Our schools are still designed to produce clerks for empire: Sugata Mitra
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Mar 24, 2013, 10:35:54 AM3/24/13
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Our schools are still designed to produce clerks for empire: Sugata Mitra
Education researcher Sugata Mitra has won 2013's million-dollar Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) Prize
with his 'Hole in the Wall' experiment, showing slum children learning
to work a computer and teaching each other minus adult supervision.
Speaking with Pratigyan Das, Mitra discussed the dynamics of this
venture in India, the radical potential it offers — and how our
educational system apparently persists in trying to produce clerks for
an empire long gone:
What is the 'Hole in the Wall' experiment about?
Well, i wanted to prove that kids can be taught computers very easily without any formal training.
This is about teaching without any kind of supervision — in other
words, the acquisition of basic computing skills by any set of children
can be achieved through incidental learning,
provided the learners are given access to a suitable computing facility
with entertaining and motivating content and some minimal human
guidance.
Since 1982, i had been toying with the idea of
unsupervised learning through computers. Finally, in 1999, i decided to
test my idea.
On January 26, 1999, i and my team members carved a hole
in the wall that separated the NIIT premises from the adjoining slum
in
Kalkaji, Delhi. Through this hole, a freely accessible computer was put up for use — this computer proved to be an instant hit
among the slum-dwellers, especially the children.
Interestingly, the children learnt to use the computer on their own.
How did you come up with this idea?
By observing children of affluent parents who had computers, teaching themselves to use these.
Would you say we don't need teachers anymore?
No — but teachers need to change their pattern of teaching.
They need
to frame questions that children can research and learn from by
themselves without any help.
What about teachers' role in fostering links between children and ensuring discipline?
Well, these were very useful tasks in Victorian England and India about 200 years ago in a very boring setting — not any more.
Can your project work in India where there's no access to computers — or even electricity — for many?
It was discovered in India! This is not a problem, there`s broadband
and mobiles in almost all places in India. I feel like cable TV,
this
will solve its own problems. Entertainment can be a more powerful driver than poverty.
How does literacy work here — do children need to know some English to follow a computer?
They need to know some basic English — but even if they don`t, they
pick up a smattering in months
if they`re allowed to work in
unsupervised groups and we stay out of their way.
How do you view our current educational system?
The Indian education system, like the Indian bureaucratic system, is
Victorian and still in the 19 th century.
Our schools are still designed
to produce clerks for an empire that does not exist anymore.
We don`t need to improve our education system — we need to reinvent it.
And what are the opportunities your study offers India?
This could play an important role towards levelling the playing field
between the affluent and the poor, quickly, effectively and cheaply.
All
continents are paying attention. Everybody is interested in
self-organised learning — they can see a generation doing it anyway and