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Role of the
Teacher
Moiz Amjad
Translated by Nadir Aqueel Ansari
Every society has an established set of
virtues and vices and it takes conscious and unconscious measures at
various levels to promote the virtues and eliminate the vices. Sometimes a
society may face a crisis of values in which the values are at odds with
one another or the values suffer from double standards. In that
eventuality, the people reflect contradictions in their actions and in the
morality they profess. The people are seen violating the values they hold
sacred in their sermons and lectures. Such an atmosphere is hazardous for
the immature and sensitive young people who react and suffer from mental
confusion and are led to believe that there are certain values to be paid
lip service only, whereas the practical needs of life demand an altogether
different set of values.
In the past, parents and teachers used to
make the best of their efforts to provide an atmosphere to their children
which is congenial to the development of higher virtues and morals. But
the gross social change over the last fifty years, large scale
urbanization, ruthless competition for financial gains, and heavy
preoccupation in everyday life deplete all time and energy from the
parents, leaving behind little time or energy for their children. Whatever
time they have at their disposal is consumed by newspapers, television and
other recreations. As a result, the younger generation hardly gets any
opportunity to share ideas with their elders or to enter into a meaningful
discussion. On the other hand, this idea is gaining ground among us that
education is not meant to build up better human beings, but only to get
better jobs. Consequently, the students' minds are obsessed with better
jobs and dreams for higher social status. Obviously, the moral and
religious training of the child has gradually been ousted from the preview
of education. The system of private tuition among the students and
teachers is also endemic. Now the students tend to consider their teacher
as their servant, rather than their mentor or reformer. The net result of
all this deterioration is that the value system of our society has fallen
into oblivion, which we had to transfer to the next generation for the
preservation of our religious and national identity.
In Muslim history, teachers have not only
distinguished themselves by their profundity in knowledge and research,
but also because of their character, piety and abstinence from immoral
acts. Throughout their history, Muslims have refused to except the
authority of any pervert or debauch as a religious scholar and teacher. We
have always attached importance to the character, nobility and conformity
of belief and action. In the Islamic view of education, instruction of
sciences cannot be divorced from moral and ethical training. It is again a
contribution of the modern age that character building has been totally
dissociated from education. That is why our system is producing an
educated but characterless generation. Maulana Maudoodi once observed:
"Devoid of any divine element and
Islamic morality, our education system even fails to inculcate those basic
human morals in our students, without which a nation cannot hope for an
honourable survival, what to speak of any possibility of its development.
The generations being produced by it are unfortunately equipped with all
the decadence of the West but do not have even an inkling of Western
virtues. They are neither dutiful, hardworking and devoted, punctual, nor
do they have any claim on perseverance, determination, discipline or
self-control. They do not have any ideals beyond their self-interest. They
are just like wild bushes, and do not demonstrate any national character.
They would not desist from indulging in the meanest dishonesty, even when
they are placed at a very noble position in life. They comprise the worst
and the meanest nepotists, smugglers, transgressors on others rights and
unwilling workers. We can find thousands of people in our society who can
stoop very low to receive bribes and illegal gratification, would go out
exerting all kinds of immoral influences to get unwarranted favours, whose
lawlessness has no bounds and who would overlook the larger good of the
society and the nation for a paltry personal gain. The product of these
schools took over the leadership and administration of the country after
we won freedom from the colonial rule, and since then, the way our country
has been mishandled and routed, by these characterless managers, is indeed
tragic. And if you want to assess the character of the generation which is
presently at the mercy of these schools and colleges, you can do so by
studying them in their institutions, hostels, recreation spots, on
national days and on the streets." ("Ta`leemaat", Pg 132)
It is a fact that a civilization cannot
rise out of a skeleton of mere ideas and abstract concepts. Civilization
finds a concrete shape in the practical behaviour of a nation, based on
these principles and concepts. Once the practical aspect is gone, the
civilization also disappears and can only be studied through its remnants
preserved in museums and chronicles. This necessitates the providing of an
Islamic atmosphere throbbing with life in our education institutions, with
a view to infuse confidence in our students and to enable them to be proud
of their culture, to respect their national character and national
emblems, and to ornament themselves with Islamic conduct and morals. They
should stand firm on the centuries old foundations of their cultural
tradition and at the same time should establish standards of excellence in
their academic performance.
We should try to build up a strong
character in our students right from the beginning, and they should learn
to act in accordance with what they profess, to follow what they consider
the appropriate path, to carry out their due role in the society, to adopt
what they find good and to avoid what they think is morally wrong. It is
imperative for us to cultivate human virtues in our students from the
primary level of their education and training. For instance the promotion
of punctuality, truth, hard work, honesty, simplicity, hygiene, etiquette,
patriotism, mutual love and sincerity, social and civic sense, obedience
to law, tolerance and other desirable virtues should be the hall mark of
an Islamic education system.
Parents and teachers have to play a
cardinal role in the building up of the character of the next generation.
The teacher's role is particularly important and has been compared with
that of the prophets. Every prophet is essentially a teacher. On more than
one occasion, Providence has changed the fate of nations through effective
and well directed teaching. This profession is so important and so
sacrosanct that the Holy Prophet (sws) proudly declared it to be a
prominent part of his personality and prophethood. If a teacher realizes
the significance of his job, the tremendous responsibility he is
shouldering, the share he has in the future development of the nation, and
consequently the accountability he will have to face in the Hereafter, he
will at once shudder with the idea of facing the grave consequences of any
dereliction on his part.
