THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 13 June 2020 (Streamed education is diluted education (The Hindu))



Streamed education is diluted education (The Hindu)



Mains Paper 2: National
Prelims level: SWAYAM platform
Mains level: e-learning platform and its sustainability in India

Context:

  • All that is of value is diluting into the functional, and there seems to be no vocabulary to capture this dilution of value.
  • Our conception of value itself has been diluted to mean just exchange ‘value’.
  • Here, I will relate this to the meaning of education.

The UGC scheme:

  • Recently, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the University Grants Commission had issued a circular to universities encouraging them to adopt massive open online courses (MOOCs).
  • Courses were offered on its SWAYAM platform for credit transfers in the coming semesters.
  • This sounds like a benevolent act during th...............................

CLICK HERE FOR FULL EDITORIAL (Only for Course Members)

MOOC-based e-learning platforms:

  • MOOC-based e-learning platforms tend to reinforce a top-down teacher-to-student directionality of learning whereby the teacher ‘creates’ and the student ‘consumes’.
  • This misses the point that teaching and learning are skills that are always in the making.
  • The teacher is after all “an intellectual midwife” who facilitates in the birth of students’ ideas and insights through engaging in critical dialogue.
  • In a conducive classroom environment, this role is often switched and the student plays intellectual midwife to the teacher’s ideas.
  • Moving to a MOOC-based degree system would rob young teachers and students of these essential lessons in teaching and learning from each other.

Sacred spaces:

  • Taking higher education online is much like taking up a sport such as cricket, football or boxing online.
  • One has not actually learnt the sport unless one has engaged with it in one’s gully, stadium, field, or ring.
  • In education, the classroom acts ........................

CLICK HERE FOR FULL EDITORIAL (Only for Course Members)

Litmus test:

  • Implicit in every curriculum is the tacit assumption that the classroom is a laboratory for hands-on testing of ideas, opinions, interpretations, and counterarguments.
  • A diverse and inclusive classroom is the best litmus test for any theory or insight.
  • Multidisciplinarity happens more through serendipity — when learners across disciplines bump into each other and engage in conversations.
  • Classroom and campus spaces offer the potential for solidarity in the face of discrimination, social anxiety, and stage fear, paving the way for a proliferation of voluntary associations.
  • In the absence of this physical space, teaching and learning would give way to mere content and its consumption.

Dilution:

  • Without a shared space to discuss and contest ideas, learning dilutes to just gathering more information.
  • This could also dilute norms of evaluation, whereby a “good lecture” might mean merely a lecture which “streams seamlessly, without buffering”.
  • This is not an argument from tradition.
  • One could think of greater value-sensitive and socially just architectures and technologies that further foster classroom engagement.
  • And also make it accessible for students of various disabilities and challenges, thereby adding more value to the existing meaning of education.
  • But public education modelled on social distancing is a functional reduction and dilution of the meaning of education.
  • It could add value only as an addendum to the classroom.

Conclusion:

Prelims Questions:

Q1. What is 163348 (2002 NN4), recently seen in news?
(a) A giant asteroid
(b) A satellite launched by North Korea
(c) Fastest Supercomputer developed by Israel
(d) An Exoplanet

Answer: ....................................

CLICK HERE FOR FULL EDITORIAL (Only for Course Members)

Mains Questions:
Q1.  Why e-learning isn’t a sustainable .....................................................?