THE FUN THEY HAD BY ISAAC ASIMOV
Read the extracts and answer the questions that follow:-
PASSAGE 1
Margie
even wrote about it that night in her diary. On the page headed 17 May 2157,
she wrote, ‘Today Tommy found a real book!’ It was a very old book. Margie’s
grandfather once said that when he was a little boy his grandfather told him
that there was a time when all stories were printed on paper. They turned the
pages, which were yellow and crinkly, and it was awfully funny to read words
that stood still instead of moving the way they were supposed to — on a screen,
you know. And then when they turned back to the page before, it had the same
words on it that it had had when they read it the first time.
Questions :
(i) What did Margie write in her diary?
(ii)
Had Margie ever seen a book before?
(iii) ‘They’
turned the pages. Who does ‘They’ refer to?
(iv) What was
funny about the book?
(v) Why had
the pages of the book turned yellow and crinkly?
Answers :
(i) On the
page headed 17 May 2157, Margie wrote, ‘Today Tommy found a real book!’
(ii) No,
Margie had never seen a book before.
(iii) They
are Margie and Tommy.
(iv) The
words in the book stand still instead of moving.
(v) The
pages of the book had turned yellow and crinkly because it was very old.
PASSAGE 2
‘Gee,’ said
Tommy. ‘What a waste. When you’re through with the book. you just throw it
away. I guess. Our television screen must have had a million books on it and
it’s good for plenty more. I wouldn’t throw it away.’ ‘Same with mine,’ said
Margie. She was eleven and hadn’t seen as many telebooks as Tommy had. Ile was
thirteen. She said, ‘Where did you find it ?’ ‘In my house.’ He pointed without
looking because he was busy reading. ‘In the attic.’ ‘What’s it about ?’
‘School.
‘ Questions :
(I)
What is a waste for Tommy?
(ii) What
sort of books did Margie and Tommy have in their schools?
(iii) How old
were Margie and Tommy?
(iv) Where
did Tommy find the book?
(v) What was
that book about?
Answers
:
(i) Printing
books on paper is a waste for Tommy.
(ii) They
have moving books on their mechanical screen.
(iii) Margie
was eleven and Tommy was thirteen years old
(v) Tommy
found the book in his house in the attic.
(v) It was
about ‘School’.
PASSAGE 3
Margie was
scornful. ‘School? What’s there to write about school? I hate school.’ Margie
always hated school, but now she hated it more than ever. The mechanical
teacher had been giving her test after test in geography and she had been doing
worse and worse until her mother had shaken her head sorrowfully and sent for
the County Inspector.
Questions :
(i) Name the
writer of the story ‘The Fun They Had’.
(ii) What was
Margie’s opinion about school?
(iii)
What had been doing her mechanical teacher?
(iv)
What were Margie’s responses?
(v) Why
was the County Inspector sent for?
Answers :
(i) The
writer of the story ‘The Fun They Had’ is Issac Asimov.
(ii) Margie
hated school.
(iii)Her
mechanical teacher had been giving her test after test in geography.
(iv)Margie’s responses were very poor.
(v) The
County Inspector was sent to check the mechanical teacher.
PASSAGE 4
He was
around the little man with a red face and a whole box of tools with dials and
wires. He smiled at Margie and gave her an apple, then took the teacher apart.
Margie had hoped he wouldn’t know how to put it together again, but he knew how
all right, and, after an hour or so, there it was again, large and black and
ugly, with a big screen on which all the lessons were shown and the questions
were asked. That wasn’t so bad. The part Margie hated most was the slot where
she had to put homework and test papers. She always had to write them out in a
punch code they made her learn when she was six years old, and the mechanical
teacher calculated the mark in no time.
Questions :
§ Who
was around little man?
§ What
did he do to the teacher?
§ What
had Margie hoped?
§ Which
part of the mechanical teacher did she hate most and why?
§ How did she write her test papers?
Answers
:
(i) The
County Inspector was a round little man.
(ii) He took
the mechanical teacher into pieces.
(iii) Margie
had hoped that the County Inspector would not know how to put it together.
(iv) She
hated the slot most because she had to put her homework and test papers in it.
