The butterfly effect: Helping Pakistan’s children emerge from their cocoon
Prof Buzan's Butterfly Universe Initiative aims to unleash the country's potential through mind mapping
KARACHI:
The human brain is one of nature's most fascinating and mysterious creations, with its full potential still unknown. And Prof Tony Buzan is on a quest to understand how it works.
Buzan and his team have picked Pakistan as the starting point for their Butterfly Universe Initiative, a global movement for mental literacy that focuses upon 'learning how to learn'. The project aims to unleash the potential of five million children in the country by 2020 through mind mapping.
"Our goal is to have a mentally literate world, and for that, everyone must think," explains Buzan, the inventor of the mind mapping method and a Nobel Peace Prize nominee in 2014. History, according to him, has witnessed every developed country being led by critical thinking — and the creativity and energy he sees in Pakistan's people makes him think it is the perfect place to begin his mission.
"In this digital age, there are manuals for everything but our brains," says Buzan. "Our vision is simple: learn how to understand your brain."
There are three things he looks for in the teachers selected for his project: the ability to imagine, the vision to daydream and the passion to educate. "We as a team gave a formula to our master trainers to train teachers, who will further teach students to broaden their mental horizons and see the flip side of the picture."
Over the course of the project, the teachers will be shown how to open up their minds, like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon. "The beautiful, vibrant butterfly we see was not always that way — it was a caterpillar that went through the stages of transformation," Tariq Qureishy, the CEO of Vantage Holding and founder of 100% MAD (Make A Difference), draws a butterfly on a piece of paper to illustrate his point. "Unfortunately, our system never lets our teachers and students evolve beyond the cocoon."
He hastens to add that the children are not at fault — it is the system and the teachers that share equal responsibility. "Our project is unique because we try to make learning for fun for children and teaching interesting for teachers."
One thousand trained teachers from four different schooling systems, including The Citizens Foundation and The City School, have already started promoting mind mapping within their schools. "We are targeting 100 schools for a year, where teachers get two hours of training every evening and the students learn through a full-day training programme on Saturdays," Qureishy shares the plan for the project's initial phase.
"It is believed that if a butterfly flaps its wings in one place, it can cause a hurricane weeks later in a distant location," says Qureishy. "The 1,000 butterflies that we have trained have started flapping their wings. It is only a matter of time before the rest of the world joins in."
Published in The Express Tribune, March 26th, 2015.
The human brain is one of nature's most fascinating and mysterious creations, with its full potential still unknown. And Prof Tony Buzan is on a quest to understand how it works.
Buzan and his team have picked Pakistan as the starting point for their Butterfly Universe Initiative, a global movement for mental literacy that focuses upon 'learning how to learn'. The project aims to unleash the potential of five million children in the country by 2020 through mind mapping.
"Our goal is to have a mentally literate world, and for that, everyone must think," explains Buzan, the inventor of the mind mapping method and a Nobel Peace Prize nominee in 2014. History, according to him, has witnessed every developed country being led by critical thinking — and the creativity and energy he sees in Pakistan's people makes him think it is the perfect place to begin his mission.
"In this digital age, there are manuals for everything but our brains," says Buzan. "Our vision is simple: learn how to understand your brain."
There are three things he looks for in the teachers selected for his project: the ability to imagine, the vision to daydream and the passion to educate. "We as a team gave a formula to our master trainers to train teachers, who will further teach students to broaden their mental horizons and see the flip side of the picture."
Over the course of the project, the teachers will be shown how to open up their minds, like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon. "The beautiful, vibrant butterfly we see was not always that way — it was a caterpillar that went through the stages of transformation," Tariq Qureishy, the CEO of Vantage Holding and founder of 100% MAD (Make A Difference), draws a butterfly on a piece of paper to illustrate his point. "Unfortunately, our system never lets our teachers and students evolve beyond the cocoon."
He hastens to add that the children are not at fault — it is the system and the teachers that share equal responsibility. "Our project is unique because we try to make learning for fun for children and teaching interesting for teachers."
One thousand trained teachers from four different schooling systems, including The Citizens Foundation and The City School, have already started promoting mind mapping within their schools. "We are targeting 100 schools for a year, where teachers get two hours of training every evening and the students learn through a full-day training programme on Saturdays," Qureishy shares the plan for the project's initial phase.
"It is believed that if a butterfly flaps its wings in one place, it can cause a hurricane weeks later in a distant location," says Qureishy. "The 1,000 butterflies that we have trained have started flapping their wings. It is only a matter of time before the rest of the world joins in."
Published in The Express Tribune, March 26th, 2015.