There
was this English textbook that our class used when I was in high school. In it
was a story titled “Honorable Dishonor”. The story was about two bright
students: one, a financially well-off boy who was posed to graduate class
valedictorian and deservedly so; the other, the well-off boy’s closest
competitor—a poor lad who would be the class salutatorian.
One
day while all alone in the classroom, the well-off valedictorian-to-be found a
book which was inadvertently left by one of his classmates. Trying to determine
to whom the book belonged, the valedictorian-to-be opened it and saw a letter
inside. The book belonged to his closest competitor and the letter was for the
latter’s mother. In the letter, the boy was saying sorry to his mother for not
being able to graduate as valedictorian. The consequence was that he may not
move on to college for the family was so poor that even his half-scholarship to
college for being the high school salutatorian would not suffice. The family
has absolutely no means to augment the half-scholarship. To add to that, this
boy had many more siblings to be sent also to school.
After
reading the letter, the well-off boy went to the class adviser, related the incident,
and gallantly declared that he was willing to give up graduating at the top of
the class so that the salutatorian-to-be can graduate as the class
valedictorian and be entitled to a full scholarship to college. This was not
easy for this well-off boy to do since all his other siblings before him have
graduated valedictorian but more than that, he also deserved to graduate as
so.
In
class, my high school teacher queried if I would be willing to do what the boy
in the story did given the same set of circumstances. (I was the consistent
first honors and expected to graduate at the top of the class.)
Without
really thinking, I readily said yes. At the time I felt it to be the proper
response. The teacher praised and commended me without giving any justification
why giving up what you deserve and fought hard for is the proper thing to do.
Many
years have gone by and I have developed into a critical-minded adult. If that
high school teacher would ask me the same question, most likely I would have
given a different answer. I would not have given a safe “yes” answer just to
look (or sound) good and to please her. I probably would have said “no” and
launch into a discussion on the ill-effects of having an “entitlement
mentality”, the benefits of self-reliance and the difference between true
altruism and false altruism.
The
above epiphany suddenly came to me when I read in the papers about the
error-filled DepEd (Department of Education)-sanctioned textbooks and the
courageous teacher (Antonio Calipjo-Go of the Marian School), initially thought
of as a crank, who questioned the facts presented in those textbooks used by
many (I think, high school) students all over the country.
We
need more people like him in the academe and in our educational system—people
who are critical-minded and do not just accept facts and information as they
are.
As
you can see, as one news organization put it, “facts are not mere facts;
information is not just plain information”. Facts and information do have an
effect on their consumers.
More important, however, than having error-free
textbooks are teachers and/or educators who can think critically and can pass
such ability on to their students. More important than having the gumption to
kvetch is the ability to think critically, question or challenge the status quo
and the guts to stand for what one believes what ought to be. “What is as
important as a beautiful mind is a courageous heart,” so goes a line from the
movie “A Beautiful Mind”.
Again
I am reminded of this incident related to me by one mother: Her son was
supposed to get a perfect score in an exam but for one mistake. On the blank
space before the question “What is the color of an egg?” her son wrote “brown”.
The teacher put a big X mark on the answer.
To
a certain extent I believe that I may have been miseducated. (I may have also
used those error-filled textbooks during my time.) So too those classroom kids
who for many years have used those error-filled government-sanctioned textbooks
and who have without question listened to so-called voices of authority who
believe that all eggs are white.
I
have this not-so-funny feeling that my miseducation would take some time to be
undone.
[ I found this in my Journal. ]
2 comments:
lucky you
you at least get
"miseducated", at a high price.
there are those who
never had any education at all.
that is where we should be more
critical.
Thanks for the comments, JRSB.
Contextually, this was written more or less 10 years ago.Some of my views have changed, I've met fantastic mentors/teachers along the way. In Zanorte, i'll put you in that list, too, winky smile; although excellent teachers in this province are handicapped by the system/schools which "punish" such standards and instead pander to students' whims and caprices. I won't mention which schools. (Uhm, DMC. hahaha.)
Thankfully, I was only partially "miseducated" and for free at that, having had full scholarships from elementary to college and partly through law school where my academic decline began, wink, smiley face.
I have had the privilege to help out in "educating" those who "have no education" but deserving, through my Tita's foundation: we have given out so far six, i think, scholarships (and counting) at Salug National High School.
In this regard, my kvetching is JUSTIFIED. winky smile.
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