(v) She
wrote her test papers in a punch code.
PASSAGE 5
The Inspector
had smiled after he was finished and patted Margie’s head. He said to her
mother, ‘It’s not the little girl’s fault, Mrs Jones. I think the geography
sector was geared a little too quick. Those things happen sometimes. I’ve
slowed it up to an average ten-year level. Actually, the overall pattern of her
progress is quite satisfactory.’ And he patted Margie’s head again.
Margie was
disappointed. She had been hoping they would take the teacher away altogether.
They had once taken Tommy’s teacher away for nearly a month because the history
sector had blanked out completely. So she said to Tommy, ‘Why would anyone
write about school?’
Questions
:
(i) ‘The
Inspector smiled after he was finished’. What was finished?
(ii)
What was the problem with the mechanical teacher?
(iii)
At what level did the Inspector set it?
(iv)
The mechanical teacher was set right but Margie was disappointed, why?
(v) What
trouble had been there once with Tommy’s teacher?
Answers
:
(i) He had
reassembled the mechanical teacher all right.
(ii) Its
geography sector was geared a little too quick.
(iii) He set it up to an average ten-year
child level.
(iv) She had
hoped that she would get a long vacation until her mechanical teacher was
repaired.
(v) Its history sector had completely blanked out.
PASSAGE 6
‘Maybe’ he
said nonchalantly. He walked away whistling, the dusty old book tucked beneath
his Margie went into the schoolroom. It was right next to her bedroom, and the
mechanical teacher was on and waiting for her. It was always on at the same time
every day except Saturday and Sunday because her mother said little girls
learned better if they learned at regular hours. The screen was lit up, and it
said: ‘Today’s arithmetic lesson is on the addition of proper fractions. Please
insert yesterday’s homework in the proper slot.’
Questions :
(i) ‘Maybe’,
he said nonchalantly. Who does ‘he’ refer to?
(ii) Where
was Margie’s school situated?
(iii)
What was the routine of Margie’s mechanical teacher?
(iv)
What topic was Margie going to learn that day?
(v) Find a
word from the passage which has the meaning same as ‘showing not any
interest’.
Answers
:
(i) ‘He’
refers to Tommy.
(ii) In her
house in the room next to her bedroom.
(iii) It flashed at the right time daily
except on Saturday and Sunday.
(iv) She was
going to learn the addition of proper fractions.
(v) Nonchalantly.
SHORT
ANSWER QUESTIONS (to be answered in about 30 – 40 words each)
Q1.
Who are Tommy and Margie? How old are they?
Ans. Tommy and Margie are students from the
year 2157. They are neighbours and spend time together like children of their
age usually do. Tommy is a thirteen-year-old boy and Margie is an
eleven-year-old girl.
Q2.
What did Margie write in her diary?
Ans. On 17 May 2157
Margie recorded in her diary the discovery of a real book by Tommy. It was a
very old paper book with yellow and crinkly pages.
Q3.
Describe the book that Tommy had found in the attic.
Ans. Tommy found a real book in the attic of
his house. The pages had turned yellow and crinkly because it was at least two
hundred years old. Moreover, it was all covered with dust as it had been lying
in the attic for ages.
Q4.
Had Margie ever seen a book
before?
Ans. No, Margie had never seen a book
before till she saw the one that Tommy had found in the attic of his house. She
had only heard about books from her grandfather who himself had not seen any.
He too had heard about a printed book from his own grandfather.
Q5.
Did Margie like the printed book? Why/Why not?
Ans. Margie was so excited to know that Tommy
had found a ‘real’ book which was unlike the on-screen books the two were used
to reading, that she recorded the discovery in her diary. As she turned the
yellow and crinkly pages of the book with Tommy, she found it awfully funny to
read it. While Tommy found it a waste, Margie was fascinated by it and liked
it.
Q6.
What things about the book did Margie find strange?
Ans. Margie lived in
an era of mechanical education with telebooks stored in a machine. So she found
it strange that the words in the printed book remained fixed unlike the moving
ones on her television screen.
Q7.
“What a waste!” What is Tommy referring to as a ‘waste’? Is it really a waste?
