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Monday, December 08, 2014

Dec 08 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Enrolled, but not educated


Government data on rising enrollment rates hides a critical fact -actual attendance rates in rural areas and among poorer children is abysmally low
Mohit is enrolled in Class VII at a government school in a village just an hour from Bhopal. He goes to school most days, has a good group of friends he likes socializing with, and says he “wants to be a doctor”.Mohit cannot read.
When he’s given a Class V textbook — two years below his grade — his eyes go blank; his fingers trace the words, but he remains silent. The same thing happens when he’s given a Class II textbook. Mohit frequently skips school to work as a laborer. Despite being technically enrolled in school for the past seven years, the actual amount of time Mohit has spent at school is far less than his Class VII status would suggest.
“He only started coming to school more regularly one or two years ago,” his teacher says. “For a year he didn’t come to school at all. Even now he misses two or three days of school at a time.” According to his teacher, he’s one of 10 or 20 children in his school who come to class only once or twice a month.
Of a total enrollment of roughly 180, only 120 children or so show up on most days.
In fact, stories like his are common across the country.
Despite rising enrollment rates, with the Out of School rate dropping over 30% from 4.28% to 2.97% in the past five years according to the National Sample Survey, the actual attendance rate remains astoundingly low.
According to the 2013 Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) survey, the average rural attendance rate on any given day is a mere 71.8%, declining from 73.4% in 2010. Though some of this can be attributed to mundane day-to-day factors such as illness, a lot of it isn’t. The worldwide average attendance rate in schools is 91%, as per the UNICEF — suggesting other factors are at work here.
This means although the vast majority of children are nominally enrolled in school, a huge number do not actually attend school regularly.
Many of them are working.
Attention has already been drawn to the 50 lakh or so child labourers in India, as well as the estimated 60 lakh out of school; but far less attention has been paid to the millions of children who are technically “in” school, but are effectively shortchanged out of an education because they miss school to work.
“Once enrolled, a child cannot be taken off the rolls till 14 — even if heshe doesn’t come to school,” says Mohit’s teacher. “There are families who migrate looking for temporary jobs in other places,” the headmaster of another school nearby says.
“The kids — they get pulled out of school for months at a time, and when they come back they’re hopelessly behind and difficult to teach.
There are four or five such kids in my class like that.” Priya is one such child.
Born to an illiterate mother and manual labourer father, she was enrolled in Class V English-medium class last year, despite being around 15 years old. She was frequently pulled out of school to work as domestic help. “She would come three days, then disappear for three,” Priya’s former teacher Harshini Shanker says. “Then she disappeared for an entire month.” In that month, Priya had completely forgotten how to do division, and her English ability stagnated. Being enrolled in an English-medium class, Priya found it difficult to follow the lessons. “She was a weak student in the first place,“ Shanker says, “and the constant absences made it worse. Because she didn't learn anything, neither Pinki nor her parents saw the point in her going to school. Pinki herself would prefer to work because it was a far more productive than coming to school.It was a self-reinforcing cycle.“
Government surveys may report good news in education, pointing to figures such as rising enrollment numbers, but these numbers need a closer look. “How meaningful is this data?“ says education expert Vimala Ramachandran. “India has been chasing these numbers. But being enrolled is no guarantee of actual attendance.“

Dec 08 2014 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
Treatment for a Malignant India


Healthcare needs an urgent remedy
Some segments of India's healthcare have turned into sources of shame and sorrow, instead of being sources of succour and sustenance. Cataract operations leave people blind, instead of helping them see better. Sterilisation surgeries kill women in large numbers, thanks to spurious drugs. The US and Europe ban import of drugs produced at the facilities of leading Indian pharma companies.The official response to these developments has been knee-jerk penalties in combination with self-serving condemnation. This cannot continue. The problem must be appreciated and tackled at the systemic level. Lives and livelihoods are at stake.To begin with, public health engineering needs a massive dose of investment, to give people ready access to clean drinking water and freedom from filth and pollution.The Swachh Bharat campaign takes care of the awareness part of the needed change, but neglects the engineering part, for sewage treatment, sorting and recyclingco mposting of solid waste manageme nt. We have a massive undersupply of hospitals, doctors and other health workers. There are no standards for clinics and pathological labs. Regula tion of the fragmented pharma indus try is schizophrenic. Unconscionable energy is spent on bashing foreign and devising ways to knock off their pat drug companies and devising ways to knock off their patented output, and not enough in indigenous R&D. Spurious drugs abound and are patronised by politicians.High-minded suspicion of private enterprise in healthcare gets the power of legal intervention to stall and curtail infant immunisation efforts. Doctors are forced to choose hypocrisy over Hippocrates, when they pay huge `capitation fees' to get enrolled for a Master's, leaving them with the compulsion to milk the system to generate enough moolah to recover their investment. They get room to manoeuvre in the gap between the misaligned incentives of health insurance and care providers.
Every one of the fatal flaws has to be fixed. India cannot progress as a nation with its present healthcare set-up.And the issue goes far beyond raising budgetary outlays.
Dec 08 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Finally, AMU library opens for women
Aligarh:


