Education in post-Coronavirus era: Read strong & weak signals

4 mins readUpdated on Jun 1, 2020 02:59 IST
As a student, I had often heard of a quote, “History repeats itself”. But as a student of history, I have never seen the facts getting repeated over time. I remember a Professor who solved this mystery for me with a plain explanation. “History is full of lessons, and a deep study of history helps to decode the lessons as warning bells, signals to be picked up and acted upon, in time so that similar fate could be avoided”. He said no army in history has been able to win a war against Russia

I picked this headline from a recent webinar talk by Prof Vijay Govindarajan of Tuck School. He was speaking about the future of education in the context of Covid-19. He also said that one cannot plan the future but it is possible to prepare for the future. And to do so, we need to read the strong signals like Covid-19 with its global ramification, and also try to pick the weak signals and read them. Ramcharan’s words have been rankling my mind for the last few days, as I am trying to find and figure out the weak signals looking beyond Covid-19, to get some clues to prepare for that future.

Trust me it is hard to find the feeble signals and even harder to decode.

I recently had an hour-long conversation with a young friend who is also a serial small-scale entrepreneur. He started his entrepreneurial career as a Class 10 student who in his spare-time, hawked newspapers, initially to add to his pocket money, and later, assisted shopkeepers in sales and accounts, adding enough money to play with stocks. He rose steadily in his career starting in sales and rising to the level of CEO of a small Media Company and then one day, he pulled himself out from employment of another to become a full-time entrepreneur, creating jobs for others. He tried and tested several SME business models running department stores, interior design consultancy, media production and advertisement consultancy simultaneously. He experimented with building a business from scratch and then turning it over to franchises, pulling out from direct running. For a decade and a half that I have seen and known him, he is a fighter and he has never given up against any adversity including life-threatening illness he had to go through several times. I heard him worried and anxious for the first time. He spoke about the plight of SMEs who are unable to restart as the labour they had supported generously for two months have all gone with no sign of their early return. Today, he asked me to decode the weak signals for him and tell him the future. I couldn’t.

As a student, I had often heard of a quote, “History repeats itself”. But as a student of history, I have never seen the facts getting repeated over time.

I remember a Professor who solved this mystery for me with a plain explanation. “History is full of lessons, and a deep study of history helps to decode the lessons as warning bells, signals to be picked up and acted upon, in time so that similar fate could be avoided”. He said no army in history has been able to win a war against Russia in the winter season, yet greats of the likes of Napoleon and Hitler have failed to read these signals. I think, the answer to the future after the Covid-19 catastrophe lies in the lessons of great economic depression that shook the world economy as a whole in the post Industrialisation era, and in the answer that came from the new deal policy of President Franklin Roosevelt, that brought the wheels of the economy back into motion after coming to a grinding halt from 1929 to 1932. The physicians might be trying to read the signals from Ebola or Spanish Flu, in their research laboratories, but we as managers of business and leaders of society need to look beyond the laboratories.

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There is the second great economic depression looming over our heads. Its time we turn to the pages of history.

The New Deal Policy was written by Frances Perkins, as Labour Secretary and the First Woman member of President Franklin D Roosevelt’s cabinet, 87 years ago. The New Deal restored the health of the American economy and made the US economy, the leader of the World. At the end of the second world war, the USA emerged as the first Super Power of the New World Economic Order. Such was the force of reforms unleashed by the New Deal Policy. President Roosevelt became the only President of the United States to get elected for four consecutive terms and Lady Frances continued to serve in his cabinet till his death in 1945. In the 21st Century, Lady Frances could have easily made it to Presidents office for what she did for America. She appeared on the cover of TIME magazine in August 1933. Her nomination to the cabinet was opposed by the mighty labour unions, but her stature grew with that of US Economy and the unprecedented prosperity it brought to the working people in America. If one leader in history has done more than anyone else for the working people in the world, it was Frances Perkins. I read the signals of post Covid-19 world, for both the questions and answers, in her work, in the New Deal Policy with a caveat of reinterpretation along the times we live in today.

About the author

Dr SK Mahapatra is currently the Director at KIIT School of Management, Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology. He has worked in the industry, the public sector as well as the private sector, and also in the Education sector. He was Head HR of Tata Metaliks and POSCO-India, Group Ethics Officer at JSPL and President-HR at Bajaj Power. He has been a Professor at XIMB and was Director of JSB in NCR.

 

 

Note: The views expressed in this article are solely author’s own and do not reflect/represent those of Shiksha

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Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT) School of Management is particularly not affordable. The fee strcture of the programme ranges between INR 3 lakh- INR 10.5 lakh. The fee strcture inclusive of multiple components including caution deposit, exam fee, tuition fee, and more. Prospective

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Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT) School of Management accepts national entrance exams such as CAT, MAT, UGAT, CMAT, UGC NET, etc. To get admitted to KSOM Odisha, candidates must meet the eligibility criteria set by the college. Further, candidates seeking admission to an MBA program

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Yes, Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT) School of Management admission open. The institute offers admision based on merit and entrance exams. The institute accepts national entrance exams such as CAT, MAT, UGAT, CMAT, UGC NET, etc., to offer admission to respective courses. Candidates

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KIIT School of Management is one of the eminent institute and ranked among the top B-Schools in India. The institute ranked 11 in the 'Best private B School in India' category by Outlook-ICARE India 2024-25.  KSOM is approved by the AICTE and is accredited by NAAC with an 'A+' grade. The school empl

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To seek admission in a KIIT SOM BBA programme, a candidate must have completed Class 12 with at least 50% marks and Mathematics/Business Mathematics/Economics/Statistics as one of the subjects. Those who are eligible must further register for KIITEE conducted by KIIT and appear for the exam on the s

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KIIT School of Management has received rankings by many ranking bodies, including Times. In the year 2024, it was ranked #2 by Times under the 'BBA' category.

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