Musings · Social Media, Technology & Education

care-free

This article reminded me of a conversation on one of my research sites. A group of facilitators were discussing challenges teaching children of migrant workers in the week before. Someone says, children from other age groups are also arriving for the sessions. Many echo the same problem.
The solution provided is: Patiently clarify the time assigned for their age group.
Some facilitators then mention how older children come with their younger siblings. This includes older siblings as young as 3rd-4th grade and their siblings who are toddlers.
The solution provided is to send them back and tell their parents to not send the toddler or both are not allowed. This is necessary to keep the quality of learning/focus during the 2 hour session.
The facilitatators ask: What if the parents don’t send the child back?
The answer is: that is their problem. They need their child to learn so they have to deal with it.

The realities of life for some families in this way are completely written off. As the parents and everybody of working age goes to the field, the 3rd grader has the responsibility to tend for the toddler. An urban middle class family can afford to/takes it for granted that school aged children will live their lives unencumbered by chores. In schooling this reality is taken as a given. The systems are set up with that assumption. Children are expected to be ‘care-free’. But is that really the gold standard?

Wendy Luttrell similarly talks about children of working class Americans, the expectation of school aged children to be ‘un-burdened’ by care and the reality of their perception of care duties. In a project where the children were given a camera to capture their daily lives, they captured their and others’ care work. For them it is much more than duty or obligation.

When we imagine care duties like cooking, cleaning, babysitting, taking siblings to school, looking after elderly or unwell family members, we think of it as an adult responsibility or work to be transfered to others for pay. Children are expected to be ‘care-free’. Luttrell comments that freedom thus is about not having to care. On the other hand, the children from working class families she followed, thought of “care as a concerted, collective effort that enables their own and others’ participation, learning, and sense of belonging at home and in schools”

Depending on the hamlet they lived in (the overall afluence), the children at my research site, fetched water for the use of the household, cooked, cleaned, looked after siblings, looked after domestic animals. Older children in grade 7 or so also helped their parents in the field or in the shop. Can we reimagine our learning systems to work around these tasks that are inherent part of their lives? Can we imagine a way to design the learning process that acknowledges these parts of their lives – a math problem that builds on these experiences, for example, rather than an antiseptic problem of a tap and a leaky drum?

Social Media, Technology & Education

Teaching in Covid times: Looking back

We are almost at the end of November. The HE institutions in India with semester systems are now winding down while the ones with annual systems hopefully are settling in the rhythm of teaching online. In the beginning of the academic year, I wrote about thinking differently to achieve best outcomes for online teaching and ideas for assessment and final exams. I hope many were able to tweak their teaching strategy to suit the online environment keeping in mind their students’ background and resources. 

The strategy of teaching with multiple 10 min long videos and 1 hour synchronous time per week seems to have gone well. The good part is that now the teachers have multiple recorded videos that can be reused for online teaching or teaching in flipped classroom mode after the f2f teaching resumes. 

Some teachers just imported their classroom to online mode with the same hour long or longer lectures multiple times a week. Most of these teachers reported dwindling interest from students. Fatigue has set in for both teachers and students as the crucial element of classroom interaction that kept up motivation was missing. It has been especially demotivating for students without resources to attend synchronous lectures everyday. Some of the constraints for synchronous learning were: lack of a dedicated device for each person in the house, patchy data connectivity, lack of space in the house at specified time.  

If you were unable to implement some of the suggestions from my previous posts, I would love to know what the constraints were. If moving from an hour long lecture to 10 minute chunks of videos seems daunting, I can help you figure out how to do it. If institutional policy is the constraint, I am happy to help redesign policies that work for all in the given circumstances keeping in mind specific constraints of your teachers and student body. 

