GENERAL EDUCATION SCHOOL CURRICULUM IN TERMS OF
LIFE SKILLS,
AND
ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHER EDUCATION
A. N. Maheshwari
It is rightly said that the School Curriculum of a country reflects its socio-cultural ethos and is a mirror of the kind of society that is envisioned. The first ten years of schooling provide for general education through an undifferentiated curriculum. This span of schooling should enable children to grow into citizens who will live by democratic and secular values, form an egalitarian society, respect composite culture, nurture national identity, be proud of country's cultural heritage and adjust to newer economic concerns such as globalisation, and be able to live effectively in the information age. Developing in children these national concerns, along with life skills relevant to the individual and the community, as well as pedagogic concerns such as flexible pace of learning and learning how to learn should determine the content and process of school education including that of teacher education.
Parents do not explicitly understand the implications of the general education curriculum, as is usually given in the academic documents. They feel left out from what goes on inside the school where their children study, but expect that the school would take care of the interests of their children.
The common impression is that the learning in schools is largely confined to the coverage of the prescribed syllabi. This type of learning may at best result in acquiring knowledge of facts and concepts, but is not directly related to the immediate life of the learners or to their future needs. And, quite often one of the reasons for children dropping out of school is that parents find that what their children are taught at school is not immediately relevant to them in the contexts in which they live. Therefore, there is a concern that the precious years of schooling should be optimally used for developing skills, attitudes and values essential for effective living. If the general education curriculum is to be made relevant to the community, it will require a paradigm shift in the schooling process, and concurrently the teacher education programmes.
It has, therefore, become necessary to state the learning outcomes to be achieved through the schooling process in a form that can be unambiguously understood by the parents, the teachers and the children. It is envisaged that even in the changed educational process in terms of the concerns mentioned above, the learning will continue to remain around the traditional school subjects, namely, language(s), mathematics, science, social sciences, art and aesthetics, work experience, health and physical education. But the learning outcomes shall not be limited to mere acquisition of knowledge of concepts and facts of these subjects. Though the textbooks may continue to remain the principal source of teaching-learning, the task of the teacher should go beyond just covering of the prescribed syllabi and emphasise a better appreciation of the life's environment. Therefore, a new type of teacher will be required.
Preparation of teachers for the envisaged schooling process will require change in the existing teacher education curricula. The foci of teacher education curriculum, which are around building of general foundations for the teaching profession and teaching methodology skills, may now have to be suitably redesigned. In addition to teaching to pre-service teacher the traditional foundation courses, the teacher educators will have to provide a broad exposure to a variety of strategies that can be employed for ensuring that each child is able to acquire the skills, attitudes and values relevant as envisioned for the concerned stage of school education. This expectation from the teacher should determine the teacher education curriculum. At the same time, the schooling process will be directed for fulfilling the assurance given to the parents in the form of statements of skills that children will attain as learning outcomes. This paradigm shift in the school education will mean that teacher will take care that learning of children is not limited to mere memorisation of information contained in the textbooks. This, of course, would require a changed approach to the preparation of teachers.
In the above context, it has become important to outline the life skills needed by an effective citizenry, which can help in formulation of the scope of topics to be included in the curricula of different school subjects. For each of the three schooling stages, primary, upper primary and secondary - skills, attitude and values relevant to the context of the community to which the children belong may have to be spelt out for the different categories of life skills. In what follows statements of the curriculum in terms of skills have been given in the form of a grid, which is only suggestive. It has been evolved in consultation with a group consisting of some teachers, heads of schools and educational experts belonging to the city of New Delhi, and may be seen in some aspects to display an urban bias. The statements in the grid, therefore, should be understood in this backdrop for delineating any general education curriculum. Similar grids, particularly for the primary and upper-primary stages, could be constructed in consultation with the community and contextualised to specific rural and geographical variations.
It is a hard reality that the approach to learning in schools is largely determined by the requirements of public examinations. It may be appreciated that evaluation of the skills, attitudes and values will have to be the responsibility of the school and not of the Boards of School Education that conduct public examination for purposes of certification. Such aspects can best be measured in respect of an individual over a period of time and not in a one-time common public examination. This dichotomy needs to be broken; if the intended transformation is to be introduced into the existing school and teacher education curricula.
