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Rethinking Education: From Grading Systems to True Learning

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Education: An Ancient Practice, a Modern Distortion

Education, at its core, is as old as humanity itself. Long before formal schools and classrooms existed, children learned through direct engagement with life. A farmer’s son learned how to plow by walking behind his father in the fields, a carpenter’s apprentice gained skills by handling wood and tools, and a young shepherd developed patience and responsibility while caring for animals. Learning was individual, experiential, and closely tied to environment and purpose.

Institutional or “mass education,” however, is a relatively recent development. It first emerged in Germany, created to produce military personnel and bureaucrats—disciplined individuals who could serve the needs of the state. After the Industrial Revolution, the system expanded to provide a growing workforce for factories. From the start, its goal was not to develop individuals but to train employees.

From Learning to Grading

Over time, this focus led to a system where the main aim shifted from learning to grading. Instead of asking, “Has this child learned?”, the system asks, “What grade does this child deserve?” Grades became the measurement tool used to evaluate, sort, and prepare students for future jobs.

Think of it like a sieve (چھلنی): wheat is separated from husk, rice from chaff. Students are pushed through a standard filter; those who meet its criteria move upward toward higher jobs, while others are discarded as “failures.” But this raises a troubling question: who decided the standards? Who defined that a child at age ten must reach “x” stage of knowledge, or that learning delayed by a year means learning lost forever?

The Human Cost of the System

This industrial mindset causes effects we observe daily. A child struggling with math in fourth grade might be called “weak,” even if he excels in storytelling, design, or empathy. Instead of fostering his unique talents, the system labels him as a failure.

Think about Ali, a sensitive kid in a traditional classroom. Although he struggled in science, he often mediated disputes between classmates, calming fights and helping friends understand each other’s viewpoints. His natural talent was emotional intelligence—a skill that’s crucial for leadership and building community. However, the grading system completely ignored this. To the school, Ali was a “poor student.”

Questioning the Standardization Myth

The system assumes all children are alike, moving in unison through a set sequence of subjects and milestones. But people are not machines on an assembly line. One child might excel in reading at age six, while another might just start at nine. Both are normal, but the system penalizes the second for “falling behind.”

This is like planting a mango tree and a guava tree side by side, then complaining that the mango hasn’t fruited while the guava has. Different plants, different seasons, different growth rates. Yet our education system insists that every child must mature at the same time, in exactly the same way.

Returning to the Real Purpose of Education

If we peel back the layers, the true purpose of education is learning—not grading, not filtering, not producing employees. Learning involves discovering knowledge, developing skills, shaping character, and nurturing curiosity. It involves asking:,

  • What is this child capable of?
  • How can we help them grow in their unique direction?
  • How do we prepare them, not just for jobs, but for life?

Examples of this approach can still be seen today. Finland’s education system, for example, prioritizes learning over testing. Children there are not weighed down by standardized exams in their early years. Instead, they participate in play-based learning, creative projects, and cooperative problem-solving. As a result, Finnish students consistently rank among the top in global learning outcomes—despite spending fewer hours in formal school.

A Call for Change

The challenge we face is to reconsider education, shifting it away from its industrial origins. We require systems that:

  • Focus on learning rather than grading.
  • Recognize different rhythms of growth among children.
  • Value skills like empathy, creativity, and resilience alongside academics.
  • Prepare individuals not only for jobs but also for citizenship, relationships, and moral responsibility.

When we move the focus from “How well did this child fit the system?” to “How well did the system support this child’s learning?”, we restore education to its true purpose.

Closing Anecdote

A teacher once complained about a student named Sara: “She is always daydreaming in class. Her grades are poor.” Yet outside school, Sara would spend hours sketching vivid landscapes and designing costumes from scrap fabric. Years later, she became a successful fashion designer. What the system dismissed as “daydreaming” was actually her creative mind at work.

Sara’s story reminds us: every child is more than their grades. Education should not be about forcing them through a sieve but about watering their unique soil so they can bloom in their own season.

Rethinking the Way We Teach English

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

We often treat English as a high-status academic subject, a gatekeeper of intelligence, or a passport to success. But at its core, language is not a subject — it is a skill and a natural human ability. This simple yet powerful truth is often overlooked, especially in how we teach English in schools.

The Natural Ability to Learn Language

Every child, regardless of background, learns at least one language fluently—without formal lessons, grammar books, or written tests. A child in Punjab might grow up speaking Punjabi, switch effortlessly to Urdu in school, and pick up phrases in Saraiki from extended family. This is natural language acquisition, and it occurs because the child is immersed in a meaningful, emotional, and social environment.

If a child can learn Urdu or Punjabi fluently just by being exposed to it, why does the same child struggle with English? The issue isn’t in the child’s ability; it’s in the unnatural way English is introduced and taught.

