'We live in the
digital age, the age of information'. Such a cliché; not a day goes by when we
don't read this sentence in a blog post, a newspaper article, or a simple
Tweet.
But really,
attitudes toward information sharing differ from a place to another. While all
of us may want access to information, or in it's more raw form, data, we are
not always prepared to be the ones to share it. Institutions in some countries
are willing to reach out to a global audience and communicate the knowledge
they have gathered over their lifespan: the most famous perhaps being the edX
initiative launched by the joint effort of MIT and Harvard University. The Khan
Academy is another such online initiative wherein you can, as their website
says, 'learn anything for free'.
This is 'real'
information sharing: sharing lectures, having discussions and even getting your
queries clarified all in real-time is a mind boggling concept. And to me,
nothing short of a science fiction projection-turned-reality.
But in countries
like mine, the situation is totally complementary.
Simple things like
discussing a university assignment is apt to get you raised eyebrows and a
pretend-I-didn't-hear-you look. Ask for a little help in completing the lecture
since you missed part of it for some reason (usually outdoor-sy) and people
change attitudes like they never knew you.
But come the exams
and things are totally different: open your textbook and a whole swarm of
people come to check up on what you are reading, what if it's something they
missed? Just a hint that you've got some extra points jotted down for memory's
sake and they come like bees on a flower with puppy-dog faces, 'can I please
please please see what you have written too? You KNOW my preparation is nil!'
Just be seen talking
to a teacher and hey, watch out! All eyes and ears are on you!
It all makes me
think: if you are so loathed to talking about studies in everyday life and just
so busy pretending you were sleeping in class/don't open you books at
all/haven't understood a single topic and what-not, why such poking during the
exams then?
It is perhaps the
fact that we have a third-world status that we are so possessive about the
things we know. Always the fear that what we have is not really 'ours' and we
don't really 'own' it, and that someday someone can easily take it all away
from us. And make it their own.
What I want to say
is that we seriously need to change this kind of negative attitude toward
'sharing'.
MIT and Harvard are
just two examples from the large swath of international universities and
institutions involved in creating a 'web of knowledge' . They have been
none-the-worse for creating such a network of shared resources and in fact have
prospered even more so.
There will be no
harm if you help out someone with work. Everything in life is really not about
getting 'returns' or 'benefits'. Sometimes you have to keep the base instincts
aside and just be free to work with anyone in anyway you can. You never know how
much your little time may have meant to the other person. Everything is not
necessarily about securing good grades.
There is something
we all know about but have to be kept being reminded of: the simple good.
edX: https://www.edx.org/
Khan Academy: https://www.khanacademy.org/
Ugh, I hate when people approach life like a competition.
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