Thursday 3 March 2016

Reading between the school lines!


Dr Sugata Mitra, Chief scientist, NIIT, famous for the hole in the wall experiment argues that in a rapidly changing world the skills taught to children have to evolve as well. For instance it would be hard for our ancestors to believe that fencing and archery are not important subjects in our current curriculum! Perhaps fifty years hence future generations will look back and click their tongues at the hours they wasted in writing notes and memorizing history dates. Dr. Sugata Mitra, instead recommends giving children the skill to glean relevant information for themselves from the huge repository for information – the internet, fondly nicknamed Google Chacha!
As anybody who has spent enough time surfing would testify that access to the internet does not guarantee access to quality information. Children need to judge the content for its apparent validity, articles for their credibility, websites for their sources, Wikipedia articles by their attributions and so on.
 Among other skills, ability to discern and logically analyze are abilities that could be extremely useful in the future. Kids have to develop the ability to wade through a plethora of information before being able to glean out relevant pieces. Needless to say our current education system still follows the old rote method of learning that dulls the brain and inhibits creative thinking.
Apart from writing disparaging letters, that convey our frustration to an ex-TV serial actress and hope and pray that they get answered, the best we can do as parents is to encourage our children to read and fine-tune their judgement. That process begins early in infancy.
I highly recommend the tag reader from LeapFrog that used to come with an entertaining book, replete with lovable characters and witty dialogues. It is now accompanied with several audio books and a Leap Frog writing system as well. Consider the tag reader to be your baby sitter but not the couch potato creating one! When my son was 4 year old he spent countless hours reading along with this smart gadget that not only read aloud the pages but would also read out the individual words with just a click. Intuitive and easy to ease, it combines phonetic drills at the end of the story, with ingenious games that have the kid glued to the book…you heard it right …not to your smart phone! An online path learning cycle enables parents to track their child’s progress online. Equally entertaining, add on books are also available for growing levels of reading proficiency.
The only drawback of this product that affected me is the lack of after sales service, especially in non metro cities (Surat, in my case). Otherwise sturdy, a chance drop can cause the product to permanently malfunction.
My son is almost 11 years old now, but his fondness for reading still remains, so much so, that he risks missing his bus at times if he is taken in with a particularly enticing Geronimo Stilton. Which brings me to the next issue – How do we ensure quality reading for our children? With so many popular fiction books available, kids sometimes miss out on books that broaden their horizon, take their language skills up a notch and force them to think for themselves. Popular fiction, like popular movies, makes such few demands on the intellect, how can they encourage growth. So we are searching for a two pronged solution here – a )The book has to be entertaining enough and b) It has to fit the bill for language and so on. I am trying to create a reading list for my growing children. Please feel free to add to this list and I’ll publish an article in my next blog post.


Signing off till then!