“Make your child
a genius!” This hoarding on a Bengaluru bus grabbed my attention. The
advertisers promised to make your kid, anybody’s kid, a master of general
knowledge, elocution, creative writing, art, dramatics, fashion designing, film
making and heaven knows what esoteric else. A universe of knowledge and talent,
stuffed into your kid in just six weeks for a fancy price. The savvy promoters
knew that busy people like us will refuse to waste our time to think. Can
talent and genius be bought like potatoes or chappals? Who cares as long as we
can keep up with boastful neighbours? Superficial glitz can readily be bought
and cobbled together. No wonder they score over hard-earned substance. We
ourselves are busy scrambling up the slippery ladder to ‘success.’ Who has time
to nurture their own children these days? The problem is not with training
courses and camps, which can indeed be useful. The problem is with our own
attitude. By forcing our children into countless extra-curricular programmes,
we expect them to become multi-faceted geniuses overnight. Buying talent, genius,
all-round development and sundry mind-blowing intellectual accomplishments for
our precious darlings, seems to be the latest craze in shortcut privileged
parenting.
Heavy schoolbags
and endless exams are no longer enough to satisfy ambitious educationists and parents.
A lady proudly shared how her child, enrolled in an exclusive school, even
had library exams! What on earth is that? The sixth standard student did not
know or have the energy left after a deluge of edifying activities, to care.
She simply ticked random choices and submitted her paper to the teacher.
Children fare best in extra-curricular activities if they pursue them out of
interest, and not external pressures. A rigid and compulsive approach kills any
natural curiosity and joy of discovering fascinating and fun activities. A
hollow sham of all-round development is the end result.
Many Indian
children are denied even primary education due to poverty. A global report
tracking nutritional status of children worldwide, states that half of Indian
children below five years are stunted. One fifth of Indian children are wasted,
and a large number of them don’t even get ORS when suffering from diarrhoea. On
the other hand, privileged Indian children are denied childhood joys and holistic
growth by having an avalanche of curricular and extracurricular activities
shoved down their throats .While pouring money to buy such education and
accomplishments for our children, we seem hell-bent upon turning them into mindless
robots and dysfunctional, disgruntled future adults.
Educated urban
Indians like us are a hard-nosed, materialistic lot. Our houses, cars, clothes
and other possessions certify our ‘success’ in life, which in turn defines our
sense of self-worth. We live vicariously through our children, projecting our
own unfulfilled ambitions on them even before they have grown out of diapers. Modern
Indian parents strive to buy education as a commodity for their children .The
more privileged ones vie to also buy every sort of accomplishment for their
precious darlings. This begins when children are starting to walk and speak a
few words. We push them into play homes, prep schools and tutorials before they
can remember their own names. In the good or bad old days, Indian kids bent
under schoolbags heavier than themselves. Youngsters routinely took their own
lives, unable to cope with the pressure of eternal exams, and the compulsion to
get that vital half mark more than the next kid. That’s now become an accepted
part of ordinary Indian life. Meanwhile, people like us strive to rise above
the average herd by pushing our children into a bottomless quagmire of
structured extra-curricular activities. We insist on regimenting every moment
of their residual time after academics, and drag them into courses, camps and
classes to hammer all-round intellectual development into them.
Vacations are
when tiger dads and lion moms go on the rampage. We enrol children into
swimming and horse-riding camps, followed by Bharatnatyam and sign language
classes. We won’t allow them to waste a precious second, for there’s also coaching
for singing and dance contests on TV. To
meet the skyrocketing demand, creative coaches will soon launch courses for
mushroom cultivation, sand grain carving and grave digging. We ensure that the miserable young ones are
given no breathing space. God forbid they should have choices or a few moments
to reflect and ask uncomfortable questions.
To meet the
growing demand from well-heeled, busy parents, a new crop of fancy schools
promise fast-track all-round development of the child. I’ve written books for children, among other
things. Times were when committed librarians and teachers invited me to
interact with their students, taking care to familiarize themselves with my
work. Together we encouraged students to read and enjoy books of their choice,
and freely explore many ideas outside the academic curriculum while having fun.
It was an exciting experience for youngsters to actually meet and talk to
someone who had written a book they enjoyed. Such breaks from the routine
helped recharge the children’s’ spirits and excite their curiosity.
Times are
changing. During a recent visit to a posh school, the teachers’ demands dampened
my excitement. I had to teach the kids to become authors in the space of a half
hour session! I spent many years improving my writing and working on those
books, and I still feel there is much more to learn. I began my journey as an
avid reader. Even as a pre-school toddler, my parents left me free to choose my
favourite picture books. But my experiences were irrelevant here. These
children from privileged backgrounds had no time for books, the teachers
explained. They only needed to learn to become authors themselves. They had far
too many enlightening and personality building activities to keep them busy,
and dazzle the world with their accomplishments. Meanwhile, their guardians and
instructors saw no sense in allowing them time to understand, absorb or enjoy
any of it. They were so busy manufacturing budding geniuses, neither the
students nor most of the teachers even knew who I was! I realized how my
presence was part of a marketing gimmick. The parents would be informed of the
school’s efforts to expose children to experts in various fields. And this
would justify a hike in school fees. Since many among us earn a living by
providing various goods and services, we will appreciate this innovative
concept of selling Mt Everest to busy parents with no time to bring up their
children. Parents are squarely to blame. Genius shops are selling what they
desperately want to buy. Something that cannot be bought. But we try to
overcompensate for our own lack of involvement, by pushing our hapless children
into an endless whirlpool of activities.