Let us now look at the various components of the present day school curriculum and make an attempt in defining the kind of life skills that each component is most amenable to develop in the children.
2. Language Curriculum
Language is central to all learning. The present day language curriculum of the school largely emphasises skills of reading and writing, predominantly the latter. What is needed is to give a thrust to this area of curriculum with a clearer focus on development of communication skills in their total perspective. The entire gamut of language skills viz. listening, speaking, reading and writing with comprehension has to be developed in totality through any language curriculum. A grid elaborating communication skills that need to be developed in children across different stages of school education is presented in what follows:
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Listening and Speaking |
Be able to follow, comprehend and respond to instructions and questions at school and at home Be able to follow assembly programmes, thoughts for the day, news, etc. |
Be able to comprehend and respond to instructions and questions and be able to interact confidently with known persons Be able to follow assembly programmes and contribute effectively to the same |
Be able to take initiative in group discussion Be able to contribute and participate in assembly programmes, short talk on current topics, thought for the day, conduct quiz and in-house competition, etc. |
2. |
Ability to inquire and respond appropriately to simple inquiries relating to self and immediate environment |
Be able to show-and-tell using pictures, simple craft-work, models and charts, etc. |
Be able to conduct surveys on contextual topics within the school and in the vicinity of home |
Be able to conduct survey on contextual topics within the school and in the vicinity of home Be able to take part in discussions, prepare surveys reports, etc. |
3. |
Ability to speak clearly and appropriately with respect and affection |
Be able to role play using dialogue and body language, say between teacher-student, mother-daughter/son, brother-sister, grandparent- child, etc. |
Be able to simulate and take part in lively debates on matters of social and academic interest, e.g., environmental pollution, population growth, national integration, etc. |
Be able to simulate and take part in lively debates on matters of social and academic interest, e.g., environmental pollution, brain-drain national integration, dowry deaths, child labour, etc. |
4. |
Vocabulary for effective use of language |
Learn new words using webs and mind maps, e.g., learning five new words a day and be able to use them in simple sentences |
Be able to solve crossword puzzles, etc. |
Be able to solve crossword puzzles, etc. |
5. |
Creative expression |
Be able to give short speech, narrate a short story, present orally group work, describe scene at a railway platform, festivals, etc. |
Be able to give extempore speech, take part in debates, present report of activities such as class picnic, excursions, etc. |
Be able to give extempore speech, take part in debates, present report of activities such as class picnic and excursions, etc. |
6. |
Social awareness through reading |
Be able to read newspapers and form opinions on issues such as anti-fire cracker campaign, 'no plastic bag' campaign, etc. |
Be able to read newspapers and magazines and form opinion on issues such as adult literacy, child labour, Aids, say-no-to-polythene-bags, Chipko-movement, need of traffic discipline, etc. |
Be able to read newspapers and magazine and form opinion on issues such as adult literacy, child labour, Aids, say-no-to polythene-bags, Chipko-movement, need of traffic discipline, etc. |
7. |
Developing writing ability |
Be able to write short story, essay, poems, travelogue, personal diary etc. Be able to write imaginative, humorous, jokes, poems, stories, etc. |
Be able to write short story, essay, poems, travelogue, personal diary etc. Be able to write imaginative, humorous, jokes, poems, stories etc. Be able to take part in on-the-spot writing competition, etc. |
Be able to write short story, essay, poems, travelogue, personal diary and speech on socially relevant issues, etc. |
8. |
Ability to write letters, postcards, notes, descriptions etc. |
Be able to write letters to parents, friends, class-teacher, take down telephone messages, etc. |
Be able to write application for leave to class-teacher, telegrams, letter to a friend, etc. Be able to write report of group work, project reports, etc.
|
Be able to write a formal letter, letter to editor on issues and activities involving school, community, nation, etc. |
3. Mathematics Curriculum
There has been considerable discussion on the scope of mathematics that should be taught to children as a part of their general education. Basic competence in the four fundamental operations, namely, addition, subtraction, multiplication and division and their right conceptualisation by the children should inform the main thrusts of the mathematics curriculum. This is not to suggest that knowledge in such areas of mathematics as algebra and geometry is less important. The deductive logic, which is an important life skill, comes from the study of geometry. What needs to be appreciated is that children do not remain deprived in their general education of the mastery of basic computational skills used in various day to day activities, for example, computation of percentage, profit and loss, ratio and proportion, interest, length, area, volume and time. Today's information media, whether print or electronic, increasingly utilise pictorial and visual modes of communication for better and effective impact on our minds. Graphical representation of data, bar diagrams, maps, etc. are commonly encountered in print and electronic media. It is suggested that the computational skills as listed in the grid below across different stages of school education could be an importance and pragmatic approach in re-looking at the teaching and learning of mathematics in schools.
