Linkages between Higher and Basic Education
– A Personal Perspective
A.N. Maheshwari
Chairperson, National Council
for Teacher Education
The theme of the workshop is identification
of linkages between higher education and basic education. There are many
inspiring examples when experts in higher education found solutions to
intractable problems when a challenge was put to them. The goal of achieving
universal elementary education, which has remained elusive so far, is one such
challenge that calls for response from the higher education system. For this to
happen the experts in higher education would have to willingly accept that
issues of basic education legitimately fall within their academic activities,
which they normally do in universities. This workshop, which is being attended
by experts from across the country, aims at placing the role of higher
education in tackling problems of basic education.
As I was listening to the addresses of the
distinguished persons in the inaugural session, my mind drifted and started
tracing the course of my own professional life. To some extent, by change of my
mindset, I could manage to cross over to basic education from higher education.
When I look back at my career I find that I have been shifting back and forth
between these two extreme ends of the educational spectrum. I will, therefore,
use this opportunity in sharing candidly my own personal experiences. I hope
this will not be out of place in this serious discourse.
I am a theoretical physicist with research
interests in high energy physics, Feynman path-integration and gravitation. But
over the years I developed new academic and professional interests, to wit:
teacher education, school education and educational administration. During my
career I have had association with institutions that span a wide spectrum of
education. Some of these were the University of Chicago; International Centre
for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy; Regional College of Education, Mysore;
Cochin University of Science and Technology, Cochin; National Council of
Educational Research and Training (NCERT); National Council for Teacher
Education (NCTE). As would be seen from their names linkages between these
institutions/organisations, at best, are indirect. It would be interesting to
find how I could associate myself with them as their activities spread over
from basic to higher education. I would, therefore, try to trace linkages
between higher and basic education from my own career.
My initial exposure to tertiary education
was as a student at the University of
Delhi during the period 1959-1964. I
did my B.Sc.(Hons) and M.Sc. in physics during that period. As a student then
my concern was mainly on learning physics. I wanted to enter the career of
research and teaching in physics. It did not cross my mind then that I should
take part in activities such as the National Service Scheme (NSS), linked with
the community. Physics students at the University
of Delhi were too busy understanding
deeper truths such as the structure of the atom than the structure of the
society in which they lived. With this
background I moved on from the University
of Delhi to the University
of Chicago.
I
had selected the University of Chicago
for my research studies, as that institution was a part of physics
folklore. A galaxy of famous
physicists, to name a few, Michelson, Enrico Fermi and, of course, S.
Chandrasekhar had their association with this institution. My impression was
that in this University, linked with the names of more than one hundred Nobel
Laureates, the main activity of its teachers and students would be research at
the frontiers of knowledge and the pursuit of excellence. For quite sometime I
did not know that the University was running a School for children in its
campus and that it was being used as a laboratory by educationists such as
Bloom and others for their research studies in the field of education including
the basic education.
I continued to follow at the University
of Chicago the rhythm of my earlier
life at the University of Delhi.
I kept myself occupied with my research studies. I could not help noticing that
my fellow graduate students had interests other than that of research in
physics. I once asked a friend, who was spending 2 to 3 hours in the evenings
at the Student Centre, what he did there? He asked me in turn whether I had
seen any black student in the campus. He himself pointed out that it was more
probable to find in the campus students from obscure countries in Asia
than students from the neighbourhood of the University. The University was an
island surrounded by black ghettos on its three sides and the Lake
Michigan on the fourth side. According to him, children from the
neighbourhood of the University had the disadvantage of lack of support from
their parents and of poor schooling. It was, therefore, inconceivable that any
black student from the ghettos in the vicinity of the University would ever be
able to meet its admission criteria. Therefore, he and many other graduate
students spent their evenings at the Student Centre in providing remedial
teaching to the children who were living in the slums adjoining the University.
They had a hope that some day black students from the neighbourhood of the
University might succeed in qualifying the high admission standards and the
University would cease to be a place of curiosity to the children and their
parents who lived in its vicinity. I did not take part in this activity or in
other activities for helping disadvantaged that the American students pursued
along with their studies. But I began to question the ivory tower approach of
pursuing higher education in isolation.
In addition to learning physics I became aware of irrelevance of higher
education devoid of societal concerns such as equity in education and attitude
of helping the disadvantaged. The period I spent there at least made me
sensitive to the need of doing something for the society. I realised that
having received generous support from the society that enabled me to pursue my
academic interests I owed to it some responsibility. In this background after
spending some more time abroad I returned to India
in 1972.