Ans. Tommy thinks that the paper books with
words printed and fixed on them are a waste. Once a book is read, it becomes
useless and must be thrown away because it has the same content. Actually,
printed books are not a waste. They can be read by many people over and over
again and should be preserved for future generations.
Q8.
What do you think a telebook is?
Ans. A telebook is a compact book in an
electronic form. It is stored in a computer and can be read by scrolling its
pages up, down or sideways on a screen.
Q9.
How does Tommy find the telebooks of his own time to be better?
Ans. Tommy felt that
his telebooks were better than the printed books of the ancient times because
they could be stored on television and read again and again. They occupied very
little space as compared to the printed books and need not be discarded once
they had been read.
Q10.
Where was Margie’s school? Did she have any classmates?
Ans. Margie’s school was inside the comfort
of her house. It was just next to her bedroom. It was a customised school, set
up exclusively for her according to her level and needs. No, she did not have
any classmates.
Q11.
Why had Margie started hating her school?
Ans. Margie never
liked school. But recently her hatred had increased because of her poor
performance in geography tests. Her mechanical teacher gave her one test after
another and her performance went on becoming worse and worse.
Q12.
What did Margie hate the most about her school?
Ans. The part that Margie hated most was the
slot where she had to put homework and test papers. She always had to write
them in a punch code that she was made to learn at the tender age of six.
Besides, the mechanical teacher calculated her marks in no time which left no
scope for Margie to relax after submitting the assigned tasks.
Q13.
What subjects did Tommy and Margie learn?
Ans. Tommy
and Margie learnt a lot of subjects like History, Geography and Mathematics.
Q14.
What kind of teachers did Margie and Tommy have?
Ans. Margie and
Tommy had mechanical teachers. They were not real persons but televisions which
had different subject sectors. These teachers were customised to the level of a
student. In case of malfunction, they were disbanded and repaired.
Q15.
Why did Margie’s mother shook her head one day and send for the County
Inspector?
Ans. Margie’s mother sent for the County
Inspector because Margie had been performing poorly in Geography. The repeated
fall in her daughter’s performance disappointed her. So, she decided to call a
specialist, the County Inspector, who could locate the problem and correct it.
Q16.
What views did Margie’s mother have about teachers and learning?
Ans. Margie’s mother
was very particular about her child’s education and made sure that Margie
attended her tele-school regularly and studied properly and punctually.
She believed that a tele-teacher had to be adjusted to the mind of each student
and that each student had to be taught differently. Whenever she noticed a snag
in Margie’s tele-teacher, she sent for the County Inspector to get the snag
removed so that Margie did not miss Out of her school and learning.
Q17.
What was the County Inspector trained to do?
Ans. The County Inspector worked as a
technical expert. He was trained to identify and rectify errors in the
functioning of the system installed in the mechanical teachers.
Q18.
What idea do you form of the County Inspector as a person?
Ans. The County Inspector was certainly a
kind-hearted man. Instead of finding fault with Margie, he gave her an apple
and told her mother that if Margie was not performing well, it was not her
fault, but the fault of the mechanical teacher. He aligned the speed of the geography
sector keeping in mind the level of the girl. Before leaving, he patted Margie
on the head and expressed satisfaction at her performance.
Q19.
Why was Margie doing badly in geography? What did the County Inspector do to
help her?
Ans. Margie was doing badly because the speed
of the geography sector had been fixed too fast for her level. The County
Inspector slowed down the speed to suit the level of an average ten-year-old.
As Margie was of eleven years, she was comfortable with the new level set by
the County Inspector.
Q20.
How did the County Inspector disappoint Margie?
Ans. Margie was disappointed because she
hated school and hoped that her mechanical teacher would be taken away for
repairs as Tommy’s teacher was once taken away for a month. But when the
County Inspector promptly repaired and reset it at her home itself, she was
unhappy.
Q21.
What had once happened to Tommy’s
teacher?
Ans. Once, Tommy’s mechanical teacher had
developed a fault and its history sector had blanked out absolutely. The teacher
had to be taken away for repairs and it had taken a month to put it in order.
Q22.
Did Margie have regular days and hours for school? If so, why?
