The Rat Race and the Unimpressed Panel of Strangers
By Sameera Wajid
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.
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
their toddler ready for the big test and interview? A
non-standardized test that has no scientific backing. Will the baby hold his
ground and face the unimpressed panel of strangers and be able to
reproduce answers perfectly that the parents have been working on for the last couple
of years..
There are so many reasons we give ourselves to make sense of
this madness. Our parents did this for us, and look how we turned out we
argue. Or sometimes, it’s like This opportunity is the only way to get ahead
in the academic world. If our child doesn’t cross this hurdle, what will become
of him or her? My child deserves better education than I got and
starting early is the key. And then All my friends send their children to similar
schools so should I? And not-to-mention your family or friends who know
better than you because they’ve been there first... their kids had to clear
these hurdles... mine need to as well. Sounds familiar?
This race is defining our schools. Our teachers. Our
curriculum. The single-minded focus on getting the best grades or lose at life,
is creating stress and anxiety. According to a research conducted on Student
Anxiety due to Academic Stress and Parental Pressure by Pondicherry University
in India in collaboration with Queensland University of Technology, Australia
two out of three children reported stress due to academic pressure. Two out of
every 3 students reported feeling pressure from their parents for better
academic performance.
The proverbial journey of a thousand steps starts
with one. But that step, and the next few, those are the important ones. They
define what direction we are heading in. They define our pace, our purpose.
If
education were a book, academics would simply be a chapter. Is it more
important to head in the direction that suits the journey of knowledge led by
the child’s interests, or the race of academics?
These are different paths. One takes your child on the wondrous
journey of learning, absorbing by experience, and the satisfaction one gets
when they finally understand the magic behind an idea by learning at their own
pace. The other teaches your child that the world is a ruthless race where you
have one shot at winning, and that is by way of excelling at the predetermined
linear system. With no room for mistakes.
One path has success
at every turn because it is a path to discovery. The other path chases success,
and delivers failure, stress and disappointments.
When you look at it this way, doesn’t that choice sound
different now? What right do we have, as parents, to push our children towards
this race? Where lies our responsibility? Nature does not hurry. Nature takes
its time. So does organic education. We NEED TO STOP PRESSURIZING OUR CHILDREN
TO LEARN. They are natural learners. Let them learn and find the joy in
learning.
Borrowing from Sir Ken Robinson, ‘College does not start at
Kindergarten. Kindergarten starts at Kindergarten.’
So..
Does your toddler know his colours, animals and modes of
transport yet?
Because if they don’t, you have a wonder-filled road ahead
of you, where you and your child can learn by experience, led by the child’s
interests and their innate sense of wonder and curiosity and every turn is a
beautiful, wide-eyed, endearing success.
The unimpressed panel of strangers can wait.



Comments
Post a Comment