COMPPUTATIONAL SKILLS
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Computations using four fundamental operations |
Be able to compute price of items purchased for daily use Be able to solve simple problems related to real life and world of work |
Be able to solve simple problems related to real life and world of work |
|
2.
|
Computation of percentage, profit and loss, income tax, discount, etc.
|
Be able to work out profit and loss in daily life transactions
|
Be able to compute profit and loss in real life transactions and express them as percentages
|
Be able to compute profit and loss in real life transactions and express them as percentages Be able to compute income tax, sales tax, discounts, insurance premium, etc. Be able to appreciate concepts such as cost of living index, death rate and birth rate, etc. |
3
|
Computation of ratio and proportion |
|
Be able to solve problems relating time-distance, time-work, work-person etc. |
Be able to handle situations involving time-distance, time-work and work-person relations. |
4.
|
Computation of Interest
|
|
Be able to compute simple and compound interest in situations of loan and deposits, etc.
|
Be able to compute simple and compound interest, hire- purchase installment Be able to appreciate changes in, population, food production, etc. Be able to compute depreciation/appreciation of movable and immovable assets such as land, building, shares, vehicles, etc. |
5. |
Measurement/ computation of length, area, volume and time |
Be able to handle day-to-day transactions involving measurement of length, area and volume |
Be able to measure/ compute surface area/ volume of simple objects such as triangles, bricks, play field, cube, room, water storage tank, cricket ball, etc.
Be able to measure lapse of time between two events |
Be able to measure/compute area of irregular figures such as fields, play ground etc. Be able to compute cost of whitewashing of a room, cost of digging a well, etc. |
6. |
Interpretation of data from graph/chart/map |
|
Be able to read simple graphs, bar graphs from newspapers and magazines, etc. and draw meaningful conclusions |
Be able to read and interpret maps, graphs, histograms, pie charts from newspapers, magazines, etc. |
7. |
Graphical representation of data |
Be able to represent data as a graph, bar chart/ pie chart; for example weather data on variation of rain, temperature and pressure etc. |
Be able to represent data related to world of work and life using appropriate mode such as graphs, charts, etc. |
4. Science and Technology Curriculum
It has been generally seen that majority of the basic information and concepts that dominate the school science curriculum have significance for only such children as would pursue a career in science. What is expected as a part of general education is to ensure that science and technology education is used to inculcate in the learners a spirit of inquiry, curiosity, objectivity, creativity, problems solving skills, decision making skills and aesthetic sensibility. These attributes have been reflected at different places in the grid. This requires a total transformation in the approach to the design of science curriculum with a focus on the development of the above mentioned skills, attitudes and values. This, of course, has implications for re-designing the programmes of teacher education.
5. Social Studies/Social Sciences Curriculum
The components of social sciences include history, geography, civics/political science and economics. History connects our past with our present through familiarisation with our cultural heritage and social order. The constitutional values such as rights, duties, learning to live together, and understanding of the nature of governance will form an appropriately re-designed civics/political science curriculum. The concern for sustainable development and environment education will be taken care of by the curricula of geography and science. The questions of economy in the context of privatisation and globalisation require a different set of life skills. The general education curriculum has, therefore, to acquaint students through teaching these subjects with the expected orientation.
