Learning-by-Doing Best System for South Sudan
“If knowledge comes from the impressions made upon us by natural
objects, it is impossible to procure knowledge without the use of
objects which impresses the mind.” John Dewey
06 September 2011

By PaanLuel Wel,
(Washington DC, USA)

GURTONG - “Education remains a major challenge as only a minority of
our children has access to education. There is a need to scale up
education enrolment quickly all over the country. To demonstrate our
seriousness, within the first 100 days of the new government, 30 new
primary schools and four new secondary schools will be constructed.”
said President Salva Kiir when he officially inaugurated the South
Sudan Legislative Assembly at Nyakuron Cultural Centre in Juba on
Monday, 8 August 2011.

South Sudan Should Adopt Experiential Education as the Pedagogic Creed
for the National Curriculum. Education is a social institution by
which desired social reforms are indoctrinated into the psyche of the
students. It is a continuous creative process aims at the development
and the full actualization of human potentials for the enrichment and
successful progress of the society.

As such, the most effective form of pedagogic creed must be the one
that enable the learners, the South Sudanese school-children, to
release their latent capacities by developing analytical abilities and
confidence in themselves and, in the process, instilled the vision
that will enable them to become self-motivating agents of political
and socio-economic change, serving the best interest of the new nation
in which they will be the future leaders and sole beneficiaries.

If the purpose and the relevancy of education to our South Sudanese
society is an instrument of social change, what form of pedagogic
creed would be most appropriate for its successful dissemination? I
would argue that education should be based on learning-by-doing.
Learning by doing makes the propagation of the learning process
practical and relatable to the students.

What do I mean by learning by doing? Learning by doing, which is also
called hands-on learning or experiential education, is the philosophy
of education that describes the process that occurs between a teacher
and student that infuses direct experience with the learning
environment and content.

John Dewey, one of the pioneering American educational philosophers,
advocated for this type of learning when he says: “If knowledge comes
from the impressions made upon us by natural objects, it is impossible
to procure knowledge without the use of objects which impresses the
mind.”

This is especially urgently the case because students do learn best in
an environment in which they are free to experiment, experience and
interact with the set curriculum as well as amongst themselves.
Therefore, in order for South Sudanese educational system to be most
effective, educational content must be presented in a way that allows
the students to relate the information to prior experiences, thus
deepening the connection with this new acquired knowledge.

Not only will learners, under such learning environment, gain valuable
knowledge and skills, but it will also present them with the rare
opportunity to learn how to live and socially interact with one
another, much as they do at their respective homes and tribal
communities.

Hence, unlike most pedagogic creed across the continent of Africa,
learning does not become something remote from their day to day
activities when they are not in school. Instead, it becomes an
extension of the very activities they daily engage in and of which
they are most familiar with.

Consequently, this learning by doing approach will enable South
Sudanese students to realize their full potentials and the ability to
use those skills for the greater good of themselves and their
immediate families, of the society and the human civilization.
Therefore, as the best way of preparing our future generation to both
adequately acquire the current known knowledge and skills and to also
pave way for them to initiate new scientific and social discoveries,
we must give them the command of themselves in the learning
environment so as to enable them to have the full and ready use of all
their capacities.

This is because anything else other than learning by doing, say rote
methodology which is the most ubiquitous pedagogic creed in Africa,
will likely stifle creativity, curiosity, intuitiveness and
self-confidence in our students.

With its sole purpose and relevance being the instrument of social
change and necessary reforms within South Sudanese society, education,
as John Dewey once observes, ought to be “a regulation of the process
of coming to share in the social consciousness; and that the
adjustment of individual activity on the basis of this social
consciousness is the only sure method of social reconstruction.”

No doubt, learning by doing, the student-centered pedagogic creed, is
the most effective learning methodology because it re-imagined the
role of the teacher as a facilitator and a guide of student learning
process.

In contrast, most learning experiences and processes on the African
continent today have the teacher, in the words of Dewey, standing “at
the front of the room doling out bits of information to be absorbed by
passive students.”

Under the experiential educational system, the teacher, however,
become a partner in the learning process, guiding students to
independently discover meaning within the subject area. This is the
essence of scientific discoveries—one that we, South Sudanese, sorely
need as we embark on reconstruction and development of our war-ravaged
new nation.

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