English: The Most Misunderstood Subject in Our Schools

In most classrooms, English is seen more as an academic subject than a language. We memorize lists of irregular verbs, copy sentences from textbooks, and translate isolated paragraphs—often without understanding their purpose or how they apply in real life.

Result? Students pass exams but struggle to speak or write confidently. Even students with advanced degrees in English may hesitate during conversations. This isn’t a reflection of their intelligence—it’s a sign of a flawed teaching method.

The Story of Ali: A Case of Language Blockage

Ali, a bright student from Multan, topped his board exams in English. However, when a foreign visitor visited his university and asked, “Where can I find the library?”, Ali froze. He later said, “I know all the grammar rules, but my tongue just doesn’t move when I need it.”

Ali’s story is common. What he lacked wasn’t vocabulary or grammar but confidence, exposure, and the emotional comfort to speak the language naturally. He had learned about English, but he had not learned to think or speak in it.

Reflection Exercise: Language as a Natural Skill

This exercise is created for teachers, parents, or students to reflect on their own perspectives and experiences with language learning.

Step 1: Recall Your Experience

  • When did you first realize you could speak your native language fluently?
  • Did anyone “teach” it to you formally, or did it develop naturally?
  • Now compare this to how you learned English. What are the main differences?

Step 2: Journal Prompt

Spend 10 minutes writing a reflection on the following:

  • What makes me feel blocked or afraid when I try to speak in English?
  • What if I treated English as a tool to express myself, rather than a test I need to pass?
  • What type of environment would enable me to speak more freely?

Step 3: Language Without Fear

Pick a simple everyday sentence you usually say in your native language (for example, “I’m going to make tea” or “Can you open the window?”). Say it aloud in English. If you make a mistake, smile and try again. Do it five times a day.

How Babies Learn—And What That Teaches Us

A baby isn’t taught grammar or spelling. No one corrects its sentence structure. Yet by age 3, the child can speak full sentences in their native language. Why? Because the baby immerses itself in the language—hearing it, using it, and being emotionally connected to it.

This tells us: context matters more than content. Emotion matters more than instruction. Language develops through interaction, not in the cold silence of rote memorization.

Reimagining the English Classroom

If we genuinely want children to become fluent in English, we must change the environment, not just the syllabus. Here’s what that might look like:

  • Begin with listening and speaking, not grammar rules.
  • Establish English-only zones in classrooms—where mistakes are embraced as part of the learning process.
  • Use storytelling, songs, and role-playing to build an emotional connection with the language.
  • Teachers must demonstrate comfort and fluency, not fear of “wrong English.”
  • Encourage peer learning—language develops most quickly in social settings.
  • Prioritize meaning and expression over correctness.

Teaching Activity Suggestions: From Memorization to Immersion

These activities aim to foster an engaging, low-pressure setting for learning English.

Activity 1. English-Only Zone (30 mins daily)

  • Set a specific time during the day when only English is spoken.
  • Mistakes are not corrected—only encouraged. The focus is on expression, not perfection.

Activity 2. Role Play Scenarios

  • Have students act out real-life situations: ordering at a restaurant, meeting a new friend, asking for directions, and more.
  • Let them use gestures, broken sentences, and creative phrases.
  • Follow up with group reflection: “How did it feel?”

Activity 3. Personal Story Time

  • Have each student share a brief story from their life in very simple English.
  • Example: “When I lost my pencil,” “My first pet,” “What I ate this morning.”
  • Foster emotional involvement instead of focusing on correctness.

Activity 4. Song and Story Circles

  • Use English songs or short illustrated stories with subtitles.
  • Encourage students to repeat important phrases or perform scenes from the story.

Activity 5. Translate with Feeling

  • Select brief, emotional sentences in Urdu or regional languages and ask students to express the same feeling in English—not necessarily word-for-word.
  • Examples:
    • “مجھے ڈر لگ رہا ہے” → “I’m scared.”
    • “واہ! کیا مزے کی بات ہے” → “Wow! That’s awesome!”
  • Let them create their own versions too.

Note for Educators and Parents

Treat English like swimming: You don’t teach swimming by having kids memorize water formulas. You put them in the pool—with support. The same applies to language.

From Subject to Skill: A Paradigm Shift

English must stop being the language of fear and exams. It should become the language of expression, creativity, and connection. If a child can learn Urdu, Punjabi, or Pashto without textbooks, they can learn English too—if we let the language breathe.

The challenge is not about learning English. It’s about unlearning the way we’ve been teaching it.

Final Thought

Instead of asking, “Why can’t our students speak English?” we should ask, “Why are we treating a natural skill like an unnatural burden?” If we change the question, we might just change the answer—and unlock a generation of confident, expressive bilinguals.