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Civic sense, environmental awareness and friendly attitude |
Be able to keep the classroom clean, help parents in keeping a clean home with clean toilet etc. Be able to share common facilities such as school canteen by forming a queue, etc. |
Reinforce further the statements for primary |
Be able to organise campaigns such as tree conservation and have a positive attitude for all living forms |
2. |
Leadership qualities |
Be able to take part in excursions Be able to control the class in the absence of the teacher, etc. |
Reinforce further the statements for primary Be able to help persons in distress by even taking personal risk, etc. |
Be able to organise excursions, assembly activities prefectoral role, etc. Be able to help persons in distress by even taking personal risk etc. |
3. |
Religious tolerance |
Be able to appreciate religious diversities and have respect for different religions and faiths |
Reinforce further the statements for primary |
Be able to take part in religious functions of friends, different communities |
6. Work Education/ Work Experience Curriculum
The place of work education in the general education curriculum has been emphasised by various Committees and Commissions on education in our country. It has been recognised as an activity, which should lead to production of purposeful goods and services by the learners and utilised by them in their social environment as their contribution. Besides, such an approach inculcates dignity of labour and working with hands. In fact, if one were to go back to what Gandhi said work education should have become a centre-stage of education.
Except six to seven hours spent in the school, children spend the rest of the time at home. The time at home is spent doing homework, playing, and listening to music and in helping the parents with household tasks. Facility in using modern electronic gadgets with proper safety measures and participation in household activities will make children confident, responsible and supportive to their parents and siblings. Such skills will be crucial when growing up children become householders themselves.
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Ability to operate household gadgets and perform household activities |
Be able to operate radio, television, toaster, etc.
Be able to take care of personal hygiene, cleaning of room, washing of uniform, etc. |
Be able to use safely electric iron for pressing school uniform
Be able to measure body temperature, room temperature using appropriate thermometer Be able to maintain cleanliness at home and of surroundings |
Be able to connect appropriate electric wires to plugs, holders, switches, etc. in domestic wiring Be able to change safely LPG cylinder and handle safely situation when there is leakage of gas, etc. Be able to fix electric fuse in domestic wiring Be able to cook food items such as rice, vegetables, etc. |
2.
|
Dignity of work
|
Be able to participate in Socially Useful Productive Work (SUPW) activities like cleaning of school area, home, school bus, etc.
Help parents with household chores such as setting the table for meals, taking the garbage out and disposing it at a proper place Attend to visitors and guests at home |
Be able to participate in Socially Useful Productive Work (SUPW) activities like cleaning of school area, home, school bus, etc.
Help parents with household chores such as setting the table for meals, taking the garbage out and disposing it at a proper place Attend to visitors and guests at home |
Be able to participate in Socially Useful Productive Work (SUPW) activities like cleaning of school area, home, school bus, etc.
Help parents with household chores such as setting the table for meals, taking the garbage out and disposing it at a proper place Help in maintaining school facilities such as laboratories, library, resource rooms etc. Assist in organisation of school day and family functions Attend to visitors and guests at home |
7. IT Literacy
In today's context, no school child can be taken to be educated unless she/he has the necessary confidence in the Information Technology (IT) literacy skills. Learning to learn on one's own has become very fundamental to our survival in the emerging learning society. This will require among others the basic IT skills in children so that they may be able to manipulate the vast amount and variety of information for their learning. This would also lead to liberating the child from the "tyranny" of confinement to prescribed textbooks. It will also consciously develop in children the ability of interactive learning at their own pace and even self-evaluation of the learning acquired.
For living effectively in the age dominated by communication and information technology it will be essential that students acquire such skills as make them information technology literate. Through designing appropriate learning experiences in the first ten years of schooling, essential IT skills that should be developed in students in the primary, upper-primary and secondary stages have been given in the following:
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Information Technology Literacy |
|
|
Be able to write letters, and reports with texts, tables and graphics using word processor and printer Be able to access information from the Internet and be able to communicate using E-mail |
8. Art, aesthetics and general skills
No education can be meaningful if it stops at only developing cognitive learning. There are dimensions inherent in every individual, which crave for participation in areas beyond cognition. Concern for love, beauty, compassion, coping with stress, time management, etc. become basic for survival. There are other affective dimensions which will involve development of certain psychological skills and skills for co-operation and learning to live together. The art and aesthetics appreciation skills that should be developed through a general education curriculum have been given in the grid below:
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Handling emotions |
Be able to overcome negative emotions like fear, anger, and aggression and develop positive emotions such as love, empathy, tolerance, etc. Be able to confide freely in parents and teachers |
Be able to overcome negative emotions like fear, anger, and aggression and develop positive emotions such as love, empathy, tolerance, etc. Be able to confide freely in parents and teachers |
Be able to overcome negative emotions like fear, anger, and aggression and develop positive emotions such as love, empathy, tolerance, etc.
