Sunday, December 9, 2012

You Are Special In This World

In a classroom of 50, the speaker asked, “Who would like this hundred rupees note?” Hands started going up. He said, “I am going to give this to one of you but first, let me do this.” He proceeded to crumple the note.
He then asked, “Who still wants it?” Still the hands were up in the air. ‘Well’, he replied, “What if I do this?” And he dropped it on the ground and started to grind it into the floor with his shoe. He picked it up, now all crumpled and dirty. “Now who still wants it?” Still the hands went into the air.
“My friends you have all learned a very valuable lesson. No matter what I did to the money. You still wanted it because it did not decrease in value. It was still worth a full hundred. Many times in our lives, we are dropped, crumpled and ground into the dirt by the decisions we make, and the circumstances that come our way.”
“Do you know you are unique? Taking into consideration the past hundred years and in the future century, no one had or will have your fingerprints, your lip prints, your ear or toe prints. Your DNA is unique. Doctors have shown that the composition of your blood is peculiar to you. You are, in fact, a special individual with a capacity to achieve great things.”
“Do you remember at school, for example, thinking: ‘how can I do that’ whenever you were instructed to use new skill? Yet each time, after pushing yourself, you ‘discovered’ you had the ability – you even enjoyed it. Once accomplished you never forgot how to ride a bicycle, you had the ability. But you had to really draw on yourself as a child to overcome the inevitable falls. The secret is that this potential must be called upon. Those who give up, fail in their lives. This is known as ‘mind limitation’.”
“We feel we are worthless. But no matter what has happened, or what will happen you will never lose your value. You are special. Don’t ever forget it!”
Now, let’s go to another scene which must be familiar to most of the students:
1.       Why can’t you be good for a change?
2.       Why are you so selfish?
3.       Why do you have to fight with everybody?
4.       Why can’t you be like other children?
5.       Why must you interrupt everybody?
6.       Why can’t you keep your mouth shut once in a while?
7.       Why are you so slow?
8.       Why do you always rush?
9.       Why must you be such a pest?
10.   Why are you so disorganised?
11.   Why are you such a busy body?
12.   Why do you forget everything I tell you?
13.   Why are you so stupid?
It is said 12,000 such negative suggestions and rebukes are confronted by child in a span of 15 years. This greatly affects the self-esteem, learning and other skills, thus hampering academic performance, in most of the cases.
Just remember, as the currency does not diminish in value despite being crumpled, stamped and thrown about, the human value never changes adversely despite several such shabby treatments.
Students should learn to overcome this problems, to become a winner!
Blame and guilt are cry baby words; let us get them out of our talk about education. Let us use the word ‘responsible’ and ‘commitment’.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

CBSE to Introduce Open-Book Testing in Board Exams

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) introducing an open-book exam within its class X and XII board assessments is a welcome move. It reflects a fresh, innovative spirit trying to reshape education in India - and creating measures to give students a break.

A quick look at the open-book methodo-logy illustrates why. In this mode, students are informed of possible topics for testing some months before their exam. They thus have time to read up thoroughly on these areas and prepare to answer analytical questions rather than mechanical queries. Such questions, designed to teach students how to mine material thoroughly, encourage analytical thought, original perspectives and creative linking of different sorts of information in examinees' minds. What these cancel out is rote learning or getting through coursework using guide books that break subjects into technical question-answer sets, not open fields of knowledge students learn to navigate with skills and practice.
 
Open-book testing is decidedly a step in the right direction - one which the CBSE should follow the whole way. For critics who prefer the traditional chants of rote learning, get real. Current data shows rote is doing very little for India's learning. Despite our chest-thumping over producing doctors and engineers by the barrel, a recent Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study shows how Indian educational standards have slipped so low, we now rank second-last from the world's weakest - one step above Kyrgyzstan. This, when some of our best students took the PISA test conducted over 73 countries.