KarachiWe have to move from tradition to innovation in the field of language teaching. We have to keep abreast of the latest concepts in the field of education and have to mould the classroom atmosphere accordingly. This was the tenor of the keynote address by Dr Lou McLaughlin, an English
Ruqaiya Hasan’s contribution to the study of literacy”, recalled that Prof Hasan was the keynote speaker at a conference on leadership at the University of Illinois, Urbana Illinois, USA. He said her talk pivoted around the process of globalisation and her data was titled, “glib speak”. He said it was all about saying things that went to the advantage of our latent adversaries without our being aware of it. For instance, quoting the late Prof Hasan, he said the word “Liberalisation” had a positive connotation but the World Bank and the IMF, under the cloak of the positive connotation used it to promote their own agenda which was all to our disadvantage.
Similarly, he said, the word democracy had a positive connotation, meaning thereby a government of the people, for the people, and by the people. Yet, in the context of Pakistan, he
said that it just implied the gathering of votes. “By studying how language works, we can impact the lives of others,” Mahboob added.
He said that Prof Hasan was very particular about grammar but not the kind of grammar taught in our schools. Dr Maliha Ahmed, a doctor and a specialist in neuroscience, explained the learning process from the perspective of brain structure. Outlining the steps to maximise attention, she said we could achieve this objective through interaction. Story telling, she said, grabbed attention. Memories, she said, were made up of vast webs of data. She talked of the release of an enzyme, dopamine, on hearing music, which she, said, enhanced learning.
Dr Fatima Dar said that education should enable every person to attain all-round development in the domains of aesthetics, physique, and intellect and lamented that our education system was not paying any attention to behavioural development. Mick King from the Middlesex University, Dubai campus, gave a detailed talk on problem-based learning.