Be able to confide freely in parents and teachers |
2. |
Coping with stress |
Be able to cope with day-to-day stresses such as sibling rivalry and working parents etc. |
Be able to cope with day-to-day stresses such as sibling rivalry and working parents etc. |
Be able to cope with day-to-day stresses such as sibling rivalry and working parents etc. |
3. |
Self-confidence |
Be confident of one's competence |
Be confident of one's competence and take decisions and be accountable and responsible for one's actions |
Be confident of one's competence and take decisions and be accountable and responsible for one's actions |
4. |
Resourcefulness skills |
Be able to assist in organising school and family functions Be able to take part in camps, excursions, and picnics Be able to use resources maximally and meaningfully Be able to contribute to exhibitions |
Be able to assist in organising school and family functions Be able to take part in camps, excursions, picnics Be able to use resources maximally and meaningfully Be able to contribute to exhibitions |
Be able to assist in organising school and family functions Be able to take part in camps, excursions, picnics Be able to use resources maximally and meaningfully Be able to contribute to exhibitions |
5. |
Analytical ability |
Be able to take part in activities such as science club, computer games, etc. |
Be able to take part in activities involving collection and interpretation of qualitative data on issues of current affairs such as radioactive waste, pollution, conservation, etc. |
Be able to take part in activities involving collection and interpretation of qualitative data on issues of current affairs such as radioactive waste, pollution and conservation, etc. |
6. |
Aesthetic appreciation |
Be able to enjoy music, visit to art gallery Be able to take part in fine arts and performing arts |
Be able to enjoy music, visit to art gallery Be able to take part in fine arts and performing arts |
Be able to enjoy music, visit to art gallery Be able to take part in fine arts and performing arts |
7. |
Emotional abilities and inter-personal skills |
Be able to express through poems and read them aloud in the class or in assembly, be able to make friends, take care of animals and plants, be sensitive to feelings of elders |
Be able to express through poems and read them aloud in the class or in assembly, be able to make friends, take care of animals and plants, be sensitive to feelings of elders |
Be able to express through poems and read them aloud in the class or in assembly, be able to make friends, take care of animals and plants, be sensitive to feelings of elders |
9. Health and Physical Education
A sound mind in a sound body has been proverbially emphasised as the backbone of a healthful living. The school curriculum should emphasise the concerns of healthful living through teaching as well as through physical activities. Healthful living requires physical, mental and spiritual development. Skills needed for healthful living, which should be developed in each student in the first ten years of general education, are given as below:
Skill |
Primary |
Upper Primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Personal hygiene |
Be able to take care of personal hygiene, identify various parts of the body and be able to take care of them by washing and cleaning them every day Wear neat and clean clothes including undergarments Keep nails and hair trimmed Take care of uniform, shoes, socks, etc. |
Be able to take care of personal hygiene Wear neat and clean clothes including undergarments. Keep nails and hair trimmed Take care of uniform, shoes, socks, etc. |
Be able to take care of personal hygiene Wear neat and clean clothes including undergarments. Keep nail and hair trimmed. Take care of uniform, shoes, socks, etc. |
2.
|
Healthy food Habits
|
Eat food at proper times and avoid eating open food and fruits, and drink only safe water.
|
Eat food at proper times and avoid eating open food and fruits, and drink only safe water. Know food items such as vegetables, fruits, etc, which are rich in carbohydrates, fats, proteins, different vitamins Be aware of essential ingredients of daily foods
Be able to select balanced and nourishing diet and avoid junk food by appreciation of its ill effects |
Eat food at proper times and avoid eating open food and fruits, and drink only safe water. Know food items such as vegetables, fruits, etc, which are rich in carbohydrates, fats, proteins, different vitamins Be aware of essential ingredients of daily food and be able to select balance and nourishing diet and avoid junk food by appreciation of its ill effects. |
3. |
Cleanliness |
Maintain home, classroom and their surroundings clean Keep the school garden, canteen area, play field, toilets and drinking water place clean |
Maintain home, classroom and their surrounding clean Keep the school garden, canteen area, play field, toilet and drinking water place clean |
Maintain home, classroom and their surroundings clean Keep the school garden, canteen area, play field, toilets and drinking water place clean |
4. |
Friendship with ecosystem |
Know the local plants, trees, animals, birds and natural resources like lake, river, etc. |
Understand that plants & trees purify the environment by the process of photosynthesis
Have awareness of causes of pollution of air, water and the local ecosystem by pollutants such as industrial waste, sewage, automobile exhaust, radioactive waste, fire crackers, etc. |
Understand that plants & trees purify the environment by the process of photosynthesis.
