Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Safety is not another word for care

READING SIGNS A good teacher is one who is trained to observe and listen closely to what is being presented through a child’s behaviour

- (The author is Principal, St Mary’s School, Delhi)

cameras that cover gates and even classrooms, labs and libraries. The public demanded that female attendants should guard toilets, while female guards should be there at entrances. Parent representa­tives were roped in for safety audits of schools so that they could feel that they had done their bit and of course employees like conductors, drivers etc were banned from school toilets. In this manner, we all convinced ourselves that everything had been done to make our children safe never wanting to acknowledg­e that our streets are dangerous, that our homes are unsupervis­ed and that our minds have been polluted. We had convenient­ly decided that ‘safety’ was another word for ‘care’.

If we were to truly care, we would sit up and question what is actually happening here. We would then see that we are facing challenges in attention seeking behaviours that are rooted in causing harm either to oneself or the other. It is important to understand that aggression and anger are also signs of complete helplessne­ss. Anger is a natural emotional response specially when one feels hurt, powerless and when one thinks nothing else will work.

Human beings are social animals and every person has a feeling of accomplish­ment and self - worth when he or she is valued.it is time we, as adults, acknowledg­e that culture and society no longer sees the child but only sees his/her marks, the report card or the child’s achievemen­ts. We as parents and teachers both need to understand that focus only on academics doesn’t make for happy or whole children.

I remember once how two boys had got into a fight over a trivial matter like eating in the classroom and dirtying someone’s desk. The fight went outside the school and Boy A called in his elder brother to slap Boy B. This ended up in a fight where Boy A ended up getting a bad cut on the head. I called both students and their parents into my office to discuss the matter, Boy A’s father was mortified that his son had called the elder brother while Boy B’s elder sister turned up (both parents lived in Kolkata) to say that her brother would never do such a thing. She supported his behaviour, and even condoned it. She said, the other student had “hurled abuses about his mother,” and that her brother had fought to “protect the mother’s honour.” I questioned what honour there was in fighting? Why was it that both boys had to resort to the physical violence rather than have a discussion? The absence of the physical presence of the parents was deeply felt.

There is no substitute to the presence and love of a parent. When parents ask kids to walk back from school to an empty home, fend for themselves and access unsupervis­ed, unlimited time on the Net they are looking for trouble. When par- ents substitute study time at home with tuition time and when consequenc­es are not discussed but substitute­d with punishment, society needs to sit up and take notice. When parents cheat or hit each other, when the words they use in conversati­ons are inappropri­ate, they need to know that behaviours are being wired deep into the psyche of children.

It is true that a child spends a large chunk of his time in school and within school he happens to spend time with his teachers and peers. However, the teacher and the school are only a support in the upbringing of the child.

Teachers try to get an understand­ing of a child’s life scenario by analysing the child’s ecological system: who are the people the child hangs out with, beliefs the child holds on to and so on. Schools know that if they do not work on indica- tors of helplessne­ss, hopelessne­ss, anxiety, anger or loneliness in a child, academics will also be affected. Teachers are specially trained to look out for sudden changes in the mood of the child, a sudden drop in the grades, or attention-seeking tendency through undesired behaviour like fights, anger outbursts, bullying and so on. They also look out for a child facing challenges arising on the home front such as separation of parents, loss of job or a death of a parent.

The boy at the Gurgaon school, would not have woken up one day and decided to do this. There would have been signs before it actually happened.

A good teacher is one who is trained to

observe and listen closely to what is being presented through a child’s behaviour and speech so that there is an empathetic, critical response to situations. She will not wait for a situation to arise but will constantly work to make an environmen­t where the child is confident to seek help when he or she needs it.

A child holds in himself or herself the tomorrow that we all crave for, where relationsh­ips are important and where the self exists only as part of a larger cosmos. It is not just the syllabus or the marks that will define such a child. It is our acknowledg­ement that until we as adults do not value the child and make a world that is safe and centred not around acquisitio­ns but around the child, the world will not be a better place, either for you or for me.

IT IS IMPORTANT TO UNDERSTAND THAT AGGRESSION AND ANGER ARE ALSO SIGNS OF COMPLETE HELPLESSNE­SS. IT IS AN EMOTIONAL RESPONSE WHEN ONE FEELS HURT AND POWERLESS AND THINKS NOTHING ELSE WILL WORK

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: MALAY KARMAKAR ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: MALAY KARMAKAR

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