Social Media, Technology & Education

NEP: some thoughts

Some excerpts as I was reading the NEP
“moving towards a higher educational system consisting of large, multidisciplinary universities and colleges”
“build vibrant communities of scholars and peers, break down harmful silos, enable students to become well-rounded across disciplines including artistic, creative, and analytic subjects as well as sports, develop active research communities across disciplines including cross-disciplinary research, and increase resource efficiency, both material and human, across higher education”
“10.2. Moving to large multidisciplinary universities and HEI clusters is thus the highest recommendation of this policy regarding the structure of higher education”

Thinking out loud about the experience at Columbia University with respect to multidisciplinary coursework and research:
IGERT experience
Some fields do better in interdisciplinary research probably because there are already some pathways for them – Bioengineering, biochemistry for example. The Architecture and Engineering IGERT however struggled.
Different ways of teaching and learning, different value systems (nursing and medicine), unavailability of venues to publish research (Engineering and Architecture) were some of the challenges.

Creating coursework
School of Nursing and School of Medicine when creating an online course could not agree on how to read test reports (therefore how to teach how to read reports) – the basic assumptions about relationship with patients or their positionality with respect to patients differed so drastically that it was almost impossible to decide the ‘right’ course of action as the students walked through the cases presented.

Social Media, Technology & Education

Assessment in Covid times

Most of the colleges in India, conduct a final exam to assess student learning. Covid has put constraints on large gatherings to take an exam. It is a good reason to get out of the entrenched system of final exams, external examiners and all its trappings. Ideally we should be focusing on continuous assessment by the teacher rather than depending on a one time effort to assess semester-long learning.

Take a moment to think through why you need timed final exams. There could be a variety of reasons. Competitive timed exams with invigilation have a primarily gatekeeping objective. A similar reason I have heard multiple times at the university/college level is – keeping sanctity of education or the degree.

If we agree that the primary aim of the whole exercise of a degree program is learning to think/do/communicate X, who do we assume or believe is responsible for the learning? The ‘sanctity of education’ discourse and need to monitor exams closely, presumes that the institution and the teachers are responsible for student learning. If you believe that the students are responsible for their own learning, you might not need monitored exams.

Over the years, many teachers have commented that students have a short term objective to get good grades rather than giving importance to learning and it is their responsibility to goad students on the path of long term benefit away from short-termism. If you believe this, you can think of learning as a shared responsibility and inculcate the culture in your classroom from the first day of class. Design assignments that would push for learning rather than performance. Grade for effort, rather than right or wrong answers.

This is a conversation you need to have with yourself at the beginning of the semester and plan your assessment strategy based on it.

Just a note: If students want to cheat rather than learn, they will. Fixed and strict time limits, video monitoring of students while writing the exam etc establish the culture of teachers being responsible for learning and provides more impetus for students to find ways to skirt the constraints. Rather than motivation for learning, these methods end up being punitive for students who do not have a stable internet connection, separate room, and a separate robust device to take the exam on.

Alternatives to monitored exams
Open book test: If you would like to know how well students can apply something they learnt, the best way is to give them a problem solving assignment that cannot be completed by copying from the textbook or easily googled. An open book test with a lenient time frame gives importance to higher order learning than rote learning and makes sure that the most disadvantaged students are not penalised.

Final paper, presentation, or a product: Works well if you can break it into multiple short assignments throughout the semester leading to the end product. This scaffolds the process of creating the end product, especially important for students who might balk at a lengthy writing assignment or students who have never worked on a semester long project who might falter at time management skill. This assignment gives you a glimpse into the process as well as the end product making the grading more meaningful.

For more ideas see this list from Center for Innovative Teaching and Learning at Indiana University.

Continuous Assessment
Rather than thinking about how to move the final exam and invigilation online, it might be a good time to embrace continuous assessment. You can start by converting your final product or exam into a semester long process as mentioned above. If your subject does not lend itself to a final product or the students are not prepared for it you can start small.

