn’t have a tradition of critique as an art, I have never seen or read any books critically examining Thirukkural, kambaramayanam etc. today there are voices questioning the relevance of those doctrines, this is essentially because of western education.

Who is being educated?

Well everybody is: questions like who are we to educate them, were not they educated before the schools were established, is not traditional wisdom superior. Points well taken but i don't think it serves any purpose. People send their children to schools for money, and career (apart from other things), they send them to schools hoping their children don’t meet the same fate, not just to get wisdom. To expect a school kid to have wisdom of philosopher is ridiculous. If an IIT student is asked about the possible solutions to solve problems of world, he would think in terms of technology. To expect a 17 year old student to critically examine the implications is a bit too much. Schools are not multi dimensional, it approves certain kind of intelligence and abilities, in fact it admits only certain kind of people, but I guess this will always be there. I wish to quote the old and famous pandit and boat man story.

Inspite of the shortcoming I refuse to believe that schools are bad. Schools have kept the spirit of questioning and learning. Today we find the kids more enterprising than before, every parent vouches for that. In fact it is better than ever before. It is in the school the child learns to be a rebel, the relationship with the teachers are better. The modern fathers and mothers are liberal, friendly they may read books about parenting that is because they want to do and be the best.
Traditionally sons and fathers never converse. Fathers and gurus were authoritarians. Perhaps under the strict guru and father, they learnt it better. Today we may not have produced great musicians and dancers but we have more musicians, dancers. Look around us people are experimenting with everything. I see this as the best period for art, music and literature. If schools were just schools as we assume to be, then how do our kids have their spirit?

Education and schooling to Dalits are not as same as these are for others. Concerns about he losing his traditional knowledge and occupation is farcical at best. In fact attempts are made to put them to schools to move out of traditional occupations. I am bored of listening stories about the dying art of pottery, weaving and other traditional community work. I would like to hear us talk about asking Brahmins to send their kids to veda paatashala, today we don’t find have enough sama vedis, how about we taking up this art. This would be much easier for us to do because many in the group are Brahmins, there are mutts teaching this, and this could be a lucrative one.

And I would like the communities to be referred as caste not as communities, Nadar is a caste, it is not a community. It is misleading to refer it like that.

Finally if we are to be sincere to the problems of education, we need address the fundamentals of all the "Caste". Vaidya is not a vaidya by chance, he is by birth. Nadars worrying about their children not taking up trade, is a genuine concern, but are they willing to teach it to other castes, this way they can save their traditional "Trade". The question is not just about preserving traditional wisdom, it is also about that caste people willing to teach and share it to others. Perhaps all traditions occupations can be saved this way. I am sure there will be a dalit who would like to learn and become a purohit, and Brahmins to learn weaving etc. Of course some traditions and rituals associated with the art or occupation may go, be it. In the pretext of preserving traditions we can perpetuate caste differences.

I sincerely believe that if the group has to have relevance we should disband this group and join other groups working for education cause perhaps groups promoting SSAs. I dont like the idea of just inviting others for a guest lecture. I hope the group motive is just not to talk about what is education, if be the case, i think should all buy JKs book and be satisfied with this.
- Prasanna, 6th May

Notes from Paatashaala session on May 5, 2007

My brief notes of the discussions on 5th May are as follows:

Participants present for this session were Akila, Sangeetha, Naveen, M. Ramachandran, Ranjan De, Srinivasan, Nithiyanandam, Ram, Prasanna and Priya.

During the session on 5th May, we started the discussions with Ram explaining why we at Samanvaya saw the need to initiate such a forum on education and our earlier experiences with such discussion forums.

A brief summary of the above: The education scenario is changing rapidly, what with advancements in technology resulting in access to information as never before, changes in curriculum particularly to an Indian framework, mainstream schools trying to improve and incorporate alternative methods and tools of pedagogy, while on the other end of the spectrum, we still have a large number of 8th and 10th std drop-outs and pathetic conditions of schools especially in the rural areas. A much smaller percentage of the school-going population actually finish 12th. An even smaller proportion steps into and gets degrees from colleges and further. Can we critically examine education in India, and understand the issues related to it before going on to do something about it?