Have awareness of causes of pollution of air, water and the local ecosystem by pollutants such as industrial waste, sewage, automobile exhaust, radioactive waste, fire crackers, etc. |
5. |
Harmful effects of smoking, alcoholism and drugs |
Become aware that smoking is hazardous to health |
Become aware that smoking, consumption of alcoholic beverages and use of drugs are harmful for health Become aware of common drugs, e.g., tranquillisers, narcotics, hallucinogenic stimulants, sedatives etc. Become aware that drinking alcohol damages the digestive tract and kidneys |
Become aware that smoking, consumption of alcoholic beverages and use of drugs are harmful for health Become aware of common drug e.g. tranquillisers, narcotics, hallucinogenic stimulants, sedatives etc. Become aware that drinking alcohol damages the digestive tract and kidneys |
6. |
Common diseases, their causes and prevention |
Become aware of common diseases such as cholera, malaria, chickenpox, measles, cold & cough, and ailments such as stomach-ache, headache, food poisoning, dehydration and their first-aid treatment Become aware of prophylactic treatment such as vaccination against diseases |
Become aware of common diseases such as cholera, malaria, chickenpox, measles, cold & cough, and ailments such as stomach-ache, headache, food poisoning, dehydration and their first-aid treatment Became aware of prophylactic treatment such as vaccination against diseases |
Become aware of common diseases such as cholera, malaria, chickenpox, measles, cold & cough, and ailments such as stomach-ache, headache, food poisoning, dehydration and their first-aid treatment Became aware of prophylactic treatment such as vaccination against diseases |
7. |
Population control |
|
Become aware of advantages of small family, ill effects of high population growth, methods of family planning |
Become aware of advantages of small family, ill effects of high population growth, methods of family planning Values related to successful married life, child bearing and rearing and other aspect of family life
|
8. |
Healthy leisure time habits |
Develop interest in reading epics such as Ramayana, Mahabharata, fold tales and biographies of great persons |
Become aware of advantages/disadvantages of seeing cinema/TV
Be able to select good reading materials from newspapers, magazines and to be able to avoid reading cheap and prurient materials. Develop hobbies like gardening, fine art, singing, dancing, swimming & playing games, etc. |
Become aware of advantages/ disadvantages of seeing cinema/TV
Be able to select good reading materials from newspapers, magazines and to be able to avoid reading cheap and prurient materials. Develop hobbies like gardening, fine art, singing, dancing, swimming & playing games etc. |
9. |
Adolescence education |
|
Know about biological psychological, socio-cultural and moral aspects of human sexuality Become prepared for coping with the stress and strain of the adolescence period and to be able to lead healthy life during this period Know the functions of male & female human reproductive systems |
Know about biological psychological, socio-cultural and moral aspects of human sexuality Become prepared for coping with the stress and strain of the adolescence period and to be able to lead healthy life during this period Know the functions of male & female human reproductive systems |
10. Learning to learn
The following category of skills are for preparing children into becoming lifelong learners, for making learning not a drudgery or a burdensome task but a joyful experience in the process of growth of an individual and for drawing the maximum out of life:
Skill |
Primary |
Upper primary |
Secondary |
|
1. |
Willingness to learn |
Be able to take interest in learning, become inquisitive and acquire self-motivation |
Be able to take interest in learning, become inquisitive and acquire self-motivation Be able to gather information, analyse it and use it for solving some problem |
Be able to take interest in learning, become inquisitive and acquire self-motivation Be able to gather Information, analyse it and use it for solving some problem, Become an autonomous learner |
2.
