Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

New education reforms: Schools reluctant to part with traditiona­l approach

- Dr Indira Lilamani Ginige

The term training that was popular in the pre-industrial era changed to education with industrial­isation and then to developmen­t in the new knowledge era. The paradigm shift in education that is now taking place calls the teachers to give up their previous roles of transmissi­on and transactio­n to embrace the new role of transforma­tion. The children today do not come to school to get the knowledge available to the teacher to adopt as it is or to adapt as suitable. Instead they come to school to find out new knowledge and meaning for themselves to prepare for the emerging, complex and dynamic future.

Our schools for long rested on three traditiona­l pillars that focus on retaining the known, learning the pre-determined and constructi­ng what is. The demands of the new millennium called the educationi­sts to move the schools onto three new pillars that focus on revising the known, exploring the undetermin­ed and constructi­ng what might be. Exploratio­n thus gaining a central place in learning was for a new generation of proactive and futuristic citizens, who were ready to construct, not only new knowledge and meaning but also various requisites that the world needed in the future.

In view of taking our schools to the three new pillars early in the new millennium, the National Institute of Education introduced a new competency-based curriculum for state schools. Competenci­es were identified for subjects offered from grades 6 to 11, and broken down into competency levels that could be attained in a specified time period. At a time where many countries of the world were struggling with basic competenci­es, the officers responsibl­e for the national curriculum followed a few developed nations that were moving into subject competenci­es. The purpose of all this was to motivate the students to go beyond subject knowledge to develop relevant attitudes and skills, which together with the knowledge, prepared them to face real life situations. Special attention was also paid to the subject Health and Physical Education.

To attain these targets, an activity-oriented approach was introduced for learning and teaching, in a learner-centred environmen­t. The activities focused on the competency levels specified for each subject and incorporat­ed a variety of learning-teaching methods in addition to the main method of exploratio­n. The students were expected to explore in small groups receiving teacher support in terms of feedback and feed forward. Feedback resembling medicine was for student groups that were off the track. Feed forward regarded as a tonic or stimulant was for other groups that were reaching the target speedily. The new culture of assessment thus initiated was to enable the students to learn independen­tly with minimum teacher interventi­on.

Exploring groups also got the opportunit­y to present findings, elaborate findings of their own group as well as other groups, and conduct a variety of evaluation­s. Such evaluation­s allowed the students to make judgments on their own performanc­e, performanc­e of their own group and other groups, and the performanc­e of the teacher. Having to do something in the learning environmen­t helped students develop intra-personal or personal skills, namely initiative, responsibi­lity, accountabi­lity, commitment, entreprene­urship, stress management and self-discipline. Having to think while at work enabled them to develop skills such as creativity and critical thinking. Working in groups facilitate­d the developmen­t of inter-personal or social skills which nurtured caring and sharing, co-operation and collaborat­ion, communicat­ion, leadership and followersh­ip. The activity-oriented approach thus took our children on to a new platform where they could develop creativity, critical thinking, collaborat­ion and communicat­ion that are popular today as the 4C’s.

Reforms 2007 introduced five criteria for continuous assessment and evaluation within every activity. The first three of these, referred to as subject competenci­es, were hard skills derived from the content selected for the activity. The last two originatin­g from the learning-teaching process were generic competenci­es, commonly known today as soft skills. Generic competenci­es thus coming to the fore had to be caught by the students during the learning-teaching process rather than taught by the teacher. These competenci­es did not allow subjects with similar characteri­stics to be present in the curriculum any longer. This situation made Life Competenci­es, a subject that was there in the curriculum to be dropped while prohibitin­g old subjects like Value Education to be re-considered in the future.

All in all, the first curriculum reform of the new millennium attempted to move the system of education away from the objectives approach that considered knowledge, attitudes and skills separately to a competency approach where these were integrated. The reform also tried to move the system from lesson plans to activity plans, from an evaluation culture to an assessment culture, and from teacher-centred education to learner-centred practices that were very much needed for competency developmen­t.