I started my teaching career at the Himachal
Pradesh University,
Shimla. I thought that the best way for me to contribute to the society would
be through my teaching and research. I was not satisfied with my efforts as
there was a mismatch between what I wanted my students to achieve and what they
were able to do with their abilities, for they joined the University with weak
academic backgrounds. After struggling through their M.Sc. course almost all of
them preferred to join school teaching than to joining research in physics. I
realised that if the need of the State was that of good teachers then the
challenge was to reorient the thrust of the M.Sc. course from preparing
researchers in physics to preparing good teachers for teaching school physics.
This would have given me more professional satisfaction and also the system
would have got better teachers. It was a turning point in my professional life.
I
joined the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) for it
was running integrated teacher education programme at its Regional College of
Education (RCE), Mysore. Therefore,
not by design but more by a twist of circumstances I became a teacher educator.
I started teaching integrated courses in teacher education. One of the courses
that I experimented with was the M.Sc.Ed. Physics course, for preparing
teachers for teaching physics in senior secondary schools. At the RCE-Mysore I
had the good fortune of having as colleagues some very exceptional persons.
They had the background of higher education and were holding posts with
designations of Professors, Readers and Lecturers, but their research interests
were in education in general and teacher education in particular. The College
had a lab school in its campus. It was called the Demonstration
School. I now got the answer why
Bloom and other researchers in education at the University of Chicago needed a
lab school for their work and their contributions were considered by their
peers no less important than the work of those who worked in basic sciences or
in social sciences or even in professional fields such as law, business or
medicine. Like the lab school of the University
of Chicago, the Demonstration
School completed the full spectrum
of education from the primary to the higher education in the same campus.
At the Regional College of Education I came
across curriculum reforms in school science education such as the Physical
Science Study Committee (PSSC), which were carried out in the early sixties in
the United States of America.
These curriculum innovations were not carried out by experts in education
following the traditional approach but by scientists from the higher education
system. The genesis of this curriculum reform was that the USSR
had out performed the US
by successfully launching its sputniks. The blame was put on the quality of
education imparted by the schools in the US.
The system was not giving the type of education to students who could compete
in science and technology with the USSR. In such a context John F. Kennedy put the
challenge to Dr. Seaborg, then Chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission,
to lead a group of scientists from the universities for bringing in reform in
school curriculum so that children could be made problem solvers and creative
thinkers. These qualities were considered essential for fulfilling the
challenge put by Kennedy for America
to land a man on moon and of bringing him back safe to the Earth. We all know
that this challenge was successfully met. Did the scientists succeed in
influencing school education in the US?
The answer is that the experts from the higher education system could provide a
fresh approach to the school curriculum and came out with an innovative
approach to it that has influenced school education in many other countries of
the world.
I could easily adjust to my role as a
teacher educator because I was teaching pre-service courses in which content,
in my case physics, was appropriately integrated with professional skills of teaching
physics. But over the years my interests in teacher education widened to
broader issues in education and research. This was facilitated by my colleagues
at the Regional College of Education. I may add here that when I was at the
RCE-Mysore I did not discontinue research in theoretical physics as I could
spend three months every year at one of the laboratories of advanced research
in physics either in India
or abroad. I spent nearly 14 years at the RCE-Mysore before moving to the
Cochin University of Science and Technology. At the University my principal
task was that of governance of higher education as I was its Vice-Chancellor.
My background of teacher education and that of theoretical physics helped me in
providing directions for making teaching at the University more effective and
at the same time linking tertiary and secondary stages of education. From the
Cochin University of Science and Technology I moved to the NCERT at New
Delhi. At the NCERT my full time responsibilities were
administrative and academic management of an organisation working holistically
for school education. The NCERT by its structure has direct linkages between
higher education and school education. Its faculty comprises of experts with
backgrounds of higher education who have chosen to work in school education. I
would not like to dwell on the activities of the NCERT as I expect they would
have been covered by others in this seminar. With my experience in teacher
education, school education, educational administration I moved from the NCERT
to the National Council for Teacher Education as its Chairperson. The NCTE is a
statutory body created by an Act of Parliament. Its broad mandate is planned
and co-ordinated development of teacher education in the country.
There are many inspiring examples of
contributions by experts from higher education to different levels of education
including basic education. Hopefully, others who are attending this seminar
would also share their experiences. According to me, for tackling many of the
unmet challenges of basic education such as issues of equity, quality, access
and retention in elementary schools, it might be crucial for the experts in
higher education to take up the challenge and involve themselves with basic
education.
I conclude by pointing out that many
experts in our country have strengthened linkages between higher and basic
education. The Bachelor of Elementary Education (B.El.Ed.) course of the University
of Delhi, an integrated 4-year
pre-service course for education of elementary school teachers, is an
outstanding example of linkage between higher education and elementary
education. The need of the hour is to
scale up the partnership between the higher education and the basic education.