Ans. Yes, Margie had regular days and hours
for school. She studied from Monday to Friday at the same time every day.
Although her school was a large black television screen installed in her own
house, she had to attend it regularly. Her mother thought that young girls
learnt things better if they studied them at regular hours.
Q23.
How does Tommy describe the old kind of school?
Ans. Tommy describes the old school as a
special building where all the children went to study together. The students of
the same age-group learnt the same things which were taught by human teachers.
Q24.
How does Tommy describe the old kind of teachers?
Ans. Tommy tells Margie that the teachers in
olden times were not mechanical but real men. They taught various things to
boys and girls, gave them homework and also asked them questions. The teachers
went to a special building called the school where they taught the children in
the classrooms.
Q25.
Why did Margie remark, “How could a man be a teacher”?
Ans. Margie made this remark when she heard
Tommy mention that children were taught by human teachers in the times
gone by. She could not believe the truth of Tommy’s comment because she had not
seen any human teacher; she was used to studying with the help of her
mechanical tele-teacher only. Moreover, she believed that a human teacher could
not match the mechanical teacher in intelligence and knowledge.
Q26.
Who interrupts Margie and Tommy’s conversation? Why?
Ans. Margie and Tommy were lost in
unravelling the exciting mystery of the ‘real’ book that the latter had found
in his attic, when Margie’s mother interrupted them saying “Margie! School!”
and she even suggested to Tommy that it was time for him to attend school, too.
Q27.
When Margie went to her school, what did the teacher on the screen teach?
Ans. When Margie went to her school, which
was a room next to her bedroom, the mechanical teacher taught an arithmetic
lesson on the addition of proper fractions. It taught her how to add the
fractions 1/2 and ¼.
Q28.
Why couldn’t Margie concentrate on the Arithmetic lesson?
Ans. Margie could not concentrate on the
arithmetic lesson because her mind was pre-occupied with the thoughts about the
school that Tommy had just described her. She was awestruck to learn that
children studied together and were taught by real persons in these old schools.
She thought how much fun those students must have had while studying together.
Q29.
Why does Margie feel that learning was fun in the schools of the past?
Ans. Margie attends a tele-school, which is
just a machine in the room next to her bedroom and she studies alone unlike
students of the schools in the bygone times. She feels that learning was more
fun in those days because hundreds of children had the opportunity of
congregating and studying together with the help of human teachers and printed
books. Schools were huge buildings where a lot of activities could be carried
out by students in groups. Compared to that, her present school is much too
mechanical, boring, monotonous and demanding, and she hates it.
Q30. What was Tommy’s opinion about
the ‘real book’?
Ans. Tommy found the ‘real book’ a waste as
once read you, just throw it away. It did not seem interesting and useful. The
words were fixed on it and not any other thing can be printed on it.
Q.31. How does Tommy describe the old
kind of teachers?
Ans. He says that the old teachers did not
live in the house. They had a special building and all the kids went there.
They gave homework to students. They were not mechanical teachers, but human
beings.
Q32. Who was the Country Inspector?
What was his work?
Ans. The country Inspector was the man who
repaired the mechanical teacher. He adjusted the level of the teacher as per
the child’s requirements and intelligence.
Q33. Why was Margie doing worse in
geography? What did the County Inspector do to help her?
Ans. Margie had been doing worse in
geography because the mechanical teacher was very fast in displaying the
questionnaire. The County Inspector adjusted its speed up to an average
ten-year level. Thus, the mechanical teacher’s speed was controlled appropriately.
The County Inspector assured that the overall pattern of Margie’s progress was
quite satisfactory.
Q.34. Did Margie have regular days and
hours for school? If so, why?
Ans. Yes, Margie had regular days and hours
for school because her mother said little girls learned better if they learned
at regular hours.
Q35. Why did Tommy pronounce the word
‘centuries ago’ carefully?
Ans. Tommy pronounced the word carefully
because he wanted to lay stress on the fact that the school was very old and it
was quite different from theirs.
Q36. What had once happened to Tommy’s
teacher?
Ans. Once Tommy’s teacher was taken away
for about a month because the history sector had blanked out completely.
Q37. What is the ‘slot’? Why does
Margie hate it?