It was in the 1960s that undergraduates of Abdullah Women's College were told they could no longer enter AMU's hallowed Maulana Azad Library . After decades of demand, denial and heartburn, women students walked into the library once again on Sunday , in what many said was one of the university's most landmark events.The first bus left the women's college with eight girls at 8.30am, but more joined later.Inside the library , many just looked around in awe, soaking in the feeling, still coming to terms with the new reality .Others exchanged high-fives and picked up the books they had always wanted to. “It's a historic day for the women students of AMU and the university itself,“ one of them said. The controversy that erupted on November 10, when VC Zameeruddin Shah said allowing girls into the library would lead to “four times more boys“ crowding the “packed“ facility , was finally set at rest. “ Any idea which is new takes time to fructify,“ Shah said on Sunday . Any idea which is new takes time to fructify AMU vice-chancellor Zameeruddin Shah told TOI ,“ on Sunday as undergraduates of the Abdullah Women's College entered the central library of the 94-year-old institution for the first time since the 1960s. “From next Sunday , the numbers will increase.The girls should know this opportunity has come to them with great difficulty and they should make full use of it.Soon there will be bookstores and stationery shops around Maulana Azad Library too.“
On November 12, the VC had submitted before the Allahabad high court that all students, including girls, have been allowed access to the library from the current session itself. He had also clarified that undergraduate girl students of the university's Abdullah Women's College can also become members of the library. About a month later, some of them woke up earlier than usual to ensure they reached the library on time.Since it was their first time at the facility, some of them did not know that bags were not allowed inside. The group of eight that arrived in the first bus was frisked before they deposited their bags at the counter, grabbed their tokens and stepped in.
Shabnam Pervez, who studies zoology , had failed to find books on embryology in Aligarh bookstores. “Our library falls short in catering to our demands. So the access to the Maulana Azad Library is a big relief,“ she said. “My teachers have always told us about certain writers, today I am going to look up for them.“
Sana Parveen, a physiology student, was equally upbeat. “I want my project on cardiovascular diseases among the elderly to be different from others. My work should have the information from the best books of physiology ,“ she said.
Many students had consulted their teachers on the books they would borrow. “To borrow a book available in our own library would be wasting the Sunday . So I made sure I did not borrow a book that is already available at our own college,“ said Gulfisha Nasreen, a home science student.
Every Women's College students' union listed gaining access to the library as a poll promise, but it were the current leaders, led by Gulfiza Khan, the president, Noorain Batool, the vice-president, and Afra Khanum, the secretary , who finally got the job done.

Saturday, December 06, 2014

IIM Prof bags Bharat Asmita Award



Trilochan Sastry, Professor in Quantitative Methods and Information Systems, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIMB), has been awarded the ‘Bharat Asmita’, an honor instituted by the Pune-based MIT group of institutions.
Professor Sastry teaches a wide variety of courses in the post graduate programme, doctoral programme and executive education programmes, including operations management, quantitative methods, data structures, algorithms and discrete mathematics, at IIMB.
To his credit Professor Sastry has, a number of management cases on operations management, ethics, change management and electoral reforms.
Announcing the awards for 2014, ‘Bharat Asmita’ Executive Director Rahul Karad said: “This is the eleventh year of the awards, which aim at recognizing the contribution of prominent figures from the field of teaching, people’s representation, public awareness and science and technology.”
Professor Sastry will receive the award, which carries a cash prize of Rs. 1.25 lakh, a memento and an inscribed copperplate citation, on February 3, 2015.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/12/iim-prof-bags-bharat-asmita-award/#sthash.CvNlwsZg.dpuf

