According to Rational
Emotive Behavioural Therapy of Cognitive Psychology, it is believed that man’s
action is a product of his reasoning or thinking; and if one wants to bring
about a desired change in one’s action, then one should alter his / her way of
thinking or process of reasoning. Applying the same logic here, it is my
opinion that if we want a revolution in the prevailing education system in Sri
Lanka, we should revolutionize it from the scratch, i.e., from the grass root
level. This is possible only through seeing a change in ideology that brings a
particular system in to execution and existence. This is to say that the
existing Guru-Kula system which is centred around the master, and promotes
route-learning should be given a break, and a Maieutic Method or Dialogical
Model proposed by Socrates which is centred around the students as resource
persons, and promotes participation and self-discovery should be given a rise.
Focusing on the higher
education in Sri Lanka, this does not seem to be beyond the realm of achievable
reality. As many of the colleges and universities are autonomous or
semi-autonomous, they have a greater opportunity and authority to set syllabi,
curriculums, and evaluations that would enable the wisdom-seekers to both
discover and evaluate their wisdom inbuilt within themselves. Instead of
narrowing down the classroom lectures to mere black-board teaching, or teaching
confined to a particular text which is evaluated at the end of each
pre-designated time period, the topics can be explored, debated, discussed,
analyzed, and evaluated at each student’s potentiality and interest, along with
his or her wisdom and capability either ascribed by birth, or acquired through
formal and informal education and experience over the years. This indeed
demands for a revolutionized and radical form of examination system that would
weigh up these differentiated and differently-talented individualities of
different intensity and degree. Thus, the basic question seems to be, is such a
change in our education system possible without will? Will, at least to
experiment something new? Where there is will, there is way!
Thus, if such
‘Sculpturing Method’ of education, proposed by Socrates, proves to help
statistically satisfactory proportion of wisdom-seekers in higher education in
Sri Lanka, in moulding their lives, and rediscovering their hidden and
unnoticed wisdom, then there can be no debate that tries to prove that the
Guru-Kula system of education in Sri Lanka is still relevant and indeed
timeless.