Edited by mbhcsf at 12-10-2018 01:49 PM
The True Purpose Of Education
the original websource:
http://www.ikim.gov.my/index.php ... rpose-of-education/
Dr Mohd Farid Mohd Shahran
An ancient Greek poet, Pindar, when alluding to the importance of education, remarked that “nothing is more important or more difficult than to become a man.” Education is no doubt the strongest pillar upon which a great nation and civilisation is built. This is mainly due to the fact that it is the first step where the youngest generation of a nation is being prepared before they move further up the social ladder.
Despite its fundamental and necessary role, debate is still going on concerning the real purpose of education. Is education merely aim at fulfilling the pragmatic, economic and political needs of a state or it must accomplish a higher and nobler aim which is in line with the true nature of human being?
The sign of unsettled debate on the aim of education can be seen for example from the emergence of various kinds of schools and educational institutions employing different approaches towards different aims. The problem can also be discerned from the numerous changes that took place in educational policies which usually come together with the change of government or ministers.
One of the shortcomings of the modern education is that despite the ability of a nation to produce students with good intelligence, reason and cognition, they still lack affective and moral character. The rising number of white collar crimes, among others, indicates this imbalance.
In fact, continuous disparity between intelligence and character in education would lead to a more dangerous result. Martin Luther King Jr. once commented on the nature of American education, “Intelligence plus character is the goal of true education. Education which stops with efficiency may prove the greatest menace to society. The most dangerous criminal may be the man gifted with reason but no morals.”
The topic of the aim of education is already a scrutiny by philosophers and thinkers from the East and the West. Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas, a renowned contemporary Muslim thinker, underlines the basic fundamental aim of education in his Concept of Education in Islam, that the purpose of seeking knowledge and of education in Islam is to produce a good man. This is in response to the modern secular approach of education which only gives prominence to the fulfilment of the aim of being a good citizen.
To al-Attas, being a good man is more universal and virtuous as well as being inclusive of other virtues including being a good citizen.
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