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Speech
delivered by Mr. Azim Premji, Chairman, Wipro Ltd at the Jawaharlal
Nehru Memorial Lecture, 2003
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Let me start by saying that it is a rare honour
to be speaking from this platform to a gathering of august ladies
and gentlemen. The luminous galaxy of thinkers who have spoken from
this platform pays tribute to the great man in whose memory we all
assemble here today.
That I have been invited to share this platform
is an honour to the hundreds of industry leaders in our country.
Character, human development and success
Among the several invaluable teachings that
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru left behind for all of us, the one closest
to my heart is about “Character”.
Very early in my life I learnt that Character
is Destiny. That Character of an individual, an organization or
a society is the most important determinant of success.
When I use the word Character I use it in the
broad meaning of the word - the indescribable mix that an individual
is: thoughts, words, feelings and above all of actions. And the
heart of Character is Values.
If you consider Wipro as a successful organization,
the factor I would rate uppermost as contributors to its success
are our Values.
At the outset we decided that Character is one
factor that will guide all our actions and decisions. We invested
in uncompromising integrity which helped us take difficult stands
in some of the most difficult business situations. We defined a
set of values and beliefs for the organization in early 70s before
it was not fashionable to do so. We decided that upholding those
Values was more important than achieving business success.
Let me also confess with candour that upholding
these Values over the years has not been easy, especially in the
early years. But we stuck on. And as the years passed we realized
that what started in the realm of idealism and implicit belief,
not only held true in reality, but proved to be a unique, tactical
competitive advantage. Customers wanted to buy from us because we
honoured our commitments. Business associates wanted to be associated
with us because they were reassured by our straightforward dealings.
Employees were comfortable working with us because they were not
obliged to do anything that could not stand scrutiny or that made
them feel ashamed at the end of the day. Practising these values
across the organisation also gave complete transparency and a shared
sense of purpose to everyone in the organization. It is gratifying
that over the years more and more organisations want to run their
enterprises with character and integrity.
It’s only with pride that I can say that
today the entire canvas of human endeavour in our great nation,
whether in business, academics, sports or politics is full of examples
where Character and Values have driven success.
The thought that Character is Destiny can be
easily illustrated by citing names of great men and women who have
turned the tide of history. What I am trying to emphasize here is
that this is relevant not only to the visionaries, but to also to
millions of people like you and me.
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Education – the only character builder
Convinced as I am on the importance of Character,
I have tried to think and discover what shapes Character. Being
neither a scholar nor a scientist, all my thoughts in this regard
have been at the level of action rather than in unravelling of mysteries
of human development.
Luminaries like Pundit Nehru who can deeply
influence the Character and personality of an entire nation are
few and far between, the question is can we afford to wait for messiahs,
or do we take our future in our hands.
I believe it is our inherent responsibility
to build our nation, build Character and integrity in our children
and the future generation. I strongly believe that the one concerted
area that wittingly or unwittingly can shape the personality and
Character of a society is education - and I refer to fundamental
education at the primary school level. In my view it is and absolutely
imperative that we prioritize education and its issues on the national
agenda, not only in discourse but in action.
I have no doubt that our education system as
it stands today is in need of transformation and that transforming
our education is really the key to transforming India’s destiny.
I am immensely aware that I am neither an educationist
nor an academic person. All that I understand is what kind of people
have a potential to be more successful in business and what kind
of people make successful employees.
A lot of work has been done by us as by many
others to determine the kind of citizen the nation ought to be looking
for at the end of education cycle. Let me place before you some
of the characteristics of such an individual :
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a person who has the ability to relate
rationally to fellow beings and to their environment, |
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a person who has an inherent sense
of curiosity and interest beyond his/ her own life, |
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a person who perseveres in the face
of odds, |
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a person who is not blindly obedient
but can act on the basis of independent thought and exercise
judgment |
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a person who has the ability and
willingness to continuously learn and change, |
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a person who is excited by challenges,
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a person who sees diversity and plurality
as a strength not a threat |
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and above all a person who will stand
firmly by a set of values which will guide him/ her through
life. |
Over the years, as I have interacted with
people and organizations, and have been exposed to the diversity in
various countries, I have realized that the difference between the
successful and the not so, is consistently the above qualities that
they bring to the task.
I refer to “success” not in its
narrow sense, but in broad terms - success is being able to achieve
what one sets out to achieve, no matter how simple the goal.
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Status of Education today
The all important question is “does today’s
education deliver on the above characteristics?”
My experience personally and as also of recruitment
in our organization indicates “it is not” delivering
the same.
