Tuesday, March 13, 2012

11. EDUCATION - YEAR 2012 

11.1 The end of shop class
11.2 Story telling, should it precede the three Rs? 
11.3 Why common engg entrance bothors IITs
11.4 Learning calculus at the age of six
11.5 Divided House - IIT alumni

11.6 Harvard Business School Mumbo Jumbo
11.7 The problem of different boards
11.8 Messing up education
 11.9 HRD's Plan to Launch Education Channels Hits Roadblock
11.10 Marketing principles / Engineering education

11.11 IIT-JEE format a boon for coaching schools
11.12 The IITs were formed to produce world-class engineers and scientists.
11.13 Education Is Too Vital to Be Left to Educators
11.14 Can this be true?
11.15 Anyone worried about what’s wrong with our education?

11.16 Do Romanian schools produce idiots :-)
11.17 Little knowledge is a dangerous thing
11.18 Issac Asimov's travails in academia (extracts from his autobiography)
11.19 Why Finland's Unorthodox Education System Is The Best In The World

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11.1 The end of shop class  (9/2/2012)


THE END OF SHOP CLASS

The retirement of the Baby Boomers, aged 48 to 66, who started working in factories in the 1960s, '70s and '80s, is accelerating the problem. They grew up in a world where children amused themselves by building go-carts and tree houses, rather than by playing video games and texting friends.

As U.S. manufacturers cut their headcount by 40 percent over the past three decades to the industry's current 12 million workers, they created a supply of experienced yet unemployed or underemployed people who could step into vacant factory jobs. But those people are now reaching retirement age.

One reason the experienced Baby Boom manufacturing workers will be so hard to replace is that the high school shop classes where many of them learned their skills were phased out in the 1980s and 1990s, said Emily DeRocco, president of the Manufacturing Institute, the educational arm of the National Association of Manufacturers.


"We have very falsely silo-ed education and workforce training, resulting in ... an educational system that really doesn't care about the ability to get a good job," said DeRocco, who served as assistant secretary of labor and employment in the administration of President George W. Bush.


The shop classes where generations of Americans learned to make birdhouses and other simple projects were eliminated as educators focused more on learning to use computers than hand tools. Today, manufacturers are trying to swing the pendulum back part way -- teaching students to use computer-controlled motors to power a simple machine in a high school class offers some preparation for running a high-speed production line.


11.2 Story telling, should it precede the three Rs?  (1/4/2012)

On weekends I make trips too and fro between Nagercoil and Trivandrum, a distance of 70 Km, by a lumbering passenger train. For the two hour trip (four hours up and down) I usually purchase two business magazines: wish I could find something better to read, something which tells us how our many looming problems will be solved; for the moment business magazines provide the best pointer to where the action is - alas! I also read novels (life would lose half the fun without novels :-)

What disturbs me is that, I seem to be the only person in the train reading anything; there are a lot of office goers in the train and on the return trip I find many youngsters, probably studying in the mushrooming engineering colleges, mostly fiddling with their cell phones. I do not wish that everyone should turn into bookworms, yet, would it not say much for our educational system if at least 10% of the passengers were reading something. Are we living in such a boring world that there is nothing new to wonder about?  

Why is it that a child, who learns so much on his own by the age of three, find his education literally coming to a grinding halt when he joins school. The problem could be, we are trying to educate our children without providing a context in which learning can take place. And our modern day Gurus, telling us that we need to educate ourselves so that we can compete effectively in the market place enthuses neither the teacher nor the student. 

My suggestion is that we introducing extensive story telling as the first step to formal education. Story telling should also form the medium through the three Rs are taught. Stories can be of the following kind: religious, cultural, the story of the world we live in - past, present and future -  funny stories, biographies, etc.. Obviously, the stories should be different for children having different backgrounds. 

To summarise:

- Language (which a child naturally learns)
- Story telling in this language.
- Learning of the three Rs based on stories.

