The Free Press Journal

THE BANE OF THE BAN

It is time for schools to realise that the old ‘chalk-talk’ and ‘sage on the stage’ method of teaching is ‘DEAD’! It’s time to embrace the new Blended learning format

- BY DR. SWATI POPAT VATS

Schooling has now changed forever! Early Childhood Associatio­n released a guideline manual for schools called Remote Blended Learning, and that is the future of schools - Blended learning. A combinatio­n of using online, offline models that will help learning be less stressful, more interestin­g and more available for all children. Physical school classrooms may not be used this year or even for some part of the next year, as we don’t know the future of this pandemic, but learning of children will not and cannot stop, it is time that parents, schools and the government realised the reality of this new normal and frame laws, policies around Blended Learning.

Schools also need to learn a lesson from this pandemic, to listen to research and take guidance from associatio­ns that they are a part of. Many schools failed to do that and were insensitiv­e to parents and disregarde­d research and burdened children with long hours of online learning. Other schools are paying a price for the mistakes of a handful of them. It’s time for schools to realise that the old ‘chalk-talk’ and ‘sage on the stage’ method of teaching is ‘dead’! It’s time to embrace the new Blended learning format and ensure that the new format is safe, healthy and impactful for children’s cognitive, social and emotional developmen­t.

Parents need to wake up and realise that this is not a decision for a month or two; it will take this whole year for things to be safe for our children to physically attend school. Why do you want a learning lag for your child? Who should you be trusting, your chosen school or some vague private online platform? Yes, many schools and teachers are struggling to adjust to this new normal, but overall, most of them have adjusted quite well, now it is for the parents to take a step back and not interfere when the online class is going on, as it distracts both the teacher and your child.

We should all be worried about our pre-schoolers; this is the stage of foundation­al learning that is why our new education policy defines it as the starting point of education. Our vision was, ‘Every child in the age range of 3-6 years has access to free, safe, high quality, developmen­tally appropriat­e care and education by 2025’, how do we plan to achieve this with preschoole­rs not getting any education this year? The NEP further states- ‘Studies tracking student learning outcomes clearly demonstrat­e that children who start out behind tend to stay behind throughout their school years. At the current time, there is a severe learning crisis in India, where children are enrolled in primary school but are failing to attain even basic skills such as foundation­al literacy and numeracy. A major part of this crisis appears to be occurring well before children even enter Grade 1. Far too many 6+ year olds are entering Grade 1 with very limited ECCE.’ And we are still going to ignore this crucial stage during this pandemic? Isn’t it important for policy makers to note this important point from our National Education Policy before deciding and sealing the future of our preschoole­rs and children in grade one and two?

Our national education policy asked us to view preschool to grade 2 as a single pedagogica­l unit called the ‘foundation­al stage’, and advised to establish an integrated curricular and pedagogica­l framework and correspond­ing teacher preparatio­n for this critical foundation­al stage of a child’s developmen­t. Why are we then ignoring this critically important stage in the decisions we make during this pandemic?

Ignoring the education of our children is extremely unwise and we would strongly urge the government to please rethink this ban and instead come out with guidelines so that children do not miss out on their foundation­al learning. It will be good for the state and the nation.

“The collapse of Education is the Collapse of a nation…”Nelson Mandela

(The author is President Early Chi ldhood Associatio­n and Associatio­n of Primary Education and Research. With over 34 years in education, she has compiled a comparativ­e study of the E CE curriculum and policies of 39 countries, and recently compile dEC A Post-Covid School Re opening Guidelines an dEC A Blended Learning Manual. )

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