A simple addition of a weekly homework for attendance grade mentioned in the previous note can start you on this path. The homework can be a simple reflection exercise. For example, write the main point of today’s discussion or lecture; list 3 takeaways from the session today. Another of my favourite exercise is – list skills, techniques or concepts that need more work this week, What do you plan to do about it. The plan could be self study, practice problem solving, ask for help from peers or time for office hours. These exercises teach students how to take responsibility for their own learning. That for me is the most important skill they can learn than any ‘content to be covered’ for a subject.

Social Media, Technology & Education

Teaching in Covid times

The UGC timeline of August 1st week to start the academic year for already registered students is now upon us. It is quite clear, at least in places like Delhi where I live, that university campuses cannot/will not open for face-to-face instruction. I hope Universities have planned before hand for this eventuality.

In the winter semester, campuses closing suddenly meant, the classroom instruction was moved to online as an emergency measure. There was no time to learn or follow best practices. No time for preparation of online resources or setting up processes for clear communication. We survived through that. However, the August 1 starting is not sudden, we know we will have to teach online so there is no excuse for just copying classroom practices to online and hope or pretend that it will work. These two are completely different spaces with their own strong and weak points. Replicating the face-to-face experience online in the name of not lowering /keeping standards will be a huge mistake.

Here are some areas in which teachers and administrators need to think differently to achieve best outcomes. These are based on decades of research in online and distance teaching and learning:
Classroom time together
The best part of face-to-face instruction is constant feedback for the teacher; quality time with the teacher and peers for the student. However, it is not translated well at all in synchronous online teaching. An online lecture due to its lack of non-verbal feedback is one of the least productive teaching strategies. The best part of ‘online’ is the flexibility of not being present physically. By asking students to attend lectures in real time fails to capitalize on the best that online can offer.

Instead, teachers need to plan for recorded lectures for basic content, and a follow up session every week to check in with students, address queries, expand on the material already provided. This takes care of practical difficulties students face such as – lack of stable connection, lack of space to study, lack of individual resources (computer, mobile, internet connection) for each person in the house to use at the same time. This also gives students time to mull over the material and apply the concepts so that they are much more prepared in the weekly check in session. Overall, a much more productive use of resources and the synchronous teaching time.

When creating rules about contact hours, the important point for administrators would be to think about total hours spent in synchronous and asynchronous contact rather than being hung up on replicating the twice or thrice a week timed lecture in the classroom, in an online setting.

Grading for attendance
As we shift from the weekly timed lectures to a mix of synchronous and asynchronous teaching, we also need to rethink the participation grade. Many teachers, use attendance in face-to-face classroom (and may be being vocal in that space) as a proxy for participation. Colleges also have policies about attendance. In the changed circumstances it will be punitive for the most underserved students unless the colleges can provide a dedicated computer, internet connection, and space where they can attend the synchronous online sessions.

Instead think of activities that can be completed asynchronously, such as discussion forums, regular ungraded homework assignments that can tell you if a student is participating. If colleges have a generic classroom attendance policy, administrators need to change it to participation policy to keep up with the times.

Planning for an hour-long lecture vs planning for a unit
In a face-to-face setting, our syllabus/ instructional planning is generally based on the number of hour-long lectures we have in a semester and the content to be covered. With the focus shifted to a mix of synchronous and asynchronous, the time together cannot be the central unit of planning anymore.

Instead plan based on a unit focused on subtopics you want to introduce. Best practice is to think of a subtopic that can be handled as a weekly unit. The unit can have recorded lectures, readings, activities that scaffold learning with the material provided, and a culminating synchronous session. The recorded lectures further need to be thought out as small subtopics that can be explained in bite sized short 10-minute videos. Depending on the complexity of ideas, each video or a group of videos can end into a self-study question. Such possibilities of self-check peppered throughout the unit keep students on task, provide feedback to the teacher, and creates basis for the participation grade.

Administrators need to offer workshops and/or ongoing consultations from a specialist to help teachers plan for the online settings. They also need to provide technology support and consultation so that teachers can prepare quality online content.