Selvaraj


11.3 Why common engg entrance bothers IITs  (26/5/2012)

 A major problem with the educational system in India at present is the competition between CBSE, ISC, and State Boards, to award higher marks to their students. This converts education into a 'mugfest' with students routinely scoring above 95% marks.
Solving this problem is very easy: does not involve spending 1000s of crores of rupees.

1. Make the examinations sufficiently tough so that few score above 80% . (Since there is great political pressure for children to perform well, the exams may be made sufficiently easy so that most students are able to score 50% marks).

2. Shift to grading system in all classes, do not disclose actual marks:

S ... above 90 ?
A+ ... 71 to 90 ?
A ...  60 to 70 ?

Advantages with grading system:

1. Parents will not be after their child asking why he scored 81 while Ashok down the road scored 81.5. In short, it will prevent mayhem in families.
2. Parents will be more relaxed, they may even encourage their wards to engage in extracurricular activities.
3. Parents will feel less pressure to send their wards for tuition, starting from class 1.
4. Teachers will begin to relax and make their teaching more interesting. 

Selvaraj.
......
Why common engg entrance bothers IITs

Anubhuti Vishnoi : New Delhi,  25 May 2012,

The HRD Ministry’s ambitious proposal to replace multiple engineering entrance examinations including IIT-JEE with a single, common entrance in 2013, with weightage given to school board scores, has become a subject of debate not only between the IITs and the government but also within the IITs.
The directors of the 15 IITs are largely in agreement with the idea of the common entrance exam and percentile-based normalisation of scores across school boards. Faculty federations and senates in most IITs, however, are against it. Only one IIT — Guwahati — has unanimously endorsed the proposal. And the senates have near-vetoed the introduction of the common entrance test in 2013.
Ahead of an IIT Council meeting next week, here are the proposal’s varied aspects and the areas of conflict.
The test
Initially called the Indian Science Engineering Eligibility Test, the Common Entrance Test has been proposed from 2013, replacing the AIEEE and the JEE. Under the proposal, the exam would be of two parts, Main and Advance, each of three hours. Main, which would be objective type, would test students for comprehension, critical thinking and logical reasoning, while Advance would test their problem-solving abilities in the basic science subjects.
A minimum of 40 per cent weightage to Class XII board exam scores has been proposed to determine admission; each state government or institute would be able to decide the specific weight it gives to board, Main and Advance scores. A committee headed by Dr T Ramasami, secretary in the Department of Science & Technology, has demonstrated with the help of the Indian Statistical Institute that school scores across various boards can be normalised through a statistical process.
For
The HRD Ministry and supporters of this proposal including IIT directors point out that students coming into the IIT system through JEE are now no longer as exceptional and talented as before. Pointing fingers at the coaching lobby, they say students clearing JEE are doing so on the basis of rote learning and with little “raw intelligence”.
This, they argue, is also because students are so focused on their coaching classes that they neglect their school lessons. With a new common entrance exam, they argue, not only will the stress of appearing in multiple entrance exam disappear but school-level teaching and learning will also get back its due attention and, consequently, bring in students with a well-rounded intellect into the IIT system.
Against
The IIT senates across institutes are not convinced that scores across several state boards can be normalised effectively by the statistical methods cited. They refuse to accept the 40 per cent weightage given to school boards.
The senates have instead proposed that the JEE/common entrance exam be converted to a two-stage exam: Main should be used to screen applicants for those who should appear for the JEE test to seek admission into IITs. This JEE test and its nature, they say, must be the sole prerogative of the Joint Admission Board, provided the number of students screened to appear for JEE is small enough. A subjective format should be followed for it, they have insisted.
IITs’ take
Normalisation of board scores: Normalisation using percentile approach should be researched further with data available for other boards and 2012 results of all boards.
On 40% weightage: Percentile marks should be used as an eligibility criterion or admission to IITs should be strictly based on JEE. JEE, in turn, should be as decided by JAB. Board marks in percentile form may be used as an eligibility criteria along with the Main paper marks of a common national test.
Main: IITs would like to use the Main results as a screening criterion. However, this process may begin from 2014 and not 2013.
Advance: No, IITs should have their own JEE paper. This paper may be subjective in nature. Eligibility for JEE should be restricted based on Board marks in percentile form and Main marks.


