Saturday, April 4, 2026

Shifting from Competition to Cooperation

Masterclass with Sandeep Dutt

Reading The Courage To Be Happy by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga

To explore the book’s core argument: shifting from competition to cooperation.

Key Takeaways

  • Praise is manipulation, not support. It creates a vertical, dictatorial relationship where the praiser judges the praised, fostering competition for approval.

  • Competition is a “disease” that makes others enemies. It corrupts goals, leading to unfair tactics and a focus on defeating rivals instead of achieving personal bests.

  • The solution is cooperation, built on “community feeling.” This inherent human need for connection stems from our physical weakness, which forces us to cooperate to survive.

  • Problem behaviour is a symptom of a sick system, not a bad individual. The focus must shift from treating the individual to fixing the competitive environment.

Topics

The Problem: Praise & Competition

  • The book argues against praise as a manipulative tool that creates a vertical, dictatorial relationship.

    • Example: A teacher’s praise (“It’s changed my opinion of you”) was a judgment from above that belittled the student’s full potential.

  • This praise-based system fosters competition for the leader’s favour, turning peers into enemies.

    • Analogy: A marathon where the goal shifts from finishing to defeating rivals, leading to “gamesmanship” and unfair conduct.

The Solution: Cooperation & Community Feeling

  • The alternative is a democratic classroom built on cooperation and “horizontal relationships.”

    • Horizontal relationships: All people are equal, regardless of ability or achievement.

    • Goal: See others as comrades, not rivals.

  • This model treats problem behaviour as a symptom of a sick environment, not a bad individual.

    • Analogy: A classroom with “pneumonia” (competition) needs a systemic cure, not just individual treatment.

  • The foundation for this cooperation is “community feeling”—an inherent human need for connection.

    • This need stems from our physical weakness, which forces us to cooperate to survive.

    • Conclusion: Our civilisation and power are direct results of our weakness, making cooperation a fundamental principle of life.

Next Steps

  • Sandeep Dutt: Continue reading the book on April 11 at the My Good School Retreat in Jaipur.

  • Manisha Khanna & Jugjiv Sir: Lead Sunday School on April 5 at 10:30 AM, reading “The Whistling School Boy” (Ruskin Bond) and “What You Are Looking For Is In The Library.”

  • Shalini: Read the “Youth” part in the next session on April 11.

 FATHOM AI-generated summary, read with care.

“Productive Failure” (PF) pedagogy and its AI application


Learning Forward Saturday with Aloysius Alfred and Rahul Chug of Learn PF.

To introduce the “Productive Failure” (PF) pedagogy and its AI application.

Key Takeaways

  • PF Reverses Learning: PF flips the traditional model (instruction → practice) to problem-solving → instruction. Students first struggle with a concept in a safe environment, preparing their minds to deeply absorb the formal teaching that follows.

  • AI as a Scaffolding Tool: Learn PF’s AI is designed to guide students through PF rather than provide direct answers. It uses targeted questions to help them discover solutions, avoiding the “direct instruction” trap that many AI tools fall into.

  • PF’s “3x Effect”: The pedagogy yields a “3x effect” on learning, improving conceptual understanding, resilience, and the transfer of skills to new contexts—a key goal of India’s National Education Policy (NEP).

  • Teacher’s Role is Critical: Teachers must create a safe space for failure, guide exploration, and reinforce the value of every learning experience.

Topics

The Problem with Direct Instruction

  • The traditional model (teacher explains → student practices) often leads to shallow, rote learning focused on passing exams.

  • This approach hinders the transfer of skills to new subjects or real-world situations, a key goal of India’s NEP.

  • Analogy: Being ferried across a river in a boat vs. learning to swim across it yourself. The latter builds a deeper experience.

Productive Failure (PF) as a Solution

  • Core Principle: Intentionally design learning experiences where students struggle and fail in a safe, controlled environment.

  • Process:

    1. Problem-Solving: Students tackle a problem without prior instruction, activating their cognitive abilities and exposing common misconceptions.

    2. Instruction: The teacher provides formal instruction after the struggle.

  • Rationale: The initial struggle prepares the mind to receive and deeply understand the formal teaching, creating a “3x effect” on learning.

  • Outcomes:

LearnPF’s AI Application

  • LearnPF, a Singapore-Swiss startup, applies PF pedagogy using an AI platform.

  • Design Principles for Educational AI:

    • Purpose: Clearly educational, not just gamification.

    • Pedagogy: Grounded in a proven learning model like PF.

    • Evidence: Backed by scientific research (e.g., Prof. Manu Kapoor’s 20+ years of work).

    • Function: Scaffolds learning through questions, avoiding direct answers.

    • Quality: High-quality design and content.

  • Teacher Support: The platform handles content design, freeing teachers to focus on classroom facilitation and student guidance.

Q&A and Discussion

  • AI’s “Human-like” Behaviour: An AI’s need for iterative feedback (asking questions) is a design feature to refine its output, not a flaw. Users must be patient and provide guidance.

  • PF for Languages/Social Science: PF is most effective for conceptual learning, not for memorising facts.

    • Languages: Research is ongoing to apply PF to language acquisition.

    • Social Science: Useful for teaching critical thinking and analysis (e.g., evaluating sources), but less so for recalling specific dates.

  • Teacher’s Role: The teacher’s role is to create a safe space for failure, guide exploration, and reinforce the value of every learning experience.

Next Steps

  • All Participants:

    • Reflect on the concept of “productive failure.”

    • Post questions in the WhatsApp group to initiate discussion.

    • Share personal classroom examples where students learned from struggle.

 FATHOM AI-generated summary

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