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Friday, 2nd May 2008
Prize Day season
Dolores Cristina
It is the season for Prize Days. Six weeks ago
I walked straight into it. The invitations poured
in fast and furious from state, Church and independent
schools. Two per morning and two per evening.
There are an approximate 160 primary and secondary
schools in Malta and Gozo. This year saw a short
second term and an election in March. This means
that Prize Days have, in the main, been concentrated
in a short 16-week period.
Prize Days are a brilliant "getting-to-know-you" way
of learning about the ethos of a school.
I belong to the seeing is understanding species.
Those two to three hours of sitting in a school
hall, watching students perform their song and
dance, listening to the head's "what we
have done, what we would love to do" speech
is an extremely edifying experience. More important
than that are probably the whispered but loaded
asides made during the performance, asides that
diplomatically but clearly underscore the head's
priorities, the strengths of the school, the
needs of the school, the problems of some of
the students and the requirements of members
of the staff.
I have tremendously enjoyed sitting through
slick, almost professional, school productions
that tell tales of painstaking sheer hard work.
Perfect and clear diction, gorgeous costumes,
hairstyles and makeup that are evidence of varied
talents and a commitment that goes beyond the
call of duty that clearly show a staff and parental
involvement that is so essential to our schools.
There are schools that place an enormous value
on volunteer work. In one particular instance,
blushing mums and grandmas walked onstage to
collect an award for their input.
The diversity that has become so much part of
our country is nowhere more visible than in a
school choir or a roll-call for prize giving.
Inclusivity has slowly but surely moved in.
In my days Prize Days were mainly for academic
or sports prowess. Educational values have, fortunately,
changed and the line-up for precious awards includes
a wide spectrum of competences and skills. School
children who would never have been acknowledged
in years gone by, today share the occasion with
their schoolmates as proud family members clap
in the audience.
Prize Days are essentially success stories.
The flip side to the coin is a dark one.
We are also at the beginning of exam season,
a time of the year dreaded by many. Tensions
rise and nerves are on edge. Our exam-oriented
culture makes life unnecessarily difficult for
so many, especially for the young students who
sit for their 11+ exams. The time to review has
certainly arrived, not only to decrease the burden
but also to introduce a smooth transition for
all. Our current system of classifying children
at such an early age, with results dependent
solely on exam performance, is exclusive to an
extreme. The Junior Lyceum and common entrance
exams convey the message that life is all about
getting high marks.
Preparations for these exams result in an enormous
amount of pressure that leaves little or no time
for the young students to actually understand
and learn what life is really all about. Children
who are relegated to low-ability streams are
bound to suffer from a loss of self-esteem and
self-confidence that will surely mark them for
life. That is the personal angle.
Then there is the national issue. As a country
we need to motivate our young to continue with
post-compulsory education and we can only achieve
this by shedding that which segregates and introducing
that which is inclusive to the highest degree
possible.
Motivation is the name of the game everywhere.
The most depressing sight I have seen in the
past few weeks was that of a teenage boy sitting
at the back of the classroom, clutching his school
bag to his chest. When I asked him why he was
doing that he replied that he wanted to be ready
to rush out of the classroom when the bell rang.
His classmates were all clustered around the
teacher, avidly following what looked like a
highly-interesting lesson. That boy is symbolic
of a number of students that our education system
needs to address through innovative ways.
Lack of motivation is so very often the source
of unhappy, insecure and unruly youngsters.
When you ask students what they like and what
they do not like about their schooling, the list
of the "Don't Likes" is usually much
longer than its counterpart. At one particular
school I went to, some students had written out
a wish list. Amazingly simple requests in the
majority but so amazingly difficult to implement
in some cases without the goodwill of all involved,
including the parents. That wish list, written
in the most simple of ways, could be considered
a roadmap for the policy makers.
"Education is not just about children,
it is about the child. Each child has only one
childhood. Schools are about building a basis
for life-long learning not just for academic
achievement," reads a 2007 Unesco report.
That is really what education is all about.
Mrs Cristina is Minister of Education, Culture,
Youth and Sport.
Source:
The Times of Malta
http://www.timesofmalta.com/articles/view/20080502/opinion/prize-day-season/
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