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	<title>Dawn of new learning &#124; Babu Mathew</title>
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	<description>The Dawn of new learning</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2011 08:56:44 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>Creating Intelligent Schools (Part 2)</title>
		<link>http://pulari.org/creating-intelligent-schools-part-2</link>
		<comments>http://pulari.org/creating-intelligent-schools-part-2#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Jun 2011 08:53:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>babu</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education System]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pulari.org/?p=106</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Knowing is not about remembering and repeating information but it is about finding and using information]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Nobel Laureate Herbert Simon remarked “Knowing is not about remembering and repeating information but it is about finding and using information”</em>.  Even a serious onlooker of education would agree with this statement. As technology and human competence acquires new levels of proficiency every passing hour; the monotony of repeated information and its casual storage becomes meaningless. Survival in this era is more aligned to the abilities of finding and using the relevant information more accurately and with enhanced speed. Has the transition from the old phase of storage and retrieval to the new phase of search and usage been completed? For that matter has it even started in many of our educational institutions? Why we fail to see the eventuality is a serious concern that needs to be addressed. In the earlier days education was a luxury and for many it was not something that decided the survival of the individual. But today the story is different education becomes a mandatory tool for survival. How much have we managed to move away from the earlier days and innovated to address the challenges of today? We still follow the age old methods of assessment wherein we just test the individual about her/his memory retrieval. The technique does not change according to the times. We don’t test the individual about her/his capacity to find information. The Science of Learning is providing knowledge to improve significantly people’s abilities to become active learners who seek to understand complex subject matter and are better prepared to transfer what they have learned to new problems and settings. This transfer of knowledge to address any new challenge and the subsequent application of the acquired knowledge in any setting is the real purpose of education in today’s world.  Why we fail to do this is the dilemma being faced by the stakeholders of education.</p>
<p>In the earlier days education was less about technology and had more to do with language and its applications. Memorizing and retrieving the same from the memory was stressed more. The mode of transmission of knowledge and the methods of assessment were invariably focused on memory enhancing techniques and the repeat of information already gathered. The survival of the individual was more focused on instincts than on learning or its applications. The modern era has thrown up a much complex living landscape with greater stress on technology and its usage for the betterment of humanity. Mere memorizing and retrieval won’t help the individual to survive in this complicated landscape. We still get away with the ‘A’ for Apple kind of learning. Why can’t we let our children search for words with the ‘A’ sound instead? When our children are encouraged to perform such activities, they get an idea about using the information that they receive in their day to day existence. Any information gathered is to be fine tuned, processed and made use of. This also invokes in the children a sense of curiosity and a hunger to know more which is really essential in making learning fun and challenging. Children are by nature curious and it is only our monotonous and rugged ways of imparting knowledge that really puts cold water on their curiosity and curbs their natural instinct to learn. We as facilitators of knowledge are supposed to listen to each child, help her/him test the validity of information gathered by them, and in necessary situations guide them towards the factual correctness of the information gathered by them at each point of their activities. The most important aspect of learning is that whatever information the child gathers is to be used at appropriate circumstances, and knowledge acquisition is not a robotic process that is to be directed only towards the examination end.<br />
Our learning environments need more zest and the focus should shift from testing memory to interpretation and application of the information transferred by the system and gathered from the environment. The human mind is constantly searching for information, and this quest for knowledge is part of the survival techniques adopted by humans. The child is so fascinated by the amount of information surrounding her/him in various forms. We as teachers and parents are entrusted with the responsibility of letting the child explore and use this information in a meaningful way. The current system only focus on giving them packaged information and the contents of this package has been designed is such fashion that the information provided are stereotyped and redundant. We never let our children roam outside the strict boundaries of these packaged information. Each child is blessed with her/his unique abilities-the idea of imparting knowledge is to identify these unique abilities of our children and to let them explore it further. Then learning becomes a fascinating and rewarding experience. The creation of such a learning environment will infuse in our children the belief that knowing is about finding and using information.</p>
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		<title>Emotions And Learning</title>
		<link>http://pulari.org/emotions-and-learning</link>
		<comments>http://pulari.org/emotions-and-learning#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2011 13:10:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>babu</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education System]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pulari.org/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Do emotions affect learning? And does learning affect one’s emotions? Are these two terms inter related? If so; what is the relation and how it can be defined? Let us try knowing what emotions are....
