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Blended Learning: Making Education Accessible for all

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Blended Learning is the future of education. Specially, if we wish accessible education for all. For a long time we have been talking about putting the child in the center of the all learning. Child-led learning, interest based learning, active learning; basically giving the control of the learning back to the learner. Studies have shown that children do not like to go to school (they do have some aspects that they like, like their friends and sometimes if in luck a teacher who steps out of the crowd and sparks the curiosity of the learners through innovative teaching methods and sometimes an aha moment in form of a unique idea that they get to hear about at the school premises, yet rare and mostly out of sheer luck. The rest of the routine day is a drag.). The primary reason for not liking school is lack of freedom. In a typical school, the child will be expected to queue up when going anywhere, sit through blocks of 50 minute classes that they did not plan, maybe aren't

The Importance of Recess; Downtime Improves Productivity

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"In designing a structured recess, they (schools) will sacrifice the notion of recess as an unstructured but supervised break that belongs to the child; that is, a time for the child to make a personal choice between sedentary, physical, creative, or social options." (AAP) I remember my time at school. We used to start at 8 o'clock sharp and end our day at half past 2 in the afternoon. During these six and half hours, we used to have 8 periods and 2 recesses.  First recess used to be just 15 minutes, after we 3 long periods, to eat quick snacks. Students used to bring packed lunches from home or were given lunch money so that they could buy samosas, chicken burgers, rolls, biscuits, chips and drinks from a small tuck shop located inside the premises of the school. Then it used to be back to academics, lectures, assignments. After two more periods of equal length, we would get another recess, this time full 30 minutes. Those 30 minutes were what we used to go to school

The Right to Know; Teachers Need to Stop Being a Stranger

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Over the years working as in the field of Marketing, I have given numerous job interviews to potential employers. Once I progressed in my career, I also got the opportunity to take many interviews of potential candidates for my own team. The process was always intensive, details oriented and thought out. The corporation wants to make sure they are investing in the right person, who has the right qualifications to do the job and at the same time is the right fit to the corporate culture, their ideology and vision.  At the same time, the employee wants to know whether the said corporation is the right fit for their career goals and their own vision and mission in life. They conduct their own research, check out the company's website, ask around, interview some of the present as well as ex-employees, but most importantly they want to know about who will they be working for, the reputation and credentials of the team and the supervisors are the most important and top priority, since

The Need To Re-Invent The Curriculum

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Education is the wholistic development of an individual; intellectually, morally, emotionally leading to an end result where the person becomes a socially responsible compassionate functional member of a society. Education is more than what any school can provide to the child, because education does not stop once the child steps out of the boundaries of the school.  Yet, in Pakistan a peculiar and curious trend is catching up; keeping curriculum a secret from the parents/families. The teachers are given curriculum guidelines as set by Cambridge, however the parents are not allowed to review the syllabus under the pretext that sharing the curriculum feeds into the parental competition, causes unnecessary stress to the students as they are enrolled in extra  tuition  to get ahead and reduces the effectiveness of the teachers at school. While all these points are merely trying to treat the symptoms of a problem, it also takes away the ability of providing a more wholistic school

The Race and The Unimpressed Panel of Strangers

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A few years ago, I was approached by a friend... She asked me, How old is your son now? 20 months? Does he know his colours, animals and modes of transport yet? I thought she was kidding. she was absolutely serious. Run, Run, Run as fast as you can! Schools pressurize parents to enroll their babies as young as 18 months into play groups. In some schools registration is done while the mother is still on the family way.  This isn’t something new. Over the last 7 years, I have been observing this mad race, as a mother. A race to get the child educated  as soon as  the schools dictate you to, to get the child ahead of other children as per the school’s expectations, and to proudly announce to the whole world that you are blessed with a gifted child because a school panel decided so. When you have a baby, every month, you will meet family and friends with one critical question, When is your child starting school? All first-time parents in Pakistan face this question. Is the

Perfect Education Systems; Wishful Thinking

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According to Prof. Dr. Gülden Ertugrul, Utopia is a word derived from the Greek Outopia meanings 'Nowhere' and Eutopia meanings 'Someplace Good'. It basically represents an imaginary place where all institutions and the actors in the society are perfect, a place that does not exist, but a place that one dreams of and can visualize as the ideal community, working in perfect harmony, free from all ills, injustices and discrimination. The concept of Utopia also serves as a contrast effect against which we can measure the inefficiencies and short-comings of the existing society and the corruption of the present day institutions. Education is a key tool to realize the ultimate goal of utopia. Life-Long Learners In an ideal world, there will be class difference, no socio-economic discrimination and no gender biases and education will be accessible by all. The learners will be life-long learners, not bounded by the routine school structures and learning will be for th

The Roles of Schools; Customized Solutions, Equal Opportunities and Accountability

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To pretend that the current schooling systems are anything but mediocre and ordinary would be the underestimation of the century; in fact, make that two centuries. While we see a lot of emphasis on bringing in foreign schooling models and inspirations from the world leading schools (as decided by PISA), there is little focus on developing a system from grassroots level as governed and directed by the local needs and requirements. As more and more schools scramble to copy paste short-term solutions and marketable ideas that sell, a large majority of learners/students seem to have been left behind.  Product of an Authoritarian System I went to school some 34 years ago. I have experienced one of the most authoritarian schools, with all the emphasis on rote-learning, and cramming as much as was humanly possible. There was very little focus and time available for extra curricular or any any kind of skill building. The curriculum was set by the education ministry of Pakistan, an