Sometime ago, I was opportune to see an
Indian movie titled “Like Stars on Earth” the pain I saw in the heart of eight
year old Ishan; who couldn’t read nor
write made tears run freely down my cheek. I wept till my head began to ache.
The little boy was repeatedly beaten and humiliated by his father and teachers
for not being able to read and write like his brother and peers. Due to
negligence, they were unable to notice that all the letters he saw on papers
and the blackboard were dancing right in front of him; he couldn’t explain what
he was going through neither did his family and so-called teachers understood.
His father in annoyance had to send him to
a faraway boarding school which he objected to; of course he continued to
perform abysmally. His fortune came through when a different kind of teacher
was employed temporary to handle them in arts. His attitudes towards his
studies attracted the teacher as he noticed he was a different child who saw
the world from a different angle; he viewed the world in colours and in
pictures, he ended up winning the best artist in the whole school including his
seniors. The lad’s paintings appeared on the school’s year magazine. You would
say: ‘what a great story’.
Some children are born with great
abilities that make them smarter, wiser and even more academically placed than
their peers. But does it mean that the less scholarly inclined ones should be
neglected?
In Nigeria today, it’s like a moving trend
that every Obi, Gbenga and Aminu must be university graduates, they are saddled
with the responsibility of producing a certificate just like every other
person. Of what need should time and resource be wasted in training a child in
a formal school when the brain can only function well in a technical school? Most
of these children are seen physically looking like every other child but the
psychological make-up is different.
Education, they say is power but what idea
does people have about its true meaning? Is education basically designed for
certificate sake? How many people’s brain can handle the task saddled with
getting a certificate? Is there a specially designed person that deserves the
certificate more than another? Does everyone have the capability to earn the
certificate? What comes into people’s mind when they hear examination is not
the true test of knowledge?
When I was taught what education is while
growing up as a kid, I was told that it comes in formal and informal way; this
means one can be educated in classroom and outside the classroom.
In essence, I’m not saying that a child should
totally be left to rot in academic ignorance; my thrust of argument is that a
person can be formally trained in a specific enterprise outside the
conventional generic style of education and still measure up with the society’s
demand.
When a parent or parents as the case may
be notice that their ward seems not to perform well academically even after
several attempts has been made, rather than push the child to continue with
higher education and put the child through unending struggle, why not find out
the child’s hidden and/or obvious talent and enroll him/her into a special
school where the child can be developed.
Many a child has a unique ability to
create things with the mind; they only need the push to make it through. There are
discoveries yet undiscovered, people’s mind and intellect have been channeled
towards certificates alone leaving out the hands and mind. Parents have a great
stack in this, as they forcefully impose careers on their children even before
birth. When parents notice that their child prefers to dismantle objects and
try to fix them back due to curiosity, even with these traits, parents stand
against their dream of becoming what they want.
These and many more are the thoughts that
keep running through my mind when I see parents scolding their wards for coming
last or second from the rear, it hurts a lot. Most of these children are forced
to read letters and look for X and Y from wherever they are, they struggle with
the thought of meeting up with their parent’s and societal demands.
We are not isolated from the fact that the
great men and women we praise and adore today were initially denied the
opportunity of attaining their dream. If everyone become doctors, lawyers,
engineers, architects, professors etc, who will give us a hair cut when they
get bushy? Who will keep our lanes clean? Who will take us to our destinations
when we call? Who will entertain us when we need to unwind? Who will make the
portraits for beautifying our houses? Let me drop the curtain here as you
expect the complete article in the next edition. Kindly share after reading. thanks.
1 comment:
i love this
Post a Comment