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Do emotions affect learning? And does learning affect one’s emotions? Are these two terms inter related? If so; what is the relation and how it can be defined? Let us try knowing what emotions are&#8230;.</p>
<p>Emotions are one factor that defines humanity from the rest of the species.  We experience a multitude of emotions every day, every hour and every instant of our lives. They decide how we react to persons, incidents, and objects and design the complexity of human relations. By now brain research has proved that there is a specific area in the human brain that is related to emotions – namely the limbic system and specifically the amygdala. So emotions are conscious experiences and not just illusions. These conscious experiences are always triggered by something- an object, a person, an incident, any sensory stimulations or even a thought process. There can be both positive and negative emotions. Positive emotions are the ones that give us more energy, make us more confident and we feel more vibrant and enthusiastic both in the body and the mind. Negative emotions are the ones that zap our energy, make us less confident and we feel dull and lethargic both in the body and the mind. Emotions are both simple and complex. Simple emotions are the ones that is easy to identify and can be easily explained. The complex ones are those which we find very difficult to explain and these are normally a combination of two or more emotions. The simple emotions are the basic emotions and from early childhood onwards we start experiencing these emotions. The basic emotions are namely happiness, pleasure, sadness, anger, fear and disgust.</p>
<p>What is learning? Learning is a conscious experience whereby we assimilate new experiences and information and also apply already acquired sum of all the experiences and information towards the achievement of a desired outcome. Learning is continuous and ever changing. It is a womb to grave process. Learning can be both formal and informal Formal learning is a structured and precise form of learning which has a set of rules and happens inside a disciplined and previously designed environment and knowledge is being supplied by either trained manpower or elders. Formal learning happens only for a very short span of time in our lives when you consider learning as a womb to grave process. Informal learning starts soon after conception and goes on till the grave. Informal learning is an unstructured and loose form of learning which is happening 24*7 in any kind of environment and new knowledge is being assimilated from the different experiences and conscious processes that one goes through in one’s life time. Informal learning does not need a setting and in this scenario knowledge acquisition is mostly done by the self as the self goes through a multitude of experiences every second. The informal learning can be corrected and tested under the formal learning process. Children who are encouraged to learn from their life’s experiences and who are provided more awareness about informal learning tend to ask more questions in the formal learning setting of the classroom. This is because the informal acquisition of knowledge leads them to raise more questions.</p>
<p>It is evident that emotions are learned. The multitude of emotions that a person experience in his/her lifetime is another form of learning only. The emotions invoke physiological changes, personal experiences and expressive behaviours – thus the emotional environment that one lives in has got a significant impact on learning. In the initial period of childhood the home environment does play a vital role in learning, filling the child’s environment with positive emotions are vital in maintaining a stimulating learning experience. A child who is emotionally deprived by the parents and the immediate family tend to assimilate more negative emotions then the learning experience tends to be more awkward dull and fearsome. Similarly the emotional environment at school also has to be a positive one for the child to take learning as a challenging and rewarding task. A teacher who generates fear and demands obedience can really harm the learning experience of the child. When the emotional environment in the classroom is positive coupled with a home environment which offers the nurturing of positive emotions the children tend to be more open to the experience of learning. For these children learning becomes a challenging and rewarding experience.</p>
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		<title>Creating Intelligent Schools</title>
		<link>http://pulari.org/creating-intelligent-schools</link>
