In my writings,
discussions, and publications on education, I frequently call for the necessity
of educational reform. Every time, the conversation quickly shifts toward
curricula; what to delete, what to add, and how to develop courses to keep pace
with the digital era.
However, this
focus; even though I do not downplay its importance, remains short of addressing
the core issue. The crisis lies not so much in the educational content, but in
the foundational assumption upon which it is built, the question of knowledge,
and how humans actually learn.
Therefore, I
always say that true educational reform does not start in the classroom.
Instead, it starts by redefining the very concept upon which the school is built,
recognizing knowledge as a mental and social process that is constantly
reproduced within the learner's mind and cultural context.
At first
glance, this shift may seem theoretical to some. In reality, however, it
explains most of the contradictions we see daily in traditional educational
systems across the Arab region. The student who succeeds in memorizing but
fails to understand is not necessarily weak or lacking intelligence. Rather,
they have often learned within a model that presents knowledge as a fixed
entity to be possessed, not dismantled or reconstructed. Here, the greater
crisis emerges where exams become a metric for memory rather than
understanding, and education becomes an exercise in recitation rather than
thinking. The school system, in its traditional form, still considers the mind
as a container to be filled, not as a knowledge structure to be developed.
I sometimes describe
talking about curriculum development alone as trying to improve the facade of a
building that is cracked from the inside. Books can be updated, technology can
be introduced, and assessment methods can be changed, but as long as the
philosophy of knowledge remains the same, the system will continue to reproduce
the same results in different forms.
Keeping the
learning process within traditional frameworks has turned education into a
temporary act driven by necessities, such as searching for a job or improving
social status. Consequently, knowledge has been transformed into a purely functional
tool based on the principle of, “What do I need to know to pass the test or to
secure an opportunity?”
True reform
requires a deeper shift from an education that focuses on what we know, to one that
cares about how we know and why we know. It requires moving from a school that
measures success by the quantity of information, to one that measures it by the
quality of thinking. It must move from a system that assumes all minds learn
the same way, to a system that recognizes learning as a complex personal and
social process, shaped both within and around the individual.