These are just a few places where we need to make a thoughtful shift. I will write in more detail about assessments and grading in the next post. Now that we are not available physically during our assigned lecture hours, clear communication and managing expectations is also going to be an important aspect. I guess another post on that is in order as well.

Social Media, Technology & Education

The thesis writing factory

I have heard about the thesis writing factories in India and have brushed it off thinking it is not a wide spread problem. However, recently it has come up so many times that I can’t ignore the extent of the phenomenon and the clients not only in India but also in US and UK universities.

A couple of years back I joined sites like People Per Hour to see what was going on there. My profile sets me up as a researcher, evaluator, writer, editor. It has been a pleasure working with some MA and doctoral students stuck somewhere in their research and writing process but most of the requests I get are to write papers, chapters outright. Some openely ask to ‘ghost write’ a journal paper while others use sneaky phrases like ‘major edits’. Some asking to get entire end term papers written are fearless to just post the assignment with the course and university name clearly visible.

It is appalling and distressing to see the number of such requests that reach me when it is quite clear I do not do such work. How many papers, thesis are being written by people who make it their profession? I was told the going rate for a thesis is in lacks.

If you decided to study, why wouldn’t you want to learn I keep asking in bafflement. It was clarified by one simple remark – I am not interested in research, I am doing this only to get the degree as now-a-days it is difficult to get teaching assignments without it. The incentives are all wrong already. The thesis factories are going to just baloon some more with the new UGC requirements for degree and publishing to be an assistant professor.

I am pretty sure there are still people out there who are stuck without good mentorship who will give their best if I can just help and motivate them. I am also hopeful that there are at least some who can be poked and motivated into at least trying before they declare they don’t care enough to work to get their piece of paper.

Musings

Growing up: it takes a village

As we go through the old stuff at my mother’s house, memories tumble down unexpectedely. As I decide to capture it all and not lose it again, I think of my mother who prefers to read in Marathi rather than English. So this one is for her. The one who gave us wings.
आईकडच्या जुन्या कागदपत्रांच्या निमित्ताने लहानपणीच्या आठवणींचा धागा उकलला आणि स्वेटर उसवावा तश्या आठवणीतुन आठवणी उलगडत चालल्या आहेत.

लहान असताना उन्हाळ्याच्या सुट्टीत आम्ही आजोळी जायचो. त्याआधी अगदी लहान असताना दिवाळीच्या सुट्टीत, कारण तेंव्हा आई बाबांनाही सुट्टी असायची. आई बाबांबरोबर म्हणजे ट्रेन. मिरजेला बदलावी लागायची पहाटे पहाटे 5 ला. त्यावेळची सर्वात ठळक आठवण म्हणजे प्लॅटफॉर्म वर खाल्लेलं डबल ऑम्लेट आणि बाबांनी सांगितलेल्या त्यांच्या वालचंद कॉलेजच्या आठवणी. नंतर कितीही वेळा डबल आम्लेट घरी केलं तरी गुलाबी थंडीत अर्धवट झोपेत पण charged with excitement, पुढच्या गाडीत बसण्या आधी प्लॅटफॉर्म वर खाल्लेलं आम्लेट खाण्याची ती मज्जा येणे नाही.