Research by
scientists is confirming what wise parents have known all along. Babies and
young children have immense potential for learning. Findings by Carolyn
Rovee-Collier, a psychologist at Rutgers University, suggest that "even at
two and a half months, an infant's memory is very developed, very specific and
incredibly detailed." Language skills and emotional responses to the world
around them, also begin developing early. Early and sustained nurturing is
vital in shaping intelligent, balanced, and emotionally healthy adults of the
future. Parental involvement is essential for a child’s ongoing development. Parents
are the first and most important teachers long before a child begins school.
The sincerest teachers in the best schools have to deal with many children.
They cannot give each child individual attention like the parent. Yet a growing
number of educated young Indian parents are too busy to spare enough quality
time and attention for their children.
Helping children
to develop their intelligence and skills does not mean tossing textbooks of
Medieval History and Trigonometry into the cradle to produce precocious
geniuses. Nor is enrolling kindergarteners into the friendly neighbourhood
creative writing school likely to manufacture many bestselling Nobel laureates.
We need to adopt the right attitude and not allow ourselves and our children to
get trapped in rigid and unimaginative training programmes. As caring and
concerned parents, we need to carve time out of our busy schedules to enjoy
watching and participating in activities that interest and stimulate our
children. Reading aloud, for example, is a joy shared by both parent and child.
And you don’t need to pay hefty fees for it. Far from being a waste of time,
reading encourages children to explore and learn. When parents read to their
children during the first three years of life, the foundation is laid for a
lifelong interest in learning. While vital for building brains, reading to
young children while they cuddle up to a loving parent or elder also nurtures
children emotionally, and lays the foundations for trusting and close emotional
relationships as adults.
Reading books to
children opens their mind to new things and places in the outside world. When
children learn that books contain exciting stories and pictures, they want to
read more. They do far better in school, as books are not something to be
dreaded, but a thing of joy. They can understand their textbooks better, and
organically improve their vocabulary and writing. As the child grows older,
reading expands their horizons of knowledge. Children who are allowed to
spontaneously enjoy and take interest in reading, painting, music and other
activities, become independent learners and thinkers. They can attend their
school work with minimum help, and entertain themselves when they are alone. Once
a child enjoys such an activity of her choice, the habit will serve her well
for the rest of her life. A child who can think independently will be more
competent to deal with the challenges of adult life.
Studies and life
haven't become harder these days. It's the attitudes that have changed. Kids
habitually cram lessons, and go to private tutors for spoon-feeding of fixed
notes. Then parents and schools herd children into activities such as film
appreciation, chess or piano playing, without taking their choices into
account. If we allow children to play, to think and decide for themselves, then
they will derive maximum joy and benefits from extra-curricular activities. Extra
professional coaching certainly is helpful, but parents and teachers need to
motivate the children first.
Unstructured
play time is also essential for children. As parents and educationists, it’s up
to us to allow young people some time to breathe freely, and even play in the
mud if they wish to. When children explore something that interests them, they
learn more quickly and readily remember what they enjoyed learning. By allowing
children choices, we can help nurture important skills such as making decisions,
solving problems and forging healthy bonds with others. By encouraging children’s
questions and curiosity, we can boost complex thinking.
Pushing children
into strictly regimented activities is a reflection of our own fear of failure.
We all need to overcome that fear of falling and getting dirty, of failing, if
we are to ultimately succeed. Success cannot come quickly simply from
unimaginatively planned, one-size-fits-all tutorials forced upon exhausted
children. We cannot buy our way into genuine achievements, or expect our
children to become perfect at one shot. Let’s
take a tip from American author Toni Morrison, whose impressive awards list include
the Pulitzer Prize and the Nobel Prize in Literature. “As a writer, a failure
is just information. It’s something that I’ve done wrong in writing, or is
inaccurate or unclear. I recognize failure—which is important; some people
don’t—and fix it, because it is data, it is information, knowledge of what does
not work… then you have to pay very close attention to it, rather than get
depressed or unnerved or feel ashamed. …What you do is you identify the procedure
and what went wrong and then correct it.” Even for such a towering,
world-renowned literary figure, success and confidence came with time,
introspection and constant effort. Who are we, then, to bamboozle our children into
camps and courses with the ambition of turning them into TV stars or authors
overnight?
Are we turning our children into intellectual bonsais by dumping our
unrealistic expectations upon their tender shoulders? Is it so difficult to
appreciate our children for themselves? Do we have to push them into endless
courses and camps in order to transform them into star performers overnight? It would be better if we try to bring light and joy into
children's lives. If only we could allow them some space to play freely, let
them figure things out for themselves and guide
them to activities they find interesting and
refreshing. This is published in Sunday Herald
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