11.4 Learning calculus at the age of six  (27/5/2012)

Shouryya Ray worked out how to calculate exactly the path of a projectile under gravity and subject to air resistance, The (London) Sunday Times reported.
The Indian-born teen said he solved the problem that had stumped mathematicians for centuries while working on a school project.
.. Mr Ray's family moved to Germany when he was 12 after his engineer father got a job at a technical college. He said his father instilled in him a "hunger for mathematics" and taught him calculus at the age of six.

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/german-teen-shouryya-ray-solves-300-year-old-mathematical-riddle-posed-by-sir-isaac-newton/story-e6frfkui-1226368490521#ixzz1w3wzZEMH

11.5 Divided House - IIT alumni  (7/6/2012)


Divided House
THE IIT alumni are quite offended at the idea of changing the entrance exams for the IITs. A few alumni associations have decided to petition the courts against the move to introduce a common entrance examination for all the engineering colleges. However, they are finding themselves up against another set of IIT alumni, serving within the government, who happen to be pushing for the introduction of the new system. One of them is V Umashankar — private secretary to HRD Minister Kapil Sibal — a Haryana cadre IAS officer who has an IIT background. CBSE chairman Vineet Joshi is another. An alumnus of IIT Kanpur, Joshi is a supporter of the move to give weightage to school marks in IIT entrance. However, there is one whose heart lies on the other side of the fence. Apurva Chandra, a joint secretary in the HRD Ministry, is BTech and MTech from IIT Delhi and is no fan of the new entrance format. At a recent meeting of school boards, Chandra is learnt to have expressed his doubts over the move to give weightage to school marks but apparently has been won over by Joshi’s arguments.
   
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The main question is one of autonomy. Are the IITs autonomous or are they not autonomous?

The best way to ruin an institution is to take away its decision making powers; people who do not take decisions for themselves will pass on the buck for nonperformance to others. This applies to all institutions, let alone the IITs which we are given to understand already have a high degree of autonomy build into their management structure.

Selvaraj

11.6 Harvard Business School Mumbo Jumbo  (23/6/2012)


Come on, guys! This isn’t what your parents thought you’d do with your expensive education. Find something real.

Solve the euro crisis. Eliminate insider trading. Do a study on whether recycling plastic bottles is worth the effort.
Anything but conventional wisdom fraudulently misrepresented as new and profound knowledge.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/boblutz/2012/06/20/harvard-b-school-mumbo-jumbo/?ss=strategies-solutions
11.7 The problem of different boards  (29/6/2012)

 In deciding on a common all India engineering exam it is worth keeping in mind that the syllabi, the structure of text books and teaching and learning methodology vary greatly from board to board. If you wish to get through AIEEE, it is advantageous to have studied in CBSE, because CBSE teachers probably set the AIEEE exams. If you have studied in ISC, or studied in a state board, AIEEE may not be straight sailing for you.

You may think that an ISC or CBSE student could easily write the Tamil Nadu state exam. Not so. You would need to know the Tamil Nadu approved text books practically verbatim (a feat for students who are not used to rote learning). In fact an ISC or CBSE student attempting this adventure would not score that high in the Tamil Nadu exam.

Now, with the common All India Exam, to be set by CBSE, we are simply handing over the advantage to the CBSE board and the CBSE students.

As the matter presently stands:

* AIEEE is biased towards CBSE.
* IIT - JEE may not be biased towards any particular syllabi.
* The state boards have their own individual biases that cannot be easily cracked by CBSE and ISC students.

