Business World

TO TAKE A STAND

We need an overhaul of our education system.

- MARIO ANTONIO G. LOPEZ MARIO ANTONIO G. LOPEZ is a member of Manindigan! a civil society group that helped topple the Marcos Dictatorsh­ip. maglopez @gmail.com

And in the blink of an eye, the prodigious growth in knowledge, its applicatio­ns to produce new technologi­es, and the ever increasing intrusion of technology and new ways of thinking that gave people a far greater range of choices than they have ever had seemed now a burden and a threat rather than a boon and a blessing.

We moved from a world where we thought we knew everything critical there was to know to solve most if not all our problems to what management thinkers call a “VUCA” world: Volatile — liable to change rapidly, unpredicta­bly, with special attention turns for the worse; Uncertain — not to be relied on because nothing is well known or definite; Complex or chaotic — in a state of confusion and disorder; and Ambiguous — open to more than one interpreta­tion, options unclear or inexact.

Add to that the fact that Life has become so fast paced while many people have become encumbered by problems like crowds and traffic and the need to make more money as both the standards and costs of living go up. We find little time to sit back, go slow, study our situation and think of how we got here and what we need to do. We spend very little time alone to acquire new informatio­n and knowledge so we may discuss extensivel­y and deeply with others on matters important to Life rather than earning a living; discussion­s that could lead to a new understand­ing of ourselves, other people. We are distracted by electronic­s, hand held or otherwise. Many can’t live without their electronic connectivi­ty devices. They panic when they realize they left home without it.

Many, lacking the capacity to think out new ways of coping, have fallen back on old defaults — dogmas of all kinds, convention­al wisdom, supposedly tried and tested in times gone by. Or go along with people with exciting promises of quick solutions or “real reforms” in our respective societies.

It seems to me it is now that we need to slow down and think, talk with others, to if we are really clear on what we have grown to dislike and distrust, and what we would like to happen and why. Now is the time to see if we still use words and phrases to mean the same things, if we, in fact, view events and artefacts of Life the same. For if we do not, we shall never agree. We need to understand why we were so ill- prepared as a people to cope with these challenges.

I think I am not the first to observe that many of us are unable to think analytical­ly and critically, capabiliti­es which did not seem in short supply decades ago.

At some point real education that involved the capacity to source informatio­n, process these analytical­ly and critically, then share it clearly with each other for better common understand­ing, gave way to the impetus to just finish schooling and get a diploma which one could use to find a job.

At some point we put emphases on immediatel­y useful knowledge and skills with little regard for future learning and learning how to learn. Teachers’ salaries stagnated and the new recruits into the teaching profession proved unpreposse­ssing in their enthusiasm for teacher versus just instructin­g and for their lack of exposure to the bigger world.

We placed the onus of student failures on teachers with the much abused adages, “There are no bad students, only bad teachers.” To avoid the difficulti­es of having to defend why they failed some students, many basic education teachers decided to simply pass their students, making them the next grade or year levels’ problems.

This has to be arrested and put right. We need an overhaul of our education system. Making it K to 12 will help, but it will not be sufficient to mould the kind of minds capable of sustained independen­t work on learning and learning to learn.

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