The former Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation said "real education" is not being imparted to children who in fact are being "spoon-fed", and most of the evaluation exams are memory-tests rather than gauging their understanding of the subject.
"That's why the education system has deteriorated considerably. Result is that the people who come out even after graduation or engineering, they are not employable. They don't have the basic understanding of the subject, don't have the skills for applying knowledge for practical applications and this is resulting in a pathetic situation," he told PTI.
"I think basically education has become a commercial commodity these days rather than acquiring excellence in knowledge," Nair said.
He, however, said institutions such as IITs and Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru are maintaining their standards mostly because they get "best of the students" on their campus but they need to raise their level from global perspective.
He expressed the view that one should not mix politics with education.
"Today, there is a bad tendency. There are many political parties who want to use these institutions for building up their cadres, and that should be stopped," Nair said.
Nair stressed that the thrust of education should be on improving observation, analytical and communication skills of students, in addition to cultivating moral values.
"These should form the basis of primary education. Once the foundation is strong and you show them the way how to acquire knowledge, that is sufficient. There is no point in just doing 10,000 answers by-heart, that will not take you anywhere. Education system should be an enabler, that kind of change is required," he said.
Stressing that quality is a must in teaching, he said teachers also need to be evaluated periodically.
Nair advocated adopting some basic lessons from "Gurukul system", particularly strong relation between the teacher-student and the parent.
"That ambience has to be created. Evaluations should not be based on annual exam. It should be constant evaluation where the parent also participates in a very scientific manner. Moral studies have to be given strong base in early part of education," he said.
He also favoured giving students an option to study Sanskrit. "Sanskrit is one of the most scientific languages, learning that, I understand, will improve analytical skills of the individual.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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