Sunday 29 July 2018

Experiences in England

This past month, I have been attending a course in London on Human Rights. The demographics could not have been more diverse: the professor a Syrian British scholar trained in the US, and the classmates including students of law, international relations, and journalism from France, Italy, Germany, and Taiwan. The experiences and viewpoints that each of us contributed in class reflected our diverse cultures, ideologies, and backgrounds.

Needless to say, the program turned out to be enriching beyond words.

Upon its close, I can think of certain notable factors which, in my opinion, made the course so rewarding.

As a student who has had the experience of going through the education system both at home and now abroad, I was able to observe in England two striking things which were a complete departure from the system in India:

1.    The professor as a professional

In our country, the culture (deriving from ancient spiritual and cultural ethos) places the people in our everyday lives on distinct pedestals. Parents and teachers, above all, are explicitly ordained to be at par with God himself. Owing to this, for better or for worse, the possibility of having a relationship among equals is eliminated. Obedience is the cornerstone of this contract, with little room for discussion or consensus, forget dissent.

In England, the professor is a professional and nothing else. They only expect the student’s commitment to the course, and little else. They are held in high regard, not because of any spiritual or cultural factors, but because of their knowledge and experience. In the classroom, this fundamental difference has a tremendous impact on how discourse occurs. The classroom thus becomes a beacon for open discussion, explanation, and debate, with each person equal to the other, including the professor.

2.   Learning method and exam pattern

The semester exam in India is, in all truth, a memory test. In engineering, for instance, one is supposed to write theorems and solve numerical questions by remembering formulae. In law, entire provisions, authorities, and case laws are expected to be memorized. The other students in my class in London were baffled when I told them that I had key provisions of the Indian Penal Code memorized.
As most of the grading is focused on reproducing from memory, few are interested in attending lectures, and prefer studying at home. If they do at all, it is only to save themselves from punitive action later. For most, the subject is not learnt in class, but during the month-long ‘preparatory leave’.

In London, to my great surprise (and happiness), we were not expected to memorize a single word. We were, however, expected to thoroughly read and reflect upon an extensive set of ‘required readings’ and ‘recommended readings’. These included textbooks, journals, research papers, newspaper reports, online video discourses, and magazines, to name a few. We were not expected to ‘learn by heart’ a single definition, equation or formula. Instead, we were expected to assimilate the learnings from this diverse literature, and formulate our own argument. The grading depended on how well were able to articulate the learnings into own words in the exam.

These points are an attempt to highlight the differences between the two countries, with the aim to stir the debate on what we want our own educational system to be.

Finally, it would not be prudent to jump to the conclusion that the entire Indian system is substandard. The academic community in India is not very far behind in either diligence and commitment to the cause of education. However, even they agree that an overhaul is necessary. The world’s sixth largest economy deserves a system that propels it to even greater heights in its tryst with destiny.