Unless an attempt is made to make all the systems uniform, which is not easy to do, considering that ISC provides good English Language and English comprehension skills, CBSE where English Language skills are less honed, and the state boards that have their own agenda, it is pointless to have a common all India exam.

So far as IITs are concerned, my feeling is, if two exams are required, both should be controlled by the IIT system. Handing over one exam to the CBSE system impinges on the autonomy of the IITs.

With the entry of private players and overseas institutions; and the plain jealousy of all, there is a move to cut IITs down to size :-)

Selvaraj

P.S. It is irritating to use the word syllabi (why not use syllabus as both singular as well as plural forms?)
http://www.usingenglish.com/forum/ask-teacher/51809-syllabus-vs-syllabi.html







11.8 Messing up education  (30/6/2012)


 Rather than looking into the fundamentals of schooling the ministry is trying to use an entrance examination as a means of improving the standard of schools.

http://newindianexpress.com/opinion/article554532.ece


11.9 HRD's Plan to Launch Education Channels Hits Roadblock (1/7/2012)

An ambitious plan of the HRD Ministry to launch 1,000 educational television channels has hit a roadblock after it failed to get the required permission from the Information and Broadcasting Ministry.

The HRD Ministry had first initiated steps to launch 50 round-the-clock channels and had approached the I&B Ministry for permission for uplinking and downlinking the channels.

11.10 Marketing principles / Engineering education (8/7/2012)
IGNOU offers distance learning courses in management that are structured to meet the needs of various aspirants http://www.ignou.ac.in/upload/management-2011-12.pdf. If you study and pass exams in 32 subjects you obtain a MBA. Studying five subjects you obtain a Diploma; with eleven, you obtain a Post Graduate Diploma in Management.

When I took this course in the later half of the 90s, I was particularly interested in the mysteries of Marketing; at that time this course was offered at the PGDM level, so I signed up for this course. ( I ended up passing in seven subjects and obtained a Diploma, five subjects short of PGDM; by which time I had lost interest )

My main objective of probing the mysteries of Marketing was however met. Marketing is organised around the 4P principle.

Product
Price
Promotion
Place

In designing a product there is also an important concept of product differentiation http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Product_differentiation

In economics and marketing, product differentiation (also known simply as "differentiation") is the process of distinguishing a product or offering from others, to make it more attractive to a particular target market. This involves differentiating it from competitors' products as well as a firm's own product offerings.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Product_differentiation

How smart GOI is in understanding such issues is highlighted in the study material sent to me by IGNOU:

Birth Control; criticism levelled by Nathaniel Martin:

"Selling birth control is as much a marketing job as selling any other consumer product. And where no manufacturer would contemplate developing  and introducing a new product without a thorough understanding of the variables of the market, planners in the highest circles of Indian Government have blindly gone ahead without understanding that marketing principles must determine the character of any campaign of voluntary control. The Indians have done only the poorest research. They have mismanaged the distribution of contraceptive devices. They have ignored the importance of 'customer service'. they have proceeded with grossly inadequate undertrained staff, they have been blind to the importance of promotion and advertising."


Now, on the issue of the future of the IITs, we see a similar lack of thought and analysis. Is there no product differentiation between the IITs, NITs and the state run engineering colleges? Are the NITs funded to the same level as the IITs are? If the IITs are so low in standard as many claim, why start so many new IITs?

As I see it there is considerable product differentiation between the IITs, NITs and the state run colleges. Had the central government understood this product differentiation, they would not have rushed to start more IITs, probably they would have invested money in starting additional NITs. I don't know how GOI visualises the role of IITs, other than being milch cows for their political ambitions :-) My views would be as follows:

IITs - more heavily funded, to provide leadership in engineering education. Students should have wider knowledge of the engineering discipline as a whole. More mathematical orientation required etc.

NITs - focus more on turning out practical engineers.

State run engineering colleges - No one stops them from aiming for the above objectives, but of late we find the state governments diluting standards to focus on social inclusion, which is a commendable objective in itself.