No other personality can have an influence
more profound than that of a teacher. Students are deeply affected by the
teacher's love and affection, his character, his competence, and his moral
commitment. A popular teacher becomes a model for his students. The
students try to follow their teacher in his manners, costumes, etiquette,
style of conversation and his get up. He is their ideal. He can lead them
anywhere. During their early education, the students tend to determine
their aims in life and their future plans, in consultation with their
teachers. Therefore, a corrupt and decadent class of teachers can harm a
nation much more seriously than a class of corrupt and perverted
judiciary, army, police, bureaucracy, politicians or technocrats. A
corrupt and incompetent teacher in not only a bad individual, but also the
harbinger of a corrupt and incompetent generation. A nation with corrupt
teachers is a nation at risk; every coming day announces the advent of its
approaching destruction.
Therefore, while selecting teachers, it
must be borne in mind that, in addition to their professional competence,
they must bear a good moral character and must be observing Muslims. No
Islamic education system worth the name can afford to have teachers who
are neither good human beings nor good Muslims. The teachers must be
models of faith and piety and should have a fairly good knowledge about
Islam and their conduct should conform to their faith. A teacher should
consider it his duty to educate and train his students and should feel
responsible for it. He should feel that his students have been entrusted
to him and he should avoid any breach of the trust the society has reposed
in him. He should be a sociable person with his roots in the society.
People should take him as their well-wisher and a sincere friend who cares
for their children. He should actively participate in the social
activities in a positive way. He should know the art of teaching with a
deep insight into child psychology. He should always deal with the
students in a just manner. He should not lose his self-control on mistakes
his students may commit, and instead he should respect their feelings and
ego, and should try to understand and resolve their difficulties with
grace while keeping his cool. He should be able to smile in the face of
bitter criticism on his opinions, and should not feel ashamed or
humiliated to accept his mistakes wholeheartedly. He should be proud of
his culture, his national dress and his national language and should
respect the societal mores and detest the immoralities of his times. He
should be a missionary, a mentor, a reformer and a guide besides being a
tutor. In other words, he should be a perfect teacher and a perfect
educationist.
Indeed it is an ideal teacher at the climax
of his performance that brings about a positive change in the overall
behaviour of his students by leading them to a lofty character and to
exemplary morals. While commenting on the role of the Holy Prophet (sws)
as a teacher, an orientalist, Robert L. Gulick, writes:
"Only the most provincial concept of
education would gainsay the legitimacy of placing Mohammed among the great
educators of all times for, from the pragmatic standpoint, he who elevates
human behaviour is a prince among educators." ( "Muhammad: The
Educator", Pg 4)
This
importance of a teacher demands application of rigorous standards for his
selection and a constant grooming after that. It is indispensable to
accord equal or more weightage to the character and religious commitment
of a teacher as compared to his professional competence. A teacher
suffering from decadent beliefs and morals is not capable of imparting
mental and moral training to students that can go well with an Islamic
education system. After all, unlike other fields, if the education system
falls into the hands of spoilt people, we are left with no prospects of
improvement.
The importance of a teacher as an architect
of our future generations also demands that only the best and the most
intelligent and competent members of our intelligentsia be allowed to
qualify for this profession. It is unfortunate to find that generally the
worst and the most incapable people of the society find their way to this
profession. Anyone who fails to find an opening in any other walk of life,
gets into this profession and recklessly plays with the destiny of the
nation. An important reason for this is understood to be the poor salaries
of our primary and secondary teachers which are no better than that of
clerks. A large number of our teachers is therefore frustrated and
disinterested. They have to go for part-time jobs to meet their basic
needs. The teachers in rural areas are forced to work in fields, to keep
livestock, go for small business, perform services in a mosque or the
like. The teachers in urban areas opt for student coaching or part-time
clerical assignments. Secondly, the teaching profession also does not
enjoy due respect in the society. The primary and secondary teachers are
particularly at a disadvantage. Their status is lower than that of
doctors, engineers, advocates, civil servants; even lower than that of
semi literate and illiterate traders. It would therefore require great
commitment for an intelligent individual, however fond of education and
training he may be, to forsake the career of a doctor or engineer in
favour of teaching. Thirdly, at the government level, the syllabuses have
been finalized and the chapter for revision closed, as if they are divine
scriptures. The Aristotles of our bureaucracy have left no room for any
alteration or revision in the light of new discoveries, research and
progress. Even the students striving for Bachelor and Masters degrees have
a set of limited books prescribed by the authorities. The teachers only
solve the difficulties and then transmit a rehash of these books to the
students, enabling them to memorize and copy the notes in their
examinations. It is quite beyond the sphere of the assigned responsibility
of a teacher to critically analyze the text books.
Consequently, the scholars with the ability to critically evaluate
and analyze the given material and to add something by incisive research,
just do not think of joining the teaching profession.
These are a few reasons that are
effectively keeping our intelligentsia away from the field of education.
Obviously, we cannot expect an educational arrangement to deliver the
goods unless it has a cadre of competent teachers. We need to address
these and other associated problems of teachers. The teachers should be
entitled to better salaries and better facilities when compared with other
professions. It should be ascertained at all cost that a candidate for
this profession has a natural acumen and aptitude for teaching.
Simultaneously, all out efforts should be launched at the government level
to restore the financial and social status of teachers. We do have a
practice of awarding the Pride of Performance awards to actors, artists,
and players but the outstanding achievements of a good teacher go
unnoticed and are not welcome. The notable achievements of teachers should
also be appreciated at the state level and while evaluating them, their
academic and research output should also be considered. This is an
important issue demanding immediate and prioritized attention of the
government on emergent basis. The electronic and print media can also play
a very positive role in this regard. These measures can go a long way
towards a better future of our country and the Ummah through encouraging
intelligent and competent people to join this profession and by bringing
out their true potential.
Source:
http://www.renaissance.com.pk/
Dec 1995 issue |