We have our entry test exams too. Difficult and critical as it can be. However, I did O/A level, which are as critical as these questions are. Nothing, fancy I can say about that above question. In my experience, I always had good teacher of Math/Chem in O/A level in DPS Lahore, even in BSc, but not good teachers of Physics. It extends later to dynamics, then thermodynamics, turbo-machinery, and then fluid dynamics.
The math was always there, like Calculus, Differential equation, Liner algebra,, numerical methods but its application (Physics) was missing in my experience.
Whats your say in it.
@khansaheeb @JamD
I don't agree with the statement " and syllabus being too difficult for children, ". Nothing is difficult for anyone and everything is easy if you know how (I coined this phrase in 2000 while a trainer). If Children find things difficult then they are not being taught well and not taught well how to learn. I worked in the UK as a substitute teacher/cover supervisor and it was one of the most eye opening and most enlightening life experience I could ever had. In one week I was teaching kids ranging from 11-16 year old's and in schools in different socioeconomic areas. What I found was truly shocking. I can write a book on what I found but here my key points:-
1. Intelligent parents take their kid's education seriously and start stimulating /educating from the day they are born
2. Kids who connect to their parents through love and understanding do extremely well
3. Kids (with Parents from mostly engineering/Science side) who started early in problem solving / puzzles etc. were exceptional in Maths and sciences.
4. Kids who read a lot and increased their Vocab were classed as "more intelligent"
5. As I used to teach classes in different sets I noticed that the kids in the lower sets were just as intelligent as the kids in the top sets. I used to ask the kids out of : reading, understanding, memorising , practice and test which one didn't they do. The top kids did all 5 and the lower set kids mostly didn't memorise and practice.
6. I found kids aren't taught how to learn and a lot of them struggled and resigned to drifting. Once they started drifting they were categorised as poor performers. Once they were categorised as poor performers they were given poor content teaching and with teachers with stereotyped views.
7. Problem solving as a subject is not taught a s a subject even though there is a unified core approach and common mathematical and logical reasoning in most subjects.
8. Teachers who knew their subjects well and were able to maintain discipline and captivate the students were the best teachers, these were very few.
9. Teachers who bullied were the worst as the kids were resentful and switched off from learning. In a few schools the kids hated the teachers and the teachers hated the kids there was total breakdown of trust and relationship between children and staff.
10. The best performing schools ( excluding private schools which have the best results) were the ones where the head teacher, governing body, teachers and parents were unified in their goals. These schools tended to be in more affluent areas, where the parents , on average, took the education of their children more seriously. Parents would regularly attend meetings, participate in school funding, stay on top of school reports etc. there was a culture of continuous improvement and high expectations. They would have a high number of kids going to Oxford and Cambridge and other top UK universities. The pupils in these schools showed me the highest respect and were the most disciplined.
11. In the top schools there was high degree of accountability of the headteacher and school governors , in the low performing schools the head teacher was more authoritarian and the governing body just for show. The head teacher creates the culture and environment for learning and success and it filters down to the kids. The worst headteachers were the ones who held subtle racist views and were intelligent in holding back children of minorities and working class children. They intentionally failed to deal with seed problem teachers and children.
12. Schools where teachers were not given targets or held accountable for results had a culture of poor results. Where teachers were performing well in low performing schools they were victimised by rogue headteachers and pushed out by restructuring or fired.
13. Government and local authorities encourage indirectly poor performing schools.
14. Parents who take their kid's education seriously in low performing schools have to top up at home by teaching the kids themselves or private tuition.
15. Kids from best performing schools have highest afterschool extracurricular activities
16. In the best schools feedback from pupils and parents is taken seriously and in the worst schools discarded.
Whilst I have diverged a little from the main topic my point is that memorisation / "ratta" is not the just one issue but is symptotic of a set of quite a few issues. Memorisation becomes the key focus of children's learning if other key learning components are neglected/weak. Excellent teachers and excellent learning support environment to produce excellent results.