		<comments>http://pulari.org/creating-intelligent-schools#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Jan 2011 13:57:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>babu</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Education System]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pulari.org/?p=11</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Can our schools be named Intelligent Schools?  Definitely not, for the reason that our schools have children who are being tagged as idiots, morons and waste. Most of the children are labeled in this fashion by parents and teachers – people who are supposed to facilitate learning in children! So our schools are brimming with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Can our schools be named Intelligent Schools?  Definitely not, for  the reason that our schools have children who are being tagged as  idiots, morons and waste. Most of the children are labeled in this  fashion by parents and teachers – people who are supposed to facilitate  learning in children! So our schools are brimming with idiots, morons  and waste and not children. When the traditional definition of  intelligence is offered only twenty percent of the children can be named  as intelligent children, and the school (or any learning environment)  is supposed to be a place of intelligence. That makes it imperative for  us to go for a new definition of intelligence. Our schools provide an  environment in which our children are asked to perform on certain  prescribed formats according to a very rigid set of rules in a  suffocating framework. Only twenty percent manages to perform well under  the given conditions and we term these children as intelligent and the  rest of the children are being labeled as ‘good for nothings’. The  peculiarity of the human brain is its diverse faculties. Here we are not  providing for these diverse faculties but the focus is on only a very  limited set of faculties and we term these faculties alone as  intelligence! Intelligence is the power to survive and every human being  is blessed with this power and no two human beings use this power in  identical fashion. This is specifically why we have no dearth of  philosophies, thoughts, ideas and living styles. Humanity has come to  embrace all these differences enthusiastically.</p>
<p>When it comes to creating the learning environment are we so  sophisticated in our approach? Why our schools does not provide for the  diverse abilities of our children? Why can’t we make our learning  environment more learner oriented? It has become mandatory that in order  to survive every learner has to have some proficiency in language,  logical thinking and reasoning abilities. But, should we stress that  these are to be learned in only those styles that we design it?  Just  like we adults talk about choices are we not supposed to offer our  children the choice of learning these basic things the way they prefer  to learn it? Every learner has her/his fortress of strength and this  need to be identified. This is where the theory of multiple  intelligences has its applications. Human beings have different sets of  intelligences and language abilities and logical thinking is not the  only intelligences as far as human beings are concerned. They have the  ability to visualize things and identify patterns, they also has the  capacity to identify rhythms, sounds and pitches, they can also be very  active physically and excel in areas that needs physical coordination,  they have the power to identify the changing patterns of nature and be  more aware of the peculiarities of nature. They too have the power of  interpersonal relations and some are very good at knowing better about  the self. Include in this the faculties of language and logical thinking  and we get eight different domains of intelligences as far as human  beings are concerned.  Most of the human beings show a natural tendency  to possess three of the eight faculties at a higher level compared to  the other five. As providers of learning we need to identify these  dominant faculties in each child and this knowledge can be utilized in  creating Intelligent Schools.</p>
<p>Once we put such a system in place no children will be termed as  idiot, moron or waste as every child is intelligent one way or the  other. This creates a positive learning environment as far as the  children are concerned. Now the focus shifts from an instructor oriented  environment to that of a learner oriented environment.  The application  of theory of Multiple Intelligence is the tool that can enhance  learning in children.  The children, once their better developed  faculties are identified using scientific techniques are given a  positive reinforcement as they are made aware of their own strengths.   These acknowledgements of their strengths in turn encourages the  children to pursue knowledge acquisition using their own styles and  naturally this will motivate the children to have better understanding  of themselves and will also help them in planning their future in a  meaningful way. Once the tool has been implemented, how to create the  ambience to <em>excel</em> in their pursuit of knowledge? This is where  the unique human ability comes in to play. The human beings have a  specific area in the brain devoted for emotions. Emotions do play a  vital role in our survival and hence in our intelligence. Creating an  emotionally intelligent school is also mandatory when we think of a  learner oriented approach towards education. Emotionally literate  teachers and parents can go a long way in creating the ambience for  learning. The emotional competency of the teachers, parents and children  need to be developed further to take our children to greater heights of  learning. Thus Multiple Intelligence is the tool and Emotional  Intelligence is the ambience as far as learning environments is  concerned.</p>
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