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Martha Nussbaum: Indians know how to pass exams, not how to think critically. They are not taught to think for themselves.
https://x.com/SizweLo/status/1999029470595051995?s=20
American philosopher Martha Nussbaum’s critique of Indian education
https://youtube.com/shorts/ZgNL8QCFh0I?si=zHJ3e9M17_XJT2Zn
Martha Nussbaum's critique of Indian education centers on its excessive focus on exams and technical skills (like IITs/IIMs) at the expense of critical thinking, imagination, and humanities, which she argues stunts democratic values, fosters rote learning, and hinders true civic development, pointing to underdevelopment of reasoning, especially in Gujarat, as a prime example of this damaging trend. She advocates for a liberal arts approach that cultivates empathy, global citizenship, and the ability to question, moving beyond mere economic utility to build a more just world.
Key Criticisms:
Rote Learning Over Thinking: Students are "stuffed with facts" for exams rather than taught to think independently or question authority, creating docile citizens rather than active participants.
Bias Towards STEM/Profit: An overemphasis on careers in engineering (IITs) and management (IIMs) devalues arts and humanities, neglecting crucial skills for a healthy democracy.
Undermining Democracy: This narrow focus hinders the development of critical journalism, public debate, and the imagination needed to understand diverse perspectives, which are vital for democracy.
Example of Gujarat: She cited Gujarat's education system as a case where rote learning correlated with underdeveloped critical thinking and increased religious violence, highlighting the social cost.
Nussbaum's Vision for Indian Education:
Cultivate the "Socratic Citizen": Education should foster questioning, self-reflection, and respectful public criticism.
Promote Narrative Imagination: Students need to understand others' stories and experiences (sympathy) to build a more compassionate society.
Value the Humanities: Arts, literature, and philosophy are essential for creating a world worth living in, not just for economic growth.
In essence, Nussbaum sees Indian education as prioritizing technical skills for the market over the humanistic qualities needed for a thriving, just democracy, a trend she believes threatens the nation's future.
If you'd like to explore her specific proposals for integrating the humanities and fostering global citizenship in India, I can provide those details.
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