THE THEE FUNDAS OF LEARNING
Pic.: Manjeet Singh Kukreja
Vikas,
one of my dear old-students, is a Geek! He is so tech-savvy, that I and many of
my associates (Vikas’ teachers) call him, repeatedly, to fix our computer or
cell-phone related problems. We really wonder how he does it… Yes, he fixes our
problems!
The interesting thing to note here is this: Most of our
problems are minor ones!
My wife was asking me, this morning, if she could sit
with Vikas, one of these days, to learn some issues pertaining to the usage of
computer and cell-phone. As Vikas is very busy presently studying for his
final-CA exams, I discouraged my wife from bothering him at this stage and,
suggested that after his December exams, she could approach him.
Then I left for my work… Here, in my early-morning batch,
I found myself hammering on my young-students what I had been repeatedly doing
for decades… I was, once again, reminding them about the most fundamental ingredients
of true learning… “Learning is learning, only when we have the three
fundamental ingredients of learning in place,” I was telling them… “That
childlike curiosity… our sense of wonder, our awe-struck mind… That innate trust
deep in our soul… and, that whole-hearted willingness of ours to take risks.”
Read again:
That childlike curiosity… our wonder-and-and-awestruck mind…
That trust deep down in our souls and…
That whole-hearted willingness to take risks… Try, make
mistakes and learn.
A day doesn’t pass by without my daily reminder of this
truth to my young students… I do it every time I find them running away from
taking risks, depending on me desperately for every little thing… I do it when
I see them coming to me like a herd, mechanically as a habit… when I see them
approaching the studies with no curiosity or excitement… completely bereft of
any inspiration, yes, just because they have to study for their exams and get
good marks… I tell them when I sense their unwillingness to discover it on
their own…
So, this morning, too, when I was hammering the same ghyan on my young students, I remembered
the conversation I had with my wife at home… I and my wife, like millions of other
parents and teachers of our age, grew up when computers, laptops, tablets,
cell-phones and such gadgets were not around. At least, my wife, who grew up
here in Mumbai and who is nine years younger than me, knew something about the
computer usage. I knew nothing. I had someone to do my work here in my office.
So, I did not know how to switch on and switch off the machine. (Learnt much
later that they call it ‘Log on’ and ‘Log off’!) Just the thought of touching a
certain key would paralyze me with fear… as though it might trigger off an explosion or as though the data might get
washed away (Took some time to learn that they call it ‘Deleted’!)… or,
something like that. So, when necessity arose, I sat with some of my dear friends
(my students!) and learnt some very basic functions about computer, which,
today, has helped me to do my daily blogging. In the same way, I learnt to use
the cell-phone.
Two
days ago, I had a persistent problem: my cell-phone battery was showing low
battery. I would fully charge it, but within no time, I could see it is
becoming low. The data card was on off-mode and I had no clue what was happening.
When I was walking into my 5 pm twelfth-standard batch, it was showing 11%-charged.
I knew, if I didn’t do something, by the time the one-hour lecture was over, it
would become zero-charged! So, I placed my cell-phone in 17-year-old Darpan’s
hands and narrated to him my misery. He fiddled with it, say for maximum four
minutes… and gave it back to me saying, “Sir, let’s see it at the end of our
lecture.”
After one hour, when the lecture got over, it showed 10%!
Darpan, the Geek, had fixed it, again for me - his
teacher!
When I looked into Darpan’s eyes, I heard them reminding
me of my own lesson about learning. Yes, the three fundas of learning… “Dude, be curious… Have self-trust… Take risks!”
And, when I looked around and saw all other Geeks
gathered around, there, I heard their familiar… “HAHAHA”. That LOL!
So much for that learning ghyan - the fundas - I impart every day!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Comments