Thursday, October 23, 2014

The Purpose of Education



“You don’t even have an ambition. You do not like to wear good clothes, aspire to wear a nice watch, or have a house and a car in the future. What is the point of your studying so much? There is no point in your reading so many books and wasting your time if you have no aim to succeed”, declared my aunt when delivering another one of her long sermons when discussing my future.

Much irritated as I was, her statement of success shook me strong and made me doubt my whole approach towards education. I suddenly realized how she had brought the purpose of learning down to being nothing more than a means to secure a bright (read- monetarily secure) future. I started to wonder if that is all what education was about- money, a comfortable life and good living.

Would we have had a C.V Raman and a Ramanujam if their approach to learning had been the same? What about all the Verghese Kurien’ and Bunker Roy’ we’ve produced? I wondered.

Why then is society today so intolerant towards people who want to pursue something different because they find it interesting. Why is success solely measured through the prism of money today?





“Education is not merely a matter of training the mind. Training makes for efficiency, but it does not bring about completeness.” 
– Jiddu Krishnamurti


When after doing my Bachelors in Mass Media I chose to shift  to doing a Masters in Social Work, the whole of my extended family frowned upon my choice and even asked me mockingly, “So you aspire to become a Mahatma Gandhi now is it?”
Like wanting to become a Gandhi in life was something wrong.

Our present education is geared towards industrialization with its principal aim being to develop efficiency. With examinations and degrees being declared the prerequisite to future development, we are raising our children in a world of ruthless competition and mutual destruction which never allows them time to think on vital human issues.

Success is today measured in terms of the superior salary that you draw in comparison to thy relations/colleagues. With the meaning of a ‘comfortable life’ being defined by an excessively commodified and market-oriented society, everyone is out trying to fulfill this world view. This increasing need to satisfy the society had led to a very few of us actually pursuing what we love and are passionate about.


Is it necessarily true that a confused person without an ambition is useless and worth nothing?
Why is it that our society cannot so easily accept people who want to carve their own path by gaining their own experience?

To be confused is good. A confused mind is a thinking mind. All it needs is some genuine guidance.
Many people ask me this question, “How can we take up what we are passionate about? There are so many needs and responsibilities to be fulfilled.” Without denying the verity of these statements by any measure, it is undeniably true that people today have ever expanding needs and are never happy with as much is necessary. With them having no definition of ‘enough’, they are always unhappy and are aspiring for more. When does one limit one’s wants?

We thus have a generation of IITians and IIM graduates, who work mindlessly in offices on dull and boring assignments, which offer very little, or no scope for new and innovative ideas. With the money being the sole incentive, all of them rue over the monotony in their line of work. There are a few for whom the money factor acts as a great incentive. But for those many who seek out for interesting careers with job satisfaction, work life becomes a tedious affair. This has created a generation of depressed workers who have increasingly become dependent on cigarettes, alcohol and anti-depressants to keep their work life going.


It’s time that society stopped assuming education to be nothing more than a means to earn money. Monetizing the final output of education is a sort of mental prostitution. People should understand that an individual may sometimes simply have a passion to learn. She/He may not have the best of house or the finest of cars in the future, but they shall certainly be content. It is essential for parents to rethink their views on education and to make learning a fun and desirable activity for children so as to help them draw their own future paths.

3 comments:

  1. Education is always a product of the society, of the needs of the society.

    Have you read the book 'Deschooling Society'? If not, do. You will love it.

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    Replies
    1. No sir, I haven't. But I certainly shall read it at the earliest and shall get back to you.

      Thank you so much for your thoughtful comment and for your recommendation. :-)

      Delete
  2. While gaining knowledge should be one's primary intent, one should not forget that one needs certain basic necessities to survive. So strike a balance between being Gandhi and a regular guy my friend and you will be happy. :)

    ReplyDelete