I have also had the opportunity to understand
the education system both in rural and urban India through the initiatives
of Azim Premji Foundation and Wipro Applying Thought program in
Schools (the former in rural government schools and the latter in
urban elite schools). Both the initiatives focus on “Improving
Quality of Learning”.
We realise that our education system continues
to remain enmeshed in a paradigm where note accumulation and reproduction
of information is equated with learning and mere memorization seen
as the critical cognitive faculty.
The almost factory-like efficiency of the end
school exam seems to drive everything in the system, unifying all
participants around the single objective of “doing well in
exams” which seems to have become the be all and end all of
education. This makes the system thrive on churning out standardized
children like graded “products” in a factory ………weak
in creating, thinking, discovering and learning. It fosters individuals
who are programmed to obey and conform, who have limited life skills
and need continuous direction.
It’s only a tribute to the undying human
spirit and some balancing social structures that all the qualities
of success are not completely obliterated in vast majority of our
youth, but still do find expression.
It is not that the importance of education is
underestimated in our country; public discourse and debate keeps
it very much a part of everyone’s agenda. However this consciousness
and the resulting actions revolve mainly around what I would term
as “Access” to Education and concentrate on issues of
enrolment, attendance, alarming drop out rates, discrimination,
physical conditions and facilities all of which doubtlessly merit
highest attention. But equally deserving of urgent and immediate
attention is the Quality of Learning, which usually tends to get
perfunctory treatment.
It is true that Quality of Learning cannot be
addressed in a vacuum caused by absence of schools, or absence of
teachers from schools, or the absence of the basic facilities from
schools. Nor can it be addressed divorced from the socio-economic
context of the child. Indeed Quality and Access and therefore equity
are inextricably entwined. But in my view it is critical to appreciate
that in our complex socio-economic system, as much as Access impacts
Quality, so does Quality impact Access. It is like the double helix
of the DNA, never complete in itself but complete together, the
DNA of education runs on two strands of Quality and Access.
A lot is stated about poverty and socio-economic
conditions within a habitation as important causes for families
deciding not to send their children to the school. Our consistent
experience is that from families with identical poverty levels and
socio-economic backgrounds, almost fifty percent of parents send
their children to school while the balance fifty percent doesn’t.
There is an important lesson in this. To us it simply means all
of them are families that have potential to send their children
to the school. It is just that those who don’t send their
children to the school do not find the education and the quality
of learning in the schools relevant to their lives. So we have a
situation where sections of both the elite and economically backward
find education in a large measure irrelevant to their needs.
In other words the quality of public education
is so poor that it does not incentivise us to overcome odds and
send our children to school. In a parallel to Economics the demand
side sees no rewards and therefore does not do its bit to “make
the market” of education.
The irrelevance of what is taught in schools,
both in the immediate context of the child and what it may mean
to the child and her family in the foreseeable future, is glaring
in the rural areas and in the schools which primarily educate the
children of the under-served part of the society.
My conviction that Quality of education must
get an equal share of the national action agenda has grown significantly
over the last few years after we started working closely in 4000
habitations in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in the Azim Premji Foundation
and about 100 urban elite schools under “Wipro Applying Thought
in Schools” program. While the Azim Premji Foundation works
in rural government schools that have a preponderance of under-served
children, most of the schools where Wipro works are for the privileged
and would generally find a mention in the “best schools”
lists. Their desire to participate in the program stems from their
own conviction that they must do something about the Quality of
education, in an attempt to overcome the constraints of “system”.
So whether one were to consider the so called
best schools or the schools that some how continue to exist in the
most underprivileged of areas, the issue of Quality is equally paramount.
Interestingly, paucity of funds or the intention
of the government is in no way a road block. The funds are there
and the intentions are there. In fact the funds that the successive
governments have committed to education are generous.
Let me also say that I sense a simmering consensus
(I don’t know how large) around the issue of Quality of education.
We need to develop the “simmering consensus”
through informed public debate into a strong visible consensus and
real action on the ground. This alone would achieve positive transformation
rather than a mere tinkering of the existing system.
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What kind of education should we aim at?
When we speak of “Quality of Education”,
it becomes imperative to address the all important issue of “what
kind of education”?
The philosophy, purpose, method and institutions
of education need to be re-thought. This rethinking should lead
us to an education that facilitates the blossoming of all the qualities
that we talked about earlier; qualities which truly drive success
for individuals, groups and societies. In other words an education
system where the top of the agenda is real Quality.