नंतर खानापूरवरून जाणारी कारवार बस सुरु झाली. बदला बदलीची गरज उरली नाही. एका वर्षी हृदयावर दगड ठेऊन आईनी आम्हा तिघींना बस मध्ये बसवून दिलं. उतरवायला आजोबा येणार होते. नाश्ता, जेवण, खाऊ असं बरंच बांधून दिलं होतं. त्यातलं सर्वात लक्षात राहिलं ते आम्रखंड. विकतच, कोयरीच्या आकारातल्या डब्यात पॅक केलेलं. जायची टूम निघाल्यावर आम्ही खाऊ जमा करायला लागलो होतोच. कुणी गोळ्या बिस्किटं दिली की ती खाऊच्या पिशवीत जमा होत. सकाळी 5 ला निघून 3 ला दुपारी पोचायचं त्यामुळे बस मध्ये खायला असा सर्व जामानिमा होता. आईनी बसमध्ये कोणीतरी ओळखीचे शोधले होते, आमच्यावर लक्ष ठेवायला. ते प्रत्येक थांब्यावर विचारत पेरू हवा का, दाणे हवे का, काकडी हवी का. आम्हाला हे माहीत नसल्यामुळे आम्ही चांगल्याच घाबरलो. पळवून नेल्यास काय काय करता येईल ह्याच्या क्लुप्त्या तयार झाल्या. Overactive imagination gone wild. भरपूर खाऊ खिडकीवर विकायला येत होता. पण आम्ही शहाण्या मुलींसारखं सगळ्याला नको म्हटलं. पहिल्या वहिल्या एकल्या प्रवासात न चाखलेल्या या एसटी स्टॅन्ड मेव्याची कसर आता कितीही पेरू, बोरं, काकड्या, दाणे खाल्ले तरी भरून निघत नाही.

खानापूरला पोचेपर्यंत बस चांगलीच भरली होती. अगदी पुढे बसलेल्या आम्हाला मागच्या दारापर्यंत येऊन उतरायला बराच वेळ लागला. तोपर्यंत आजोबांनी आम्हाला शोधण्यासाठी बसला चारपाच प्रदक्षिणा घातल्या होत्या. त्यांचं panic आजही मला तसंच्या तसं डोळ्यासमोर दिसतं. आम्ही आरामात महिनाभर आजोळी राहिलो, नदीवर हुंदडलो. भरपूर दंगा केला. परत येताना मात्र मामा सोडायला आला. तो असल्यानी कोणतीही चिंता नसल्यामुळे पूर्णवेळ उलट्या सीटवर गुढघे रोवून बसून, वेगाने पळत जाणारी गुलमोहोराची बघितलेली झाडं आजही लक्षात आहेत. नंतर प्रत्येक सुट्टीत आम्ही दोघी बहिणी कारवार गाडीनी खानापूरला जात राहिलो. लहानपणी असलेल्या गाई म्हशींपासून ते मामानी नंतर आणलेल्या कोंबड्यांपर्यंत, जिन्याखालच्या भाताच्या ढिगापासून ते पोह्याच्या गिरणीपर्यंत, शहरात न मिळणारे सर्व अनुभव या सुट्टीतल्या शाळेनी आम्हाला दिले. आजोबा त्यांच्या स्वछ पांढऱ्या धोतर, शर्ट आणि काळ्या कोटात बाहेर निघाले की आम्हीही बरोबर निघायचो. दोन दिवस मागच्या खोलीत भिजत घातलेलं भात उपसून तयार असे. ते आजोबा पोहे काढण्यासाठी घेऊन जात. त्यांच्या मोटठ्या काळ्या छत्रीखाली गिरणीतून परत येताना, पिशवीत हात घालून, चालता चालता खाल्लेल्या, जिभेवर विरघळणाऱ्या ताज्या गरम पोह्यांची चव अजूनही लक्षात आहे.

दुसरा उद्योग म्हणजे बाबुकाकांच्या गिरणीत तासनतास बसून येणाऱ्या जाणाऱ्या शेतकऱ्यांची विविध दळणे बघत बसणे – धान्य, तेलबिया, मिरची, आणि काहीबाही शेतमाल. The way things spiralled down the spout and transformed into something completely different in color, feel, and smell was memsmerizing. आम्हाला हे सगळं इतकं नवीन होतं की आम्ही प्रत्येक गोष्टीला हात लावून आणि चव घेऊन बघत असू. तेल काढून उरलेल्या दाण्याची पेंड खाऊन बघण्यापर्यंत काहीही. बाबुकाकाही आमचे हे पराक्रम चालवून घेत असत. अगदी मिरची दळायला आल्यावर त्याचा खाट येईपर्यंत आम्ही गिरणीत ठाण मांडून बसत असू. बाबुकाका गिरणीत दहाबारा फूट उंचावर असलेल्या त्यांच्या खुर्चीत बसत असत. लहानपणी सिंहासना सारखी वाटणारी ती खुर्ची आणि उंच शिडशिडीत बाबुकाका म्हणजे काहीतरी वेगळच प्रकरण वाटायचं. बाबुकाका सुद्धा वल्ली माणूस. “हल्याळ यष्टी गॉन तुझ्या नाकावरून गॉन” असं म्हणत माझ्या नकट्या नाकाची चेष्टा करणारा त्यांचा खणखणीत आवाज, गिरणी इतकाच अजूनही कानात भरून राहिला आहे.