As most first sessions, ours meandered through a whole host of topics. Starting with each one’s experience with, and take on education led to discussions on fun and innovation in learning, different perspectives of education, happiness as the goal of life and education, education for underprivileged children, modern education system stifling, Dalit education, Connections between Geography and Tamil literature, alternative and mainstream education, schools as asylums, aspirations of the vegetable vendor, understanding schooling / learning / education, quality in education, Euro-centric perspective of our textbooks, English vs Tamil medium schools and so on.

Some initiatives in education also came to light as part of the discussion:
- Suyam’s (Chennai), who do not have the conventional classification of subjects. They have for instance, a session called Kitchen, in which students would learn language, mathematics, science, history and so on.
- The Virudhunagar Nadars and their education initiatives.
-
SMILE (whose representatives, Srinivasan and Nithiyanandam, were present for the session) and its role in providing education to underprivileged children was also profiled for the group.

We also had a spontaneous learning session on puppet-making lead by Ranjan De, who conducts similar sessions regularly. We made various things with our respective paper cups once we were done with the coffee!

We were all basically trying to explore our own and each other’s perspectives and thoughts on education and related topics. Hence, it came about that it would be useful if we can each write a piece on our experience with education and learning, and through this process arrive at some basic definitions for the group.

We also decided to have an online presence for discussions and communication. You would have independently received an invitation for the group. And you are reading the blog. :) Currently, it is moderated. Please send your comments and opinions to one of the authors for them to be published on the blog.
- Priya

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

The Rush for 'Professional Courses' at all cost!?!

Akila Writes:

It so happens that at this point of time i have 5 youngsters in the immediate family circle who have completed their plus 2 this year. Let me start with good things first. My niece no.1, is a parent's dream of a child - Attitude-wise and performance-wise. Her parents were cool and confident that they wouldn't have to go rushing after management quotas. They were right, she's scored 97% and can get through comfortably.
The second of my nieces is a severly traumatised girl, because of a very unreasonable parent who made life living hell for everyone in the family. None of us even consider her a normal child, but she's gotten through with 87% which is amazing, given her circumstances. I am yet to know what will happen to her and can only keep my fingers crossed that she isn't forced willy nilly into something that someone with no knowledge of today's world forces on her.

the third girl is a doctor's daughter whose parents were on the wall about management seats, but i don't know what happened now, cos they're hotfooting it to negotiate for a medical seat which has been pulled down from 25 lakhs to 20 lakhs now.
the fourth is a nephew who after 14 years of lack lustre living suddenly became conscientious about his life . before writing his exams he gave his parents to understand that he is the latest wonder in nature, but after his exams he said maybe they had better book a seat in the management quota. Having talked nanotechnology non stop, he insisted on bio-techonology from a particular institute and got his parents to spend 9 lakhs on a seat which they believed was money worth investing until his results came today and he's just scraped through in all the major subjects. He has not even done biology in his 11th and 12th.
The last is a nephew whose parents paid 3 lakhs for a EEE seat in a college far far away from home, because the ones closer home insisted on 80% of marks and said they would refund the donation otherwise, even though they demanded much less than what his parents ended up paying.
What prompted me to record all this is this:
The unquestioning readiness with which the parents of the non-performing kids sprang into action and started working out a solution for their seats. What makes the Indian parent think that he must dump all his life's savings on someone who doesn't deserve it in anyway? Is there no right and wrong about it?
What makes the kid accept a largesse like this as his birthright? Is this how he is conditioned to think that he will and must always receive a free lunch?
I dont' even want to talk about the inequality of those whose parents cannot afford such expensive gifts of life? But what kind of a society are we if we always give money the power to overcome incompetence?

(I am posting this for Akila who has sent me this write-up, hopefully, she will start her own posts soon)

Sunday, May 13, 2007

News Report on the launch of PaataShaala

The News Report on the Launch of PaataShaala in The Hindu, Chennai edition - 12th May 2007.

Forum to discuss issues in education

Staff Reporter

Chennai: Samanvaya, a development consultancy firm, has formed a stakeholders team of parents, teachers, students and activists to discuss emerging issues in education.

The group, called PaataShaala, will meet on the first working day of every month for discussions or workshops on schooling, examination pressure, curriculum and peer pressure.

The firm is at 179/94, Royapettah High Road. Call 24984422 for more details or log on to www.samanvaya.com