Let me articulate what I visualise education
to be. Education to my mind is an organized system that facilitates
learning so that each individual:
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imbibe the process of understanding
and becoming what he / she can be and wants to be, i.e. develop
his / her full potential; and |
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understands his /her role and responsibility
in society and contributes to its progress. |
If that is the aim of education, how do we
envision the kind of individual that our education system should strive
to create ? I cannot phrase this better than Pandit Nehru. In moving
words from the Discovery of India, he says:
“We can never forget the ideals that have
moved our race, the dreams of the Indian people through the ages,
the wisdom of the ancients, the buoyant energy and the love of life
and nature of our forefathers, their spirit of curiosity and mental
adventure, the daring of their thought, their splendid achievements
in literature, art and culture, their love of truth and beauty and
freedom, the basic values that they set up, their understandings
of life’s mysterious ways, their tolerance of other ways than
theirs, their capacity to absorb other peoples and their cultural
accomplishments, to synthesize them and develop a varied and mixed
culture; nor can we forget the myriad experiences which have built
up our ancient race and lie embedded in our sub-conscious mind.”
Being the non-educationist that I am, I have
no business to articulate what education should be like, but being
the risk taking businessman that I am, I will take the risk of articulating
what education could be like:
| 1. |
Every child is an individual with a right to
respect. This respect for the child must translate into providing
a non-intimidating and exciting space in which the child learns.
Schools need to proactively identify and eradicate every element
of threat – physical, mental and emotional – that
stifles learning and growth. |
| 2. |
The right learning environment ought to be contextual
to the learner and to the community. For instance, a blind child
needs non-visual learning tools; hunger is a physical threat
detrimental to learning in underprivileged communities. It follows
that the local community has a responsibility in creating a
feasible environment within and outside the school. So education
will create frameworks for learning which is contextual to the
child’s history, future and environment. |
| 3. |
There has to be this clear understanding that
learning occurs everywhere and that all learning can be interesting.
It would build on the operating principle that each child constructs
her own learning. To quote Plutarch, “The mind is not
a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be kindled”. |
| 4. |
Why is it so difficult for us to accept that
every child learns differently, at different depths and at different
speeds? Some children learn best when doing things with their
own bodies; some learn better in peer groups; yet others learn
best by emulation. There is an acute need to recognise the importance
of “Individual Learning”. |
| 5. |
Let me ask you… under what subject should
the eruption of a volcano in Japan be covered? geography? physics?
maybe chemistry? geology? It is all of this and more. This is
because nature is inherently whole. It cannot be broken down
into fundamental building blocks. Then why is curriculum boxed
into subjects, modules and chapters? The child would understand
inter-related disciplines at a fundamental level. Only then
will she be able to construct knowledge that is not cut-off
from the reality of the world around her. We ought to think
of “Integrative” and wholesome learning. |
| 6. |
This form of education will not stop at “content”.
The child would continuously develop life-skills. This would
include physical development, relevant vocational skills, competencies
such as creative and critical thinking and abilities such as
risk-taking and coping with change. Further, the child’s
learning would be grounded in an individual, social and human
value system imbibed from self-discovery. |
In education of this nature, caring for children
and feeling responsible for the holistic progress of every child would
form the basis for all decisions. Such education will invest in teacher
development, better assessment systems, community participation, and
in a culture built on the imperative of the learner.
It would be an education system which would
continuously refine the dynamic balance between being the key agent
of socialization and being the driver of social change. In such
a system, the child would learn how to learn, develop and grow.
These are thoughts as I said emanating from
the experience of a businessman, not that of an educationist.
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Change processes to achieve the kind of education
we aim at
If we understand and agree on the kind of education
quality that we need to aim at, it is important to understand the
change processes that it calls for. The revitalization that a movement
towards such a fundamentally changed education system will imply
and demand, in my opinion will be driven by many initiatives.
Some of those that occur to me that need emphasis
are:
| 1. |
No participant of the education system today
will disagree with the kind change that we are talking about.
Every one wants learning which is “child centric”,
“enquiry based” etc. The disagreement is never in
overt words – but in action on the ground and deep down
in belief systems and zones of comfort. This deep resistance
must be overcome before real and systemic change can be initiated. |
| 2. |
Thinking must translate in to outstanding execution
on the ground. While a large part of the problem today is with
the ideology and working of the current system, an equally large
part of the problem lies with “managing an effective delivery
system”. Currently the management of the system has not
been a focus of much attention. This would need correction.
To begin with by gathering and creating a cadre of charged education
leaders (and I can assure you – there are plenty of those),
who would see the change in Quality of education as a nation
transforming mission. |
| 3. |
An absolutely important aspect is going to be
what in business organizations is called “change management”.