As I think back I realize, aai, ajoba-ajji, mama-mami and many more had to endure anxiety, agitation, lack of quiet and much more to give us a chance at becoming the independent, inquisitive, brave women we have grown up to be.

Musings · Social Media, Technology & Education

Growing up

Going through all the old stuff at my mother’s house has been an education in how privileged my life was in terms of at least one parent taking active interest in my education and Marathi language development. Previously I wrote about the newspaper cuttings of poems. Poems that she taught me to enact. During the recent visit we found a poem she wrote herself to teach us about fruits. I remember enacting, in fifth grade, a story she wrote. It had a somewhat sad ending but taught me about ethics and not making assumptions about people. Simple lessons that have served me well my entire life. She used to write speeches for me for ellocution competitions as well. I particularly remember the one she wrote for B G Tilak’s Jayanti – an age appropriate story from his childhood depicting his independent spirit.

This one looks like a poem written for a much younger age. Focused on interesting sounds and imagery – खाड खाड बूट आपटत , अंतू चिंतू मंडळी, लट्ठमभारती पोंक्षे etc. You can see extra lines scribbled in the margin probably to include some fruits missed in the first effort. Here is the complete poem:

फळांची ओळख
बंडोबान काढलं फळांचं दुकान
फळं घ्या फळं गोड ताजी छान
लोकांना मिळाली वर्दी
दुकानात झाली एकच गर्दी

काठी टेकत टेकत आले मिस्टर तांबे
खोकत खोकत म्हणाले कसे डझन आंबे
अंतू चिंतू मंडळी, पाहून आली जंजीर
बंडोबाना म्हणाली गॉड आहे ना अंजीर
सुलू ताई आल्या, बरोबर होती कुक्कु
म्हणाली आई मला नको काही, घे फक्त चिक्कू

खाड खाड बूट आपटत आले दोन शिपाई
ऐटीत राहूंन उभी, मागितली पपई
डुलत डुलत आले लट्ठमभारती पोंक्षे
सीझन नव्हता तरी म्हणे हवी मला द्राक्षे

सकूटर थांबवत थोडी म्हणाले सुरेश मंत्री
आहेत का हो तुमच्याकडे नागपुरी संत्री
विद्याताई आली साडी नेसून डाळिंबी
आजोबांसाठी तिला घ्यायची होती मोसंबी
प्रतिभाची मुलं म्हणे खात नाहीत भाजी पोळी
शिकरणाला हवीत तिला रोज घरात केळी

यमुनाताईंची सदा घाई, दोन हवे अननस
लवकर द्या हो नाहीतर चुकेल माझी बस

बंडोबान काढलं फळांचं दुकान
माल गेला संपून व्यापार झाला छान

Social Media, Technology & Education

What is education for?

Conversations about JNU student agitation against raised fees were trending on twitter last week. Many commented that the increase is not much. Rs300 per month is pittance. Others pointed out that 40% of JNU students are from families below poverty line who cannot afford even this sum that others think is small so they will be priced out. The oft repeated discourse was:

  • The students are free loaders.
  • Government should not be wasting tax payers’ money on subsidising education.
  • Medicine and technology education should be subsidized than humanities, liberal arts education that earns nothing.
  • Students should start earning after BA. Should do odd jobs to support themselves.