Ans. ‘Slot’ was a space in the mechanical
teacher where each student is to put his homework and test assignments for
marking. Margie hates it the most because she has to work hard to punch code
for answering homework.
Q38. Evaluate ‘The Fun They Had’ as a
futuristic story.
Ans. The Fun They Had’ is a futuristic
story. It tells us about the revolutionary changes that will come in the field
of education in the 22nd century. Technology will replace the concept of old
schools and printed books. Margie and Tommy are the students of the year 2157.
They are taught in their bedrooms serving as virtual classrooms. A mechanical
teacher will replace a human teacher. Computers and e-books will replace old
printed books.
Q39. How will the e-books be different
from the old books that existed centuries ago?
Ans. The very concept of ‘the books’ will
change in the 22nd century. The e-books will replace old books. The books will
not be printed on papers. The words will move on a TV/computer screen. The
television screen may have more than a million books on it.
Q40.What did Margie’s mother think about the
teacher’ and ‘the school’?
Ans. Margie’s mother thought that every
child had a different intelligence and capacity to understand things. The
mechanical teacher should be adjusted to fit the mind of each boy and girl it
taught. Each kid had to be taught differently. She thought that little girls
and boys would learn better if they learned at regular hours at the ‘school’.
Q41. Describe the characteristics of
the old school? How did it influence Margie?
Ans. The old school had several
characteristics — the children went to a big building. The man worked as a
teacher and taught the boys and girls. The teacher gave them homework. He also
asked them questions. They sat together and studied the same subject. In the
old school, children studied and played together. It was quite opposite to the
school that has been talked about in the chapter. Margie was very much
influenced by the old school. In her class, she was busy thinking about the fun
the children had at that time.
Q42. Will future schools be completely
devoid of humans and human values? Give a reasoned answer.
Ans. Certainly, a revolutionary change will
come in the field of education in future. The mechanical teachers
and tele-books will dominate the scene. Every student will be taught by
the mechanical teacher according to his or her ability. However, the
institution of schools will remain in one form or the other. Human teachers
will not disappear altogether. Education will never be completely devoid of
humans and human values.
Q43. Why did Tommy and Margie think
the old book a wastage of resources?
Ans. Tommy and Margie thought the old
book was a wastage of resources because they found the words in the old book
were not moving. The pages had turned yellow and crinkly. Moreover, the old
book could not last long.
Q44. What difference did Margie’s
mother find in the old school?
Ans. Margie’s mother was of the opinion
that children should be taught according to their individual needs. But in the
old school, the children of the same age group studied the same things.
LONG
ANSWER QUESTIONS (to be answered in about 120 – 150 words each)
Q1.How
did a chance discovery of a paper book leave Margie and Tommy awestruck?
Ans. Margie was 11 and Tommy was 13 and are
neighbourhood friends in the year 2157. It is an age of total automation,
mechanisation, digitalisation and computerisation. Children do not go to a
school building and they are not taught by a human teacher. Instead, their
teacher is a tell teacher, a computer like a machine that has millions of
books. It can be customised according to the age and learning needs and
abilities of individual students. Reading is done on a screen that displays
movable text. So, one day when Tommy finds an old, dusty paper book in the
attic of his house, he shares the exciting news with his friend Margie and
together they are awestruck, for they had hitherto never seen or heard about a
book that had no screen but only fixed text on pages that had to be flipped with
fingers. As the duo kept reading the book further and further, their excitement
kept growing. They were awestruck to discover that ancient schools were huge
buildings where hundreds of children studied together with the same syllabus,
the same subjects and carried out the same activities and tasks. They were
taught by real human teachers with the help of real books. Margie believes that
students those days must have had a lot of fun studying together.
Q2.
What are the main features of the mechanical teachers and the schoolrooms that
Margie and Tommy have in the story?
Ans. Tommy and Margie are young schools going
children in the year 2157. Schools and teachers have an entirely different form
from the ones in the twentieth century. Margie and Tommy’s school is not in a
separate special building but in a room in their respective houses where the
television or the mechanical teacher is placed. Each student has to sit and
study alone with the help of the mechanical teacher. The ‘teacher’ assigns
tests to the students and assesses their progress. The speed of the different
subject sectors is fixed according to the age level of each student. There is a
special slot in the tele-teacher where students have to insert their homework.