I have no illusions that the learnings from organizations can
be translated to a behemoth like the education system on this
count, but certainly in my mind the importance of this initiative
remains the same as in organizational change. It would involve
overcoming resistance, developing shared goals and an acceptance
of accountability for outcomes. |
| 4. |
A key issue is how the education system can attract
good talent. One just needs to see who works in schools, and
for what, to realize that fundamental improvement cannot be
achieved without addressing the issue of the talent pool in
the field of education. As with everything else in the context
of education, this is easier said than done. While it requires
intervention at the level of teacher education, continuing education,
management and leadership, one cannot evade the issue of how
to impact the social reward structures to get the right set
of people into education. |
| 5. |
We don’t readily see the impact of the
so called “English Medium Convent School”, but this
manifestation of private enterprise in education is ubiquitous,
even in the smallest towns. The social impact of such schools
driven by aspirations of the local middle class is tremendous.
There is no case for “regulating” these schools
– but there is a compelling case to use the spirit of
private entrepreneurship in the process of change. |
| 6. |
Given the deep social impact of education and
it very long term economic returns aspect, especially for primary
and secondary education, a completely “free market”
in education is not desirable, nor practical. But the fact is
that there is a market aspect of demand and supply in education.
We need to harness this efficiently, instead of ignoring it
or letting inefficiencies continue. Deep community involvement
and ownership is one key aspect of making this “market”
efficient. One glaring lacuna in the system today is its inability
or reluctance to listen to some the key stakeholders such as
the parents or the local communities. There is no mechanism
for these crucial voices to be a part of the system. |
| 7. |
Technology as a low cost enhancer and multiplier
of educational capacity must be driven as a top priority. There
is still inadequate appreciation that IT (especially the internet)
is one of those few things in human history which increases
in power by sharing. The greater the number of people on the
net, the greater its power. By its ability to deliver transparency
to all in a completely non-discriminatory nature, the net can
be a fundamental driver of democracy and equality. We are seeing
the excitement our computer assisted curricular and co-curricular
learning program is achieving in over 400 government rural schools
in Karnataka and Andhra. |
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Future
One of the most dramatic turn-arounds of our
time has been the dispelling Malthusian thought. The unthinkable
leaps of technology in this century have already made a phoney boogey-man
out of the Malthusian fears.
However I think and even more interesting turn-around
over the past decade or so has been the complete turning on the
head of the Malthusian hypothesis. Population and its growth from
being the primary cause of concern have gradually emerged as unparalleled
assets and strength.
As intuitively compelling was Malthus’
fear that humanity will not be able to feed the teaming billions,
it is even more compelling reality that the most unique resource
on earth is the human mind, endeavour and spirit. Once the issue
of feeding the billions is taken care of, this unique resource counts
for all the difference in the world. It’s on this pool of
unique resource that India is uniquely ahead of every other nation.
Its large population is and can be the most important differentiating
factor.
This differential becomes even more significant
if one were to look at comparative demographics of nations a couple
of decades in the future. The productive population in India will
continue to grow, whereas this most important segment of the population
will continue to fall in relative terms in all the major nations
of the world.
So we have the inevitable scenario unfolding
where India will be the powerhouse of the most important resource
– the productive human spirit.
The stage is set. It is for us to choose which
play will be staged.
This will depend not wholly, but substantially,
on what choice we make on our education system. Will we continue
with the present blinkered system which can in no way adequately
nurture our unique talent pool ?
Or will the key stakeholders join together and
transform the system to facilitate true, lasting and relevant learning
for every child which inevitably will lead to a turbo charging of
our unique human resource pool.
The choice clearly is ours to make. And the
future clearly is ours to construct based on these choices.
As a stakeholder of the education system, I
have no illusions about the difficulty and complexity of the task
on hand. But I see a big glimmer of hope in the “simmering
consensus” that I have talked about.
The mainstream of education must pick up this
agenda and make it its own, and people like you and me who are stakeholders
must engage with this process of transformation even if to begin
with, it is just lending our voice.
At this moment of inflection in our history,
the best way to conclude is to recall Pundit Nehru’s immortal
words :
“A time comes when we need to redeem our
pledge, not wholly or in full measure, but very substantially. A
moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out
from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when the soul of
a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance”.
It is fitting that on this momentous occasion
we take another pledge of dedication - Every child of India in school
and learning joyfully.
This is our chance to shape a future which will
inevitably compel the world to recognize this as the Indian Century.
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