Tuesday 22 January 2013

"Changing Education Paradigms"


I recently watched this video - an animated piece that was adapted from a talk by Sir Ken Robinson, a world-renowned education expert - as part of my QKS520 course, and found it really thought-provoking. There were many salient points raised, but I was especially struck by the following:

1. Modern-day children are actively besieged with information from a whole variety of sources, but are forced into an artificial passivity and docility in the classroom. "We are getting our children through education by anaesthetising them, [instead of] waking them up to what they have inside of themselves."

2. Schools unfortunately require and result in a "production line mentality", where students are divided by their age, not ability, and "funneled" through a system of standardised testing and curricular.

3. Divergent thinking = "an essential capacity for creativity"; the ability to see multiple answers, possibilities, and interpretations of an issue, and to "think laterally". This ability seems to be very strong in young children, but diminishes as they go through the school system. Why?

As a teacher, I certainly hope to be able to fully engage my students and cater to their specific interests and learning styles. I certainly do not wish to push them through a syllabus which they have no emotional investment in, and am fearful of falling into the trap of creating a "mechanistic" drill-and-practice routine in my classroom. While I acknowledge that academic achievement is important, I feel that the teenage years are possibly the most exciting in our lives, and I want to stretch my students; to foster a real love of learning; and to build them up as people, not mere grades-generating machines.