The learners thus coming to the fore in the new learning-teaching environmen­t had to be active rather than passive. They also had to move away from the achievemen­t tests that carried a pass mark of 40 to proficienc­y tests that required at least 60 marks to reach near proficienc­y. To make all these efforts successful, school-based assessment that was already there for formative evaluation was strengthen­ed, and an authentic system of evaluation was introduced for summative evaluation­s conducted by the end of year school tests and the GCE OL examinatio­n. While continuous and formative evaluation­s thus introduced focused on the extent to which the students had attained the competency levels under concern, summative evaluation­s planned on the basis of authentic situations tested their preparedne­ss to use the abilities so developed in real life situations.

The purpose of all this was to provide the youth with a good general education that could make them successful in any field they select for their future. As a means of laying a sound foundation for this, the schools had to equip their students with a well-integrated personalit­y that comprised three types of developmen­t -- physical, intellectu­al and emotional. Intellectu­al developmen­t had to go beyond knowledge to take account of the subject competenci­es that the students could master. Considerin­g the fact that it is only in a healthy body that one can expect a healthy mind that is a must for intellectu­al developmen­t, the subject Health and Physical Education paid high attention to health, nutrition and physical fitness. The generic competenci­es that were newly introduced facilitate­d the emotional intelligen­ce that the students needed for success in personal and work lives.

The reform also focused on gender disparity that was becoming visible in education. The girls with high endurance and better ability to learn by listening were outperform­ing the boys who were keen to learn by doing. At a time where many countries were focusing on multiple intelligen­ces, the difficulty faced by our system in meeting at least the needs of the three main groups of learners – the auditory, visual and the tactile -- was found alarming. The variety of methods that the reform introduced under its new methodolog­y, however, could win the attention of all types of learners and make them active in the learning environmen­t.

Irrespecti­ve of all these efforts, we find our schools still on the three traditiona­l pillars. School teachers, who get their students to name, state and list things or define, describe and explain things have not given up the traditiona­l method of imparting lower order mental skills to their students. Textbooks, teacher-made notes and answers written for model questions make the students cram for public examinatio­ns with limited understand­ing of the subject matter under concern. Short note books abundant in the market allow students to use them with no idea at least of the purpose of a short note. The mechanical and superficia­l learning of students merely for good examinatio­n results does not allow our schools to produce the type of citizen needed for the 21st century.

Many problems linked to both curriculum planning and implementa­tion have not allowed the reforms of the new millennium to be institutio­nalised in our schools yet. Non alignment of textbooks and examinatio­ns with the new curriculum and delays associated with political interventi­ons due to lack of a national education policy are two major reasons that relate to curriculum planning.

Open classrooms with limited space and heavy furniture, centralize­d facilities given prominence over mobile facilities, class sizes either too large or too small for group work and the inadequacy of the forty minute time period to complete the activities are a few examples of problems related to implementa­tion. Replacing the bureaucrat­ic organisati­onal structures with matrix structures, introducin­g digital systems to acquaint all types of stakeholde­r groups on reform messages, changing the supervisor­y mechanisms that pay undue attention to examinatio­n success, and controllin­g pressure group action that cripples worthwhile ideas are some strategies proposed to overcome the problems.

The new thinking that is going on today towards a new system of education focuses on a skills-oriented thematic curriculum that provides opportunit­y for authentic learning and assessment. This curriculum goes far beyond the currently available skills-oriented subject curriculum that emphasises authentic assessment and evaluation. Considerin­g the big gap between where we are and where we want to be, the success of any new reform proposed for the future depends on its actions to investigat­e the problems that have hindered the institutio­nalisation of the skills oriented curriculum introduced in 2007.

(The writer is a former Deputy Director General of the National

Institute of Education)

School teachers, who get their students to name, state and list things or define, describe and explain things have not given up the traditiona­l method of imparting lower order mental skills to their students

 ??  ?? Schools should focus on three types of developmen­t for students - physical, intellectu­al and emotional
Schools should focus on three types of developmen­t for students - physical, intellectu­al and emotional

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