It is undesirable and uneconomical however to attempt to make Einsteins out of everyone. We need a few Einsteins, who from their high pedestals can pull the others up. Trying to cut all the grass to the same height however is a self-defeating policy.

(The IITs and the NITs may not be meeting the above stated objectives. Then we should focus on solving the shortcomings; cutting all the grass to the same height is not the solution to the problem).

.....

I would strongly recommend PGDM from IGNOU for all government functionaries!

Incidentally, you need fairly good grasp of English to understand the study material sent by IGNOU. Since our educational system trashes any attempt to learn a language properly, I wonder about the future of education in India.

I had a quick glance at  'The Chennai Declaration' http://www.samacheerkalvi.in/pdf/Chennai_Declaration_Pre-final_01July2012.pdf, posted by Dr. V.N.Shrma. The emphasis put on education in the mother tongue is commendable. We may however keep in mind that:

1. A language is incomplete without its literature.
2. It is important for an educated individual to have good command of at least one language (increasingly, I am given to understand, students have poor command of their mother tongue, as well as English)
3. It is important, if we are encouraging local languages, to translate be best of world literature into these languages.
4. To be truely inclusive at least some institutions of higher learning should impart instruction in the local languages.
5. Is it so difficult to make everyone proficient in a local language and in English. In pre-independent India, educated people seem to have had good command of two languages.

Selvaraj


11.11 IIT-JEE format a boon for coaching schools (8/7/2012)
The idea of the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) to tweak the joint entrance examination (JEE) to discourage the coaching culture has done exactly the opposite so far.
Coaching institutes Business Standard spoke to said, with the MHRD insisting on inclusion of board marks as an eligibility criterion for admission to the IITs, admission to their programmes has gone up, and, in some cases, more than doubled. “After Board examinations have been made a part of the admission procedure at IITs, enrolments for this year have more than doubled. There are about 1,200 students enrolled (for the 2014 exams), compared to 575 students last year. Further, the level of examination will get difficult now as CBSE will set the JEE Main paper. Students and parents have understood that it will be difficult to get into the premier institutes without formal coaching," said Chandan Dikshit, planning and strategy head at Rao IIT Academy, an IIT-JEE coaching institute. JEE is the qualifying examination for admission to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).
http://business-standard.com/india/news/iit-jee-formatboon-for-coaching-schools/479398/

11.12 The IITs were formed to produce world-class engineers and scientists   (15/7/2012)


Engineering seems to be one of the few fields where there is no compulsory internship like in medicine, law and CA. This is one of the reasons why students may not be fully aware of the beauty and possibilities of engineering.
Engineering is also a field which is like a joker in a pack of cards. The graduates fit into any career! Naturally, the student will graduate into a more lucrative/easier career. Would a barrier to this help in getting committed students?
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/open-page/article3640215.ece


11.13 Education Is Too Vital to Be Left to Educators (19/7/2012)
Time Magazine in May ran an article entitled, “Learning that Works.” Basically it speaks about how a vibrant vocational education program can be an “alternative way to teach math, science and reading.” Vocational education basically went away 40 years ago because it became a civil rights issue. The education community’s theology was “That every child should go to college.” We have found out the establishment didn’t know what it was talking about. They conned students into taking courses which produced no real education and cost thousands of dollars.
Today Vo-Tech and community colleges are teaching subjects students enjoy and can earn a living from. Examples would be a dental hygienist at $68,300, radiology technician at $54,300 and registered nurse at $64,700, according to the Time story. Reforms are coming because they must. We have left perhaps the most important task in America to people who haven’t delivered.
http://www.tulsabeacon.com/?p=6110

11.14 Can this be true? (3/8//2012)
Experts estimate that an Indian Class VIII student is at the same level as a South Korean Class III student in math abilities or a Class II student from Shanghai when it comes to reading skills. Elementary education is a fundamental right in India, but clearly that says nothing about what our children are studying in school every day.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/India-backs-out-of-global-education-test-for-15-year-olds/articleshow/15332715.cms
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I think our nation needs to know more. How were these students selected? From which schools? Were children from village schools in India pitted against students from elite schools in other countries? Our media needs to report in a more comprehensive way.