There are many points to discuss /refute here but I picked up one that is on my mind everytime there is a controversy related to education. The fundamental question: What is education for? Much of the browbeating assumes the primary and only objective of education is to get a well paying job. What about:

  • Education as a means to develop well rounded citizens in a democracy.
  • Education as a means of self actualization.
  • Education as a cognitive, metacoginitive, social, emotional -skill building, over and above the core subject or the degree. What we call Learning to Learn.

Current education might not be fulfilling these objectives but the point is to aspire to it and plan for it rather than getting hung up on just a job at the end of a degree.

From many of the twitter conversations it looks like it is not just the question of what is education for… but also about who can aspire to which motivation/objective for education. As this tone deaf tweet assumes – poor people can only think about education as a means to a job that can earn a quick buck.

Free or subsidized education in all disciplines is an investment in the future of the country and not a waste of taxpayer’s money. ‘All disciplines’ needs to be stressed here as “We want engineers in the world but not a world of engineers” (Churchill??). More number of better educated people from diverse backgrounds (education, life experience etc) generate more, better ideas. According to economists that is the only durable source of growth in the long run. The government paying for education is not a handout to the person getting educated. It is not just for personal benefit but a necessity for future of the entire society. Definitely investment with better returns than statues and vain projects with nationalistic fervour.

Musings · Social Media, Technology & Education

Whataboutery

Lately, it has been hard to continue any dialogue, on social media (Facebook, Twitter,WhatsApp) . If the topic is lynchings, the response is, what about Kashmiri Pandits who suffered at the hand of muslims, or the historic atrocities. If the topic is economic issues due to demonetization or corruption, the reaction is, what about all the ghapalas Congress engaged in, or Lalu or some other person, party engaged in. If a person points at the atrocities on animals, or refugees in need of help, the reaction is, what about these other groupings of people? Why wouldn’t you comment on that?

This particular way of arguing, whataboutery, does not move dialogue. Here is a definition of whataboutery from Wikitionary:

  1. Protesting at hypocrisy; responding to criticism by accusing one’s opponent of similar or worse faults.
  2. Protesting at inconsistency; refusing to act in one instance unless similar action is taken in other similar instances.

This is an ‘Ad Hominum Tu Quoque’ type of fallacy , Tu Quoque literally translated as ‘you also’. Instead of refuting or engaging with the argument put forth, the focus is on labeling the commentor with hipocracy.

Whataboutery does not move dialogue, so how do we teach people how to argue productively? Looking back to see the influences in my life; I learnt about fallacies in my Logic class in 11th grade. It might be the basis of how I learnt to argue well, or how I learnt to write well, building on arguments to reach a desired point. But then again, I remember one of my classmates being frustrated with the subject as she could not make head or tail of the T,F table or the list of fallacies and their definitions. Much of it was taught like math is taught in many Indian schools. Learn the steps and just follow them without a thought. Nobody expected any particular effect on the way we think, argue, spot faulty arguments etc. Other subjects most definitely did not teach us how to argue a point well or write an opinion piece based on solid facts and reasoning. No wonder I keep getting papers to review at masters and even PhD level that are a hodgepodge of borrowed ideas than a well formed argument. But I diagress.

Coming back to the problem of public discourse – I realize now that my basic assumption that people will engage in productive dialogue if they were provided with the tools, might be faulty. The entire reason to resort to whataboutery is to shut up the person whose views do not match your world view. So the problem is much more funadamental.

The basis for the need to shut up another is because of the perception that my way is the right way and there can be none other. Some of it is because of the current polarizing discourse. Much of it I think is also because of the subpar education in schools and colleges that do not teach or expose students to the diverse experiences, histories of people. The ability to acknowledge and celebrate (not tolerate) others’ way of being and ability to listen, reflect deeply, and graciously agree to disagree – these are the skills we need to teach kids in homes and in schools.