Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Coursera is HERE!

Dear Vimarshis (is that a term)??
Its been a LONG TIME since we met and chatted and had a great dialogue around interesting topics!

I am taking this course through coursera. If anyone is interested in taking it with me, we can re-activate our Vimarsh meetings and also earn some credit on the side :)


Would be great if 2-3 pl signed up!



Friday, November 16, 2012

Meeting with Kohlberg

We are hosting a Vimarsh meeting after such a long tome tomorrow and I am looking forward to the discussion. This time, we will be discussing Kohlberg's levels of morality. Everyone is  sure to have an opinion on that, I'm sure!

Still, looking for someone to write a book/article review :)


Sunday, May 20, 2012

Pedagogy of the Oppressed

We will be out for the next two months. Our next meeting will be in August and we are discussing Paulo Freire's book

I think we will probably NEED two months to read it. Should be available on Flipkart.

I am sure this will be a 'lively' discussion!

Reggio Emilia

Even though only four people turned up yesterday, I do think that this was one of our better discussions. I had heard of the Reggio Emilia schools but never bothered to really understand their philosophy. Thanks to Vimarsh, I finally had an opportunity to read up on it and thanks to Gauri's expertise in early childhood education, the discussion was very insightful!

For those who do not know, Reggio Emilia is a city in Northern Italy. The municipal early childhood schools in this city have developed an approach that "fosters children's intellectual development through a systematic focus on symbolic representation. Young children  are encouraged to explore their environment and express themselves through all of their natural "languages" and modes of expression, including words, movement, drawing, painting, building, sculpture, shadow play, collage, dramatic play and music."

There are five takeaways from the reading:
1. Using project work and the visual arts for children in this age group. I particularly like their idea that the process of "unpacking of defamiliarizing everyday objects and events can be deeply meaningful and interesting to" children. Project work revolves around familiar objects and events like going to a market. The examples of student work provided in the chapter were fantastic and really eye-opening in terms of what young children are truly capable of and I think Lilian Katz (the author) makes a very convincing argument for using project work with students even as young as 4 years old!
2. Treating children's work seriously. Students draw whatever they are studying and because this is done "purposefully and assiduously... the visual pieces are not just decorative products to be taken home at the end of the day, most likely never to be looked at or discussed again; in Reggio Emilia they serve as resources for further exploration and deepening knowledge of the topic."
3. Realistic and imaginative representation. Just because children draw extensively based on observation does not impede their ability to draw imaginatively.
4. The content of teacher-child relationships. If you had to listen to 'conversations' between teachers and students, more often than not you would hear teachers giving students feedback or instructions. In Reggio Emilia schools, "the content of teacher-child relationships is focused on the work itself... both the children and the teachers seemed to be equally involved in the progress of the work, the ideas being explored, the techniques and materials to be used, and the progress of the projects themselves."
5. Children's sense of what adults think is important. This is SO true. Children are somewhat aware of what the adults around them care about. So if I care about being neat and having perfect spellings, that what the students will try to get better at. The author poses the question for all teachers to ask themselves: "What do most of my pupils really believe I take seriously and care deeply about?"

This is definitely a question I would love to have responses to.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Next Meeting- May 19th

Our 4th meeting is on May 19th. If you wish to join us, please use the contact form on this blog.
We will be discussing the Reggio Emilia school system  and its philosophical assumptions.

There is a reading (of course!) and if you are interested, we can share that with you once you contact us.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

The Aims of Education- Part Two

Our third Vimarsh meeting was around the National Focus Group's position paper on the Aims of Education published by NCERT.
As per their stance, there are nine aims of education:
1. Create "vital links between children's experiences at home and in the community and what the school offer them."
2. Initiate the process of becoming more self-aware
3. Live a moral life
4. Respect cultural diversity
5. "Promote and nourish as wide a range of capacities and skills in our children as possible."
6. Learn different ways of knowing
7. Be a liberating process and fee itself and children "from the shackles of all kinds of exploitation and injustice"
8. Allow children in playing an active part in the creation of an aesthetically pleasing learning environment
9. "Foster within the child" pride in their nation and in the great achievements of humanity


Aims 1,2 and 7 generated the most discussion.

What exactly does it mean to be liberated?

Further, the idea that "self knowledge can be achieved only through the knowledge of the other, and one cannot know the other without being just to the other" generated some confusion. If I am the only person alive on this planet, can I truly know myself? What implications does this have for teaching and learning?

The second article we read was Mr. Dhankar's article that asked the question: "Do teachers need to bother about this (the aims)?" I don't think that anyone disagreed that teachers MUST be involved in every part of the education process, including of course knowing and understanding its aims.  As Mr. Dhankar states, decisions about classroom practices "cannot be made by the curriculum developers, textbook writers, and the like. They must be made by the teacher herself. Therefore, her understanding of aims of education and relationship between the aims and teaching will determine the quality of education to a very great extent. The lack of such understanding will render her to be a mere instructor of some sort and will strip her engagement of all worthwhile aspects of education, even though she could still be teaching something."


Yet, the question that was asked more than once was, "what happens when I understand these aims of education but my principal, my school, my organization does not?" How much power do I really have as a teacher? And the biggest question of all was HOW do I do this?

We would love to hear you thoughts on any of these points!