If the mechanical teacher develops any fault, there are engineers to repair it.
Sometimes the fault may be a major one and it takes longer to repair it, as was
the case when Tommy’s history teacher developed a snag.
Thus, the mechanical teachers
and schoolrooms of Tommy and Margie are fully computerised and are completely
different from the present day schools.
Q3.
Why did Margie hate school? Why did she think the old kind of school must have
been fun?
Ans. Margie hated school because it did not
have any fun. Her schedule was too regimented and she had to study at a fixed
time on all days of the week except Saturdays and Sundays. She did not have any
classmates to study with and seek help from. Her mechanical teacher sometimes
developed a snag and assigned the tests that were quite difficult for her.
Constant failure to perform well in such tests was disappointing for her. There
were times when she wanted a break, but the technical advancement of 2157 did
not give her a chance. The County Inspector took just a little while to set
right the Geography sector of her teacher.
She thought that the old kind of
school must have been fun because unlike her school, the ancient schools were
in special buildings where the students from the whole neighbourhood came
laughing and playing. Students of the same level would be in the same room and
were taught by human teachers. The students would sit together in the
schoolroom, go home together, learn the same things, help one another with the
homework and talk about it. Hence, schools in olden days did not restrain their
students but gave them a chance to grow up together.
Q4.
Do you agree with Margie that schools today are more fun than the school in the
story? Give reasons for your
answer.
Ans. Margie’s school, as described in the
story, seems to be a boring place where learning in a mere task. In comparison,
schools today are more fun. Students get a chance to come out of their homes
and travel to reach school. On their way, they laugh, play and have so much
fun. The schoolyard too is a great open place where the students get a chance
to interact informally with each other. They get an opportunity to share their
experiences and help each other. Their learning schedule is also flexible and
gives them enough time to have fun. They have so many extra-curricular
activities which teach a lot of skills in a fun-filled way. Their teacher is a
real person who makes them sit together and teaches them the same topic. In
this way, they learn to adjust and adapt which helps them develop the values of
tolerance and cooperation. Hence, Margie’s view that schools today are more fun
than her school is totally justified.
Q5.
Suppose you are Margie. Write a diary entry dated 17th May 2157 about Tommy’s
real book that he found in his attic.
Ans.
Tuesday,
17th May 2157
10.00 p.m.,london
Dear Diary
It has been a wonderful day for
me as I have seen a real, hard-bound printed paper book. In fact, Tommy found
the book in the attic of his house when he was cleaning the cupboard of his
grandfather. It consists of about 200 pages which have become yellow and
crinkly with time. It is a strange experience to read the words fixed on its
papers unlike the ones in my telebooks that keep moving as I scroll.
When I turn the page, I find the
same words again. The book is about a school from olden times, about two
centuries ago. Can you believe that in those times a school was not a room in
one’s own house but a special building dedicated to the purpose of teaching and
learning! The students of the same level studied the same things sitting
together in the same classroom. It is really wonderful to think that the
teachers were men and not machines. I really believe that it must have been
great fun for children to go to such schools together, laughing, joking,
playing, and teasing each other. How wonderful it must have been that the
students helped each other with lessons as well! I wish I could travel back in
time and study in one of those schools.
Margie
Q6. Why did Margie hate school? Why
did she think the old kind of school must have been fun?
Ans. Margie hated school because she had a
mechanical teacher. It was at her house. She was supposed to sit in that room
alone to complete her home task or assignments. The part Margie hated the most
was the slot where she had to put homework and test papers. She thought that
the old schools must have been fun because the students used to sit together in
the classroom. They enjoyed, laughed and shouted in the schoolyard, going home
together at the end of the day. They learned the same things so that they could
help one another with homework and talk about it. All the teacher were people.
Children needed a company to enhance their skills. If they are isolated, they
get depressed and dejected.
Q7. The old schools are considered fun
by the modern generation. Explain.