Selvaraj

11.15 Anyone worried about what's wrong with our education? (5/8/2012)


Shouldn't we seek alternatives? Can we reduce the wage disparity between those who work with their hands and those who do 'mental' work? How do we bring about dignity of labour in this country? A Japanese guru of quality spoke about the "joy of sweating". Our society, too, had that joy. Why did we lose it to the pleasure of air-conditioned offices to do dumb jobs? Can we nurture those who enjoy working with their hands and not force them to learn by rote? How can we enable each individual to pursue an occupation according to one's aptitude?
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-toi/all-that-matters/Anyone-worried-about-whats-wrong-with-our-education/articleshow/15358010.cms


11.16 Do Romanian schools produce idiots :-) (7/8/2012)
While the state-funded system is facing financial problems, some private universities in Romania are making a huge profit. Also known as “diploma factories”, these institutions are enrolling a large number of students each year. The quality of education in these private establishments is usually even lower than in the state system. Many of their graduates end up unemployed.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/easternapproaches/2012/08/education-romania

11.17 Little knowledge is a dangerous thing (22/8/2012)
I have just started to read the famous science fiction writer, Issac Asimov’s autobiography. This is what Asimov has to say on Literacy: “The age of the pulp magazine was the last in which youngsters were forced to be literate. True literacy is becoming an arcane art, and the nation is steadily ‘dumbing down.’”
Asimov on his school experience: “Once I could read, and as my ability to read improved rapidly, there turned out to be a serious problem. I had nothing to read. My schoolbooks lasted me only a few days, I finished every one of them in the course of the first week of the term and thereafter was educated for that half year. The teacher had very little to tell me.”
……………
Issac Asimov’s life experience has got me wondering. Do modern humans know enough to safely drive forward a complex civilisation without going over the cliff? What kind of intelligence and knowledge does our society need? How should we educate our children to meet this need? This is what I visualise for our nation of more than a billion people:
1000 – The number of persons we need of the caliber who could win Nobel Prizes. It is quite possible we may already have 100 such people (they may not however be getting the required opportunity to shine). Since they will probably be super specialists, we cannot however hand over the reins of the Nation to them (sigh)!?
10000  – The number of people we need with very wide ranging knowledge. We would expect these people to be widely read, well informed and capable of true interdisciplinary thinking. We would expect such individuals to naturally (not by passing competitive exams), take over the reins of leadership.  My fear is that our present educational system may be creating only a handful of such people. It will be impossible for the regular school curriculum to create such individuals because of the inherent inefficiency build into the system, where teaching is more – of the teachers, by the teachers and for the teachers :-)
Let us focus our interest in the second categorie of individuals. Can we set up special schools where children are not taught in the regular sense, but allowed to acquire knowledge (of diverse kind) at the speed at which they are capable of acquiring it???
Selvaraj

11.18 Issac Asimov's travails in academia (extract from his autobiography) (7/9/2012)


1. WRITING PHD THESIS

... I was sitting at my desk, preparing the materials for the day's experiments, and brooding over the approaching necessity of writing a doctoral dissertation. A doctoral dissertation is a highly stylized document, and ironclad rules necessitate that it be written in a stiff and abnormal (even stupid) way. I did not want to write in a stiff, abnormal, and stupid way.

It struck me, therefore, in a Puckish moment, to write a spoof of a doctoral dissertation that would relieve my soul and enable me to approach the real thing with more spirit.

As it happened, I was  working with tiny feathery crystals of a compound called catechol, which was extremely soluble in water. As I dumped some of it into the water, it dissolved the moment it hit the surface. I said to myself, "What if it dissolves just a split second before it hits the surface. What then?"

