Mrs.
Neerja Birla, Vice Chairperson
Education Projects, Aditya Birla Group
The Times of India
Across
all religions in the world, there is this
strong and true belief that children have
divinity in them and that they are Gods
most beautiful creation. There is a symbiotic
connect between children and teachers. They
are blessed and truly in a position to mould
the lives of so many children. They are like
potters and students, like the clay. Teaching
is a huge responsibility and should be a calling.
Education,
in my dictionary, far transcends academic
excellence. It is not about running a race
with your classmates and topping the list
it is about soaking in all the knowledge
gained during the process, it is about translating
that knowledge into wisdom and about applying
that wisdom. It is about excellence. It
is about running a race with yourself and
emerging a winner in your own eyes.
I
believe that the most critical task today
is that of building character. For teachers,
it entails veering teaching in a manner
that you are actually engaging in character
education. As we are, our children too face
tremendous pressure in their own lives.
They have to cope with expectations of their
teachers, meet the standards of their parents,
and also confirm to the peer group pressures
and habits. These are virtually three different
worlds and they constantly straddle between
these worlds. They have to make hundreds
of choices, from thousands of options in
millions of areas everyday.
These
pressures manifest themselves in different
forms early drug addiction, childhood
pregnancies, killings on the campus, internet
hacking and many such forms of self chosen
stress-busters. Teachers spend a lot of
time with the children. They must keep their
antennas up to recognise sensitive signals
of stress that children undergo. The better
they are at this, the greater the good they
can do for them. Teachers need to remain
clued into the state of mind of children
by picking up their behavioural signals.
One
might argue that the parents should be the
bedrock of values, but today, with both
parents working and families being nuclear,
unfortunately the focus is not on these
softer and key aspects but rather on studies
and grades. Sometimes parents feel that
values are a given. But these need to be
made explicit. Values give meaning to life.
They give a person his identity and character.
Since a child spends a large part of his
time at school, the responsibility of nurturing
the child holistically and building his
character rests equally with his teachers
who are his mentors.
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Teachers
should instill some values in children such
as honesty and integrity, a sense of self-worth,
taking responsibility, tolerance, compassion,
respecting divergent opinions, humility
and of course, self-discipline. Only then
a child grows up to be a caring and a well
balanced human-being. At the end of the
day, as Ralph Waldo Emerson put it, Character
is everything. If we have to teach
values to children, we must realise that
we ourselves as educators, as teachers,
have to be role models. As the old adage
goes, we have to practice what we preach.
So teachers have to lead by example.
Teachers
are the sailors who point out the lighthouse.
It is up to us to teach them to think beyond
themselves. Teach them that on the contrary
there is far greater joy in giving than
in receiving and in caring for others. It
does help to give a spiritual tenor to your
teachings. Teaching children to recognise
spiritual values from their infancy provides
a bridge to a well balanced life as they
grow up.
What
else can we, as educators, teach that will
stand our students in good stead through
their lives? As education is also about
equipping students with life-management
skills to focus on their goals and
live value-centred lives we must
give this a sharper focus.
Impress
upon them that all of us children,
parents, teachers do not exist in
isolation; we live in an interdependent
society. Teach them to recognise this and
have respect for others. Only if they learn
to respect themselves, they will respect
others. They must be taught to respect divergent
views. Not having this perspective of respect
is the bane of todays society, where
we see so many warring factions.
Most
important is making the student believe
in himself. If he has faith on the pillar
of faith, in himself, you can embed in students
the can-do attitude. The ultimate
objective of all this is to instill in children
a deep sense of self-belief that comes through
deeply instilled values and a spirit that
seeks excellence. Give them wings and empowerment.
I
remember an evening that I spent with some
of my friends. One of them was discussing
her 12-year-old sons report. His physics
report card read 8 per cent, effortlessly
achieved! Can you imagine how such
a remark from the teacher would lower a
childs self esteem?
Another
area of concern is discipline. Today, unfortunately
discipline is synonymous with punishment.
Punishment can only lead to anger in the
child, defiance and sometimes creates fear.
Let us replace punishment with love and
kindness, by teaching children about the
consequences and owning responsibility of
the consequences.
Taking responsibility for the consequences
will enhance the understanding of the child
without causing any negative emotions and
will seek to resolve the problems immediately.
It
is important to impress upon children the
need to learn from mistakes as those very
mistakes are the stepping stones to success.
A story that always inspires me, which I
tell my children often, is about Edison
who failed 99 times before he invented the
bulb. With each attempt, he learnt something
about what not to do which is what made
him succeed in his hundredth attempt.
Let
us nurture our students into well rounded
individuals and leaders, who excel in whatever
they choose to do, with a great sense of
values.
It is important for all of us to look together
at the opportunity that the road to holistic
education provides. Let us go ahead, firm
in our resolve and steadfast in our commitment
to make a difference.
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