Ans. The ancient schools consisted of
Gurukuls in which the students stayed in the building with the guru. Then with
the change of time Gurukuls changed into schools. Hence the teacher and the
student have a formal relationship. In these schools, teachers are human beings
and books are real ones made of paper. Now with times, the modern generation’s
school replaced by e-text and computers. The future generation would envy when they
come to know about the old system of education in which all the kids went to
school together. They studied together, played together. They could have better
innovative minds as they got a chance to discuss things with each other. The
old system of education in which ‘man’ as a teacher could influence his
students by the charisma of his personality. Future generation would utter what
fun the schools were long ago.
Q8. Do you agree with Margie that
schools today are more fun than the school in the story? Give reasons for your
answer.
Ans. There is no doubt that today’s schools
have more fun than the school discussed in the story. This school has nothing
but a mechanical teacher with no emotions and sentiments. It does not have the
ability to understand the psychology of a child. Moreover, it guides a pupil
according to its adjusted modes. But today’s schools work for the overall
development of a child. They are given training in leadership, sports, politics
and science. They learn how to adapt themselves to the new surroundings and
cope with strangers. The students sit and learn together forgetting their
caste, colour and creed. These activities don’t give vent to the feelings of
depression, alienation and segregation.
Q9. Will the existing schools and
teachers become totally irrelevant in future ‘school’? Give a reasoned answer.
Ans. Naturally, schools that existed
centuries ago will not be the same in the coming centuries. The system of
education will be highly computerised and mechanical. The ‘school’ will have no
separate building. Nor will they be taught the same thing together. The
mechanical teacher will be a big TV screen, good for a million books. The
mechanical teacher will be adjusted according to the age and capacity of the
student. But it will be an exaggeration to say that everything about the old
schools will disappear. Even the future schools can’t be completely devoid of
the human angle. Perhaps the institution of the old schools and teachers will
remain. Human involvement can’t disappear altogether.
Q10. Describe the characteristics of
old schools. How did they arouse so much interest in Margie and Tommy?
Ans. The good old students reflected the
charm and romance of their times. Every school had its own buildings. Students
from different parts of the town went there for studies. All the students in a
class were taught the same things. They received the same kinds of homework.
Hence, students could help one another. The teachers were real human beings.
The books were printed on papers.
There was an air of romance
about the old schools. Margie’s interest was around about them. She got the
relevant information about them from Tommy. In comparison to her mechanical
teacher and her ‘school’, the old schools charmed Margie. She was fascinated by
the way children went to their schools. They studied together. They were taught
the same things. It was easier for them to help one another. Margie was rather
envious of the fun the children had in old schools.
Q11. Can you imagine a school without
teachers and books? Give your opinion on the basis of the lesson ‘The Fun They
Had’.
Ans. No one can deny the role of modern
technologies in our lives and in our studies. Nowadays education is changing
but schools without teachers and without books are beyond imagination. Without
teachers, teaching would not be good because no one would be there to explain
and to teach as well. No student would like the environment, it would be like
an office. Teachers are very important for education. Teachers not only teach
us different subjects but they also teach us to live in discipline and to live
together. Teachers resolve the student’s problem and doubt and if they aren’t
in schools the students don’t study enough. As in the lesson Margie does not
like her school, she finds it tedious as she does not have the opportunity to
be with other students and to do every work together. Modern technologies can
be taken as an aid to improve the standard of studies but the schools without
books and teachers will never be preferred.
Q12. What is the role of a teacher in
the life of a student? How is a human teacher better than a mechanical teacher?
Ans. Teachers play a very important role in
the life of a student. They not only provide bookish knowledge but also inspire
their student to live a meaningful and successful life. They burn themselves
like a candle throughout their lives to remove the darkness and ignorance from
their student’s life. This can be done by a human teacher only. A mechanical
teacher can provide ample knowledge on various subjects but he/she can not
boost up their student to do something distinguished. There is a single
mechanical teacher having various sectors geared up according to the level of
the child. There is no companion, no playground and no fun at all. The teaching
is mechanical and monotonous. Thus the human teachers are better than the
mechanical teachers in many ways. They know individually intellect of their
students which help them to guide them individually according to the mental
level of students.
No comments:
Post a Comment