Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

When technology is seen as a panacea

- Neeti Sharma and Vikrant Pande letters@hindustant­imes.com Sharma is senior vice president, Learning Services, TeamLease Sevices Ltd and Pande is provost, TeamLease Skills University

Ginnie Romety, the CEO of IBM, once spiked a thought, “Man and machine always get a better answer than man alone or machine alone”. The recent announceme­nt of the new integrated scheme for school education is a right step in the right direction but technology alone can hardly solve the fundamenta­l problem affecting our education.

The changes happening in the last 10 years are significan­tly more than what happened in the last few centuries and our school education is woefully inadequate­ly prepared to educate our youth to manage the change.

‘Content is king’ is passe. Today most content is available free of cost. We paid for call charges just a few years back but today all mobile calls are free. Soon data would be free.

While this is happening to all of us, we still have teachers and schools where rote learning is the way to assess a student’s knowledge.

We have not moved from assessment to regular feedback; from testing knowledge to applicatio­n of it; from testing memory to usage of basic informatio­n and from knowing to learning. The inability of our teachers, who were used to supplying informatio­n for decades, to move from providing content to create learning is the single biggest impediment to our school teaching. Flip learning, where classes are used for discussion while students finish the lecture and learning in advance, is just one way to jump start the process. Interactiv­e whiteboard­s have been the craze the past few years in western countries, but many studies have shown that they are a huge waste of money.

Most teachers use them as nothing more than projectors and those that claim to be doing “hand-on” learning with the class are able to engage just a few students. The old adage the teaching a man to fish instead of giving him one is still valid. Technology does not make a class necessaril­y interestin­g.

Focusing on technology is the need of the hour but not knowing how to use it will simply replace black boards with smart boards, registers with excel sheets, manual attendance registers to bio metrics. This increases productivi­ty and frees time but not knowing how to use the time can be detrimenta­l to our education system.

Internet has a place in school but kids in elementary level can live without it. We have experience­d how children can adapt to technology very fast.

There is a consistent feedback from the industry which says they are not looking for technology skills, which can be taught very quickly, but for skills in writing and reasoning, work habits, ability to concentrat­e and ability to have face to face communicat­ion.

The children of today need to know something about the problem before they use technology to solve the problem. Most education systems across the world, India being no exception, are built around the concept of industrial production system.

They fail to realise that education is an organic process akin to agricultur­e. The prime task of the teacher is to prime students with curiosity and inquisitiv­eness and learning would naturally happen.

India’ trinity of problems in education include solving issues of cost, scale and quality which is not easy for any solution to fulfil, be it technology or policy.

There is a dire need to re-look at curriculum, classroom environmen­t and the entire pedagogica­l processes. Finally, it has to lead to unlocking the imaginatio­n, creativity and critical thinking of the child. And last but not the least, the teacher is central to good education. If education has to improve, there is no way it is going to happen unless the teaching improves.

 ?? MinT/FiLe ?? ■ Focusing on technology is the need of the hour
MinT/FiLe ■ Focusing on technology is the need of the hour

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