There is very little doubt that architects and the architectural practises in India are loosing leadership in a rapidly growing but and a highly divided and skewed society. The architect today has disengaged with the larger debate of growth and development. The profession finds itself powerless. On the other hand the practitioners have quickly embraced the flat world, and has engaged in a process that easily identifies them with global imagery largely determined by a underlying neo-liberal environment.
A large part of what we call practice Is actually consultancy. Practice requires ideological thinking. One of the major reasons why architects cannot participate or lead new ideas of development is embedded in the nature of education. Little emphasis on liberal arts,humanities,innovative thinking in other fields, development of a world view are some of the missing links. Todays Architectural education system at Mumbai University is essentially focussed on producing Architects who can perform well in Architects offices . As my collegue,Rohit Shinkre rightly points out, the problem is compounded by the fact that the degree programme entitles you to a practicing license and therefore generates the need to orient our academic programme to respond to the practicing world.We need to widen the horizon and opportunities thru this education and therefore need to delink the two.
We must recognize the larger debate of equity and opportunity to equal access along with judicious growth. This to my mind will be the central debate of our foreseeable future. Our education programme must respond to and recognize our social and economic reality, and make it central to our academic programme. Recent Developments in civil society movements are a clear indicator of where we are heading. Public participation in decision making, and therefore a changing profile of clients call for redefining some of the skills, ethics and values , and knowledge base. If our institutions have to produce leaders:our education needs to lay emphasis on a question seeking approach rather than a problem solving one. subjects and teaching will have to concentrate on Indian thinking and the developing world.It would be equally important to cover the wide spectrum of developments across the globe. Students should be able to deal with brick as much with bio-mimicry , and be able to engage with architectural issues of Mumbai and new york with equal competence.
Our future generations will have to negotiate a path of global understanding and complex local issues.The academic programme will therefore have to constantly innovate for the larger good of our society we live in, and therefore the academic environment should be that which has the courage and conviction of venturing and exploring the unknown.
At two ends of the syllabus are two most important components of the process. The student and the teacher.The student today is a vastly different personality. While we may be concerned with equal access they are entrenched in "anytime access." Technology has changed their environment. Their ways and methods of accessing information, values and behavior pattern, nature of responses are all for us to learn, understand and account for in the working of our education programme.we will need to embrace that world whole heartedly. Use of technology in general and in teaching and interacting methods will have to be accounted for while structuring the academic programme.
If our education programme has to be driven by a leadership oriented question seeking academic environment then a provocative teacher and teaching methods would be central to its success. A teachers growth should be measured by contribution to academia and practice, critical thinking and an deep understanding of current issues in the field.
Finally for new thinking to emerge we need to establish a syllabus and assessing method that allows each institution enough freedom to develop its philosophy not just thru electives but thru some of its core subjects as well.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
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you were right.
ReplyDeleteI got what i wanted in your presentation. There have to be more such dialogues here - presenting opportunities, solutions and crisp problem identifications...we should be able to then tackle them...
It was one of my conversation with Anuj... coincidentally I am opening a school of Architecture...and a lot questions you asks are shared in me...
ReplyDeletehere is relevant excerpt of that conversation...At least I felt it is relevant to the questions above ...
Anuj Daga
but before you start, you must get the philosophy of the school in place
the philosophy must be reflected in the typography
Manish Mishra
hehe
how can I have a philosophy in a plce
I must believe in it
Anuj Daga
an ideology
Manish Mishra
ideology I think...I'll go fathy way
I mean try to exaggerate poor mans architecture
I dun like too much material choices
clad it, paint it, tile it...
Anuj Daga
hmm
go on
your philosophy needs to be larger
of larger vision
anticipating future
change
and how will it evolve
Manish Mishra
yes...
but I think I am talking a bout myself
school should look ahead
I mean...I am more interested in global but local
doing it laurie baker way was not easy
but it brings a cultural change in a whole region
what is the point the school...if people dun think abt A of architecture
there is no type good bad ugly....
Anuj Daga
hmmm
you need to have a vision for it
you are telling your concerns right now
which is half step towards what i asked
...
you understand what i mean?
the philosophy of the school
Manish Mishra
I understand...but I never have a vision
Anuj Daga
vision can be a framework
Manish Mishra
I mean...I never knew I'll make a school
or I'll do architecture
Anuj Daga
now that you are, you can think about it
Manish Mishra
yes that I do
Anuj Daga
yup
then think about it holistically
of involving art, science, humanities
...
Manish Mishra
but I feel my only feel is I would like students to not fearing construction
Anuj Daga
of involving different disciplines
Manish Mishra
and they can develop der on ways
Anuj Daga
sure
as a society, we construct a lot, but critique very little
Manish Mishra
because I think I hate CEPT ways as well
no no not that way
I mean look at auroville
they are brilliant
they are a school in themselves
but they don't project...zeitgeist
Anuj Daga
you should have proposed a warehouse
for an architecture school
hehe
wont that be geat?
like a factory shed
large
voluminous
Manish Mishra
I think you need a land a warehouse
to learn architecture
that is it
Anuj Daga
didnt get u
Manish Mishra
a knack of making something out of something...for curiosity
I mean to learn architecture all one needs is a warehouse
that one knows anything can be built
anything
and from this notion one starts
because he is assured of it in personal experience...
a student who knows whatever he is drawing...is real
it can be built
it exists
and then he forgets everything but focuses on clearing his thoughts
he or she
because noone is going to ask him/her if it can be built or not
because it can be built
Anuj Daga
uff
you are drifting
hold one
on*
basically
define the architectural philosophy of the school
it wil help you think of everything about the school
from people to paper to logos
Manish Mishra
see you are asking a wrong person
I dun believe in one thing
Anuj Daga
coax the person in charge
philosophies allow multiplicities
Manish Mishra
I mean...I dun believe in style
Anuj Daga
philosophy is not style
Manish Mishra
it is
Anuj Daga
no
it is love for knowledge
literally translated
Manish Mishra
it is symbol of philosophy
style is logo of philosophy inherent
I think philiosophy will be built on the way...philosophy is too small a thing in larger life
I think I'll take my time...
to judge...because I dun know myself
how can I have a style...
I dun know what I like
Anuj Daga
ok
we are drifting again
Manish Mishra
what about building it, while in act of doing it...