|
Ability to remain focussed
|
Be able to complete time-bound tasks/assignments in time Be able to sit still Be able to listen attentively to a story/ narrate it by recalling it from memory
Be able to remain focussed on theme of a discussion, etc. |
Be able to complete time-bound tasks/assignments in time Be able to sit still Be able to listen attentively to a story/narrate it by recalling it from memory
Be able to concentrate on a given task and remain focussed on theme of a discussion, etc. |
Be able to complete time-bound tasks/assignments in time
Be able to sit still Be able to listen attentively to a story /narrate it by recalling it from memory
Be able to concentrate on a given task and remain focussed on theme of a discussion, etc. |
3. |
Apply knowledge |
Be able to understand problems, analyse them, find their solution within the available resources |
Be able to understand problems, analyse them, find their solution within the available resources |
Be able to understand problems, analyse them, find their solution within the available resources
|
4. |
Co-operation & a healthy sense of competition |
Be able to participate in group activities such as peer group learning, carry out assignments through co-operative effort, be supportive, etc. |
Be able to participate in group activities such as peer group learning, carry out assignment s though co-operative effort, be supportive, etc. |
Be able to participate in group activities such as peer group learning, carry out assignments through co-operative effort, be supportive, etc. Be able to appreciate better achievement and have a healthy attitude for taking part in competitive activities |
11. Implications for Teacher Education
Concerns of school education have simultaneous implications for teacher education. Learning outcomes that can be achieved through the transaction of the school curriculum through the teacher will depend on the teacher's abilities. Therefore, the quality of any educational intervention ultimately rests with teacher's professional acumen, motivation and competence. Effective teacher education programmes need to consciously focus on developing in the teachers the necessary knowledge, skills and values that enable translation of school curriculum into action. How does one go about this exercise?
Let us look at how teacher education curricula are presently structured. There are two vital aspects of teacher preparation, one of which is concerned with equipping the teacher with those areas of knowledge which are generic to the role expected of him/her to be a transformer of young minds and understand the implications of imparting education. Such an objective is realised through imparting knowledge of foundation disciplines of education, which draw inputs from the disciplines of philosophy, history, sociology and psychology. Then comes the question of developing skills and knowledge for effective classroom performance so that the teaching produces the intended learning through already identified curriculum areas.
As stated earlier there is a concern that the present school curriculum does not inculcate basic life skills, attitudes and values to an extent it does for bookish information load. For resulting in attainment of life skills and values through the schooling process it will be necessary to synchronise functional school education with equally functional teacher education.
There is considerable scope to give some practical orientation to the course content offered under foundation areas of teacher education, which are presently handled largely theoretically. Educational philosophy provides the needed foundation for discussing, practising and internalising the whole gamut of life issues/skills pertaining to 'learning to be', particularly the total value orientation to life through educational processes. The practical component of educational psychology could also lay emphasis on psychological skills for life as enumerated earlier in the tabulated statement as part of practicum in the subject. Development of social skills could constitute a substantial part of practicum in educational sociology through discussions, seminars, workshops, investigations, case studies, etc.
The second important component of teacher education curriculum consists of courses related to methodologies of teaching school subjects, e.g., teaching of language(s), mathematics, science, social sciences/studies, work experience, art and aesthetics and health & physical Education. The methodology courses focus on "teaching how to teach" by combining the conceptual structures of the subjects and the skills and competencies that naturally emanate from the study of these subjects. The life skills to be developed through the teaching-learning of the concerned subject should receive adequate attention in the teacher education programme in the form of learning strategies that will be found helpful by teachers in the actual classrooms.
Another important component of teacher education programme is called "working with the community". Teacher educators can effectively use this component of the course in helping the student teachers interact with the community for identifying the life skills that it wants the school to develop in its children.
In today's context of life's realities, the scope of general education needs to be extended beyond imparting the literacy and computational skills. The general education may have to be used as an instrument for consumer literacy, legal literacy and of course the IT literacy.
It is expected that the approach of spelling out the school curriculum in the form of statements of skills and competencies to be developed in children by the school, de facto will be the assurance of the school to the parent. The parents will be able to judge for themselves that the school attended by their child has been able to develop the skills that the school assured at the time of admission of their child. This will bring in accountability on heads of schools, teachers, teacher education institutions, the State and the non-governmental managements that have set up schools for taking care of education of the children.