Deccan Chronicle

White boards take centre stage in teaching methods Black boards, rote learning a thing of the past

- ANUSHA PUPPALA I DC HYDERABAD, SEPT. 5

Teaching has changed from ‘chalk and talk’ to Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology. White boards have replaced black boards, said Prof. Ramana Rao of NIT Warangal, a teacher since 1985. He said the days of one-way lectures had changed.

“Now, learning is more online, through group discussion­s, tutorials, seminars and brain-storming because knowledge has expanded. Earlier, teachers were only supposed to teach but now their responsibi­lities have have become mentors,” Prof. Ramana Rao said.

Prof. Tirupati Rao, former Vice-Chancellor of Osmania University, who started teaching in 1976, said, “The main challenge these days is the informatio­n explosion on the internet. Students have access to this informatio­n. Teachers have to keep themselves up to date. Teachers can’t just teach that they have learnt yesterday because students these days have more informatio­n.” He said the informatio­n available on the internet was weakening the student-teacher relation and was a big challenge. “The role of a teacher is really important in a student’s life even though technology has developed. A teacher can never be replaced or substitute­d,” Prof. Tirupati Rao Rao said.

Mr Nagati Narayana, a senior education expert, said, “Quality education is the number one challenge. It should be addressed by teachers with innovative methods. They must accommodat­e for ICT Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology)-enabled teachingle­arning process.” He said in-service training was needed more than pre-service training these days.

“Teachers must be lifelong students otherwise they cannot compete in the 21st century,” Mr Narayana said. He also said this stress was leading teachers to take to the cane. “The frustrated teachers are forced to hit the students because they are supposed to satisfy the management­s and parents. Present generation teachers are struggling with new and critical challenges,” Mr Narayana said.

Prof. Srinivas Acharya, an educationi­st said, Today students are much smarter than the teacher. Teaching is no more telling, and listening is not learning. Technology interventi­on is high in engaging the student as students have easy access knowledge portals.’

The role of a teacher is really important in a student’s life even though technology has developed. A teacher can never be replaced or substitute­d. TIRUPATI RAO FORMER OU VC

Teachers must be life-long students otherwise they cannot compete in the 21st century. Present generation teachers are struggling with new and critical challenges. NAGATI NARAYANA EDUCATION EXPERT

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