The result was that I wrote a pseudo-dissertation written as stodgily as I could manage about a compound which dissolved 1.12 seconds before you added the water. I called it The Endochronic Properties of Resublimated Thiotimoline.

I submitted it to Campbell, who enjoyed it and who had no objection to running an occasional spoof article. I realized that it would appear in the magazine at just about the time I would be taking my make-or-break doctor's orals, and I was cautious enough to instruct Campbell to run it under a pseudonym.

It appeared in the March 1948 ASF and Campbell forgot about the pseudonym. There it was, Isaac Asimov plastered all over it, and, of course, the entire Columbia University chemical faculty got wind of it and passed it from hand to hand.

I turned really sick. I knew what would happen. Whatever I did at the doctor's orals, they were going to turn me down on the grounds of personality deficiency. All those years, all those years, and I was going to lose out for the old, old crime of irreverence to my superiors.

But it did not work out that way. After the professors had put me through the hell of a doctor's orals, Professor Ralph Halford asked the last question: "Mr. Asimov, can you tell us something about the thermodynamic properties of resublimated thiotimoline?"

I burst into hysterical laughter, because I knew they wouldn't play games with me if they intended to flunk me, and they didn't. I passed, and one by one they emerge from the testing room, shook my hand, and said, "Congratulations, Dr. Asimov."


2. ISAAC ASIMOV WAS A POOR RESEARCHER BUT A SUPERLATIVE LECTURER.

As my research continued to decline, my lectures continued to improve. By the time my active period at the medical school was drawing to its end, I was generally recognized as the best lecturer in the school. The account reached me, in fact, of two faculty members talking in one of the corridors. The distant sound of laughter and applause reached them, and one said, "What's that?"

The other replied, "It's probably Asimov lecturing."

My utter failure at research didn't bother me in the least, considering my excellence in lecturing. I reasoned it out this way. The prime function of a medical school is to teach medical students to be doctors and one important way of  doing this is through lectures. Not only was I capable of informing and educating the class with my lectures but I roused their enthusiasm as well.

The proof of that was their reaction to my lectures. It was customary to applaud each professor at the conclusion of his final lecture of the course. It was, of course, applause that was halfhearted and perfunctory, the product of custom rather than of conviction. I alone would get applause in mid-course lectures, and real applause too. And while that took place, I felt invulnerable.

How wrong I was! I had left one factor out of my calculations. Lecturing helps only the students. Research, on the other hand, means government grants, and a portion of the grants is invariably marked for "overhead," which goes to the school. What it amounts to is that the school chooses research over lecturing every time - money for itself over education for its students. That meant I was not invulnerable at all, but rather a sitting duck once my research vanished altogether, which it did.

You might argue that the school was correct in choosing itself over the students, since if the school were forced to curtail its facilities through lack of funds, the students would suffer. On the other hand, surely one could strike a balance. A superior teacher might be forgiven failure at research. That, however, as I shall explain later, was not to be.

3. FIRED!

... One postscript - In the spring of 1989, I traveled to Boston in order to participate in the sesquicentennial celebration of Boston university. I gave one of my talks on the future to a large audience of BU students, speaking with my customary elan, and in the question-and-answer period, one of the students said, "We've been hearing some very good speeches, Dr. Asimov, and since you are on the BU faculty, why aren't you lecturing to us regularly?"

And I said, "Forty years ago I was placed on the faculty and I gave lectures for nine years, about a hundred of them altogether, and they were the best lectures the students ever had, but" - a short pause of about two seconds to make sure they were listening - "I was fired."

(Since Asimov had tenure, he could not be fired from the faculty ... but he stopped receiving his salary .. which did not bother him since he had income from his books).

....................

If you have read one of Isaac Asimov's non-fiction books you will realize what is wrong with not only science education, but with education in general.

Selvaraj

11.19 Why Finland's Unorthodox Education System Is The Best In The World  (3/12/2012)





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