Prime Minister Narendra Modi named 'Asian of the Year' by Singapore daily



Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been named 'Asian of the Year' by a leading Singaporean press group.
Modi was bestowed the title for being focused on India's development and getting the world 'excited' about the prospects of the country again.
"Despite being relatively new to the job, he has already made a mark on Asia, reaching out to neighbours and receiving national leaders including Xi Jinping of China and Tony Abbott of Australia," PTI quoted Singapore Press Holdings Limited, the publisher of The Straits Times, as stating.
"Mr Modi has got India and the world excited about his country's prospects again," Warren Fernandez, editor of the daily said in a statement.
"He has given his people a renewed sense of direction and purpose, and there are hopeful signs that he is minded to using his strong mandate to good effect in one of Asia's major powers. We wish him and India every success."
It said Modi has had a highly successful visit to Japan for a summit with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Modi's call for a 'Make in India' campaign, if pursued to its logical conclusion with a friendlier investment climate and less rigid labour norms, could help fire up the growth engines of the USD2 trillion economy and provide welcome ballast to the region when the top Asian economy China is slowing, and Japan is in recession, the statement said.
The 64-year-old leader has promised to reform the economy by cutting on the red tape and attracting foreign investments.
Modi has energised India with his stirring calls for a development focus, it said.
"Economists project that as early as next year, India could pick up the growth baton from China. Given its huge market, its travellers who fill up hotel rooms and cruise ship cabins from Singapore to Sydney, its hunger for capital goods and commodities, a resurgent India will be a boon for the region and the world," editors said in their citation.
The citation said in January US President Barack Obama would be the chief guest at India's annual Republic Day celebrations -- the first time a US leader will attend the function.
"We look forward to presenting the award to Mr Modi in person at his convenience," said Ravi Velloor, Straits Times foreign editor.
The editors' choice was based on several factors: Modi was picked for being development-focused Prime Minister who fashioned an impressive victory for BJP in the polls.
Every December, editors of the Singapore daily pick an Asian whose actions have significantly impacted his own society or the wider Asian continent in the past 12 months.
Last year, the award was shared by Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
The inaugural award, in 2012, went to President Thein Sein of Myanmar.

UNEP report points to huge gaps in funding and technology

The first Adaptation Gap Report by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) released on Friday morning here, says that even with emissions cuts, climate change adaptation costs are likely to hit two to three times the current estimates of  of $70-100 Billion per year by 2050.
The report say that failure to cut emissions will dramatically increase costs and new finance is required to avoid a significant funding shortfall after 2020. Anne Olhoff, lead author of the report said that 29 experts from 19 leading institutions reviewed data for the report and it primarily looks at gaps associated with long term global goals of adaptation. The Green Climate Fund could play a central role in bridging the future adaptation funding gap, she said. The technology gap spans across all sectors but are large in water and agriculture. 
Dr Saleemul Huq, member of the steering committee, said the easier part in the adaptation goal was the money part. The more difficult part is empowering the most vulnerable communities and make positive contributions.Adaptation funding needs are increasing rapidly and the issue of knowledge and adaptive capacity building is not just about money. Vulnerable communities are doing things on their own, he said. 
The adaptation funding gap can be defined and measured as the difference between the costs of meeting a given adaptation target and the amount of finance available to do so. The report comes at a time when countries in Lima are demanding an increasing focus on adaptation and funding and calling for an adaptation goal globally.
The report finds that, despite adaptation funding by public sources reaching $23-26 billion in 2012-2013, there will be a significant funding gap after 2020 unless new and additional finance for adaptation becomes available. Without further action on cutting greenhouse gas emissions,  the cost of adaptation will increase even further as wider and more expensive action is needed to protect communities from the intensifying impacts of climate change such as drought, floods and rising sea levels.
The fifth assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change (IPCC) says that existing global estimates of the costs of adaptation in developing countries range between $ 70 billion and $ 100 billion a year globally by 2050.  The report focuses on developing countries where adaptation needs are expected to be the highest and adaptive capacity is often the lowest. On the positive side the report notes that the amount of public finance committed to activities with explicit adaptation objectives ranged between USD 23 to USD 26 billion in 2012-13 of which 90 per cent was invested in developed countries. 
The report points to a number of areas for action and future analysis.
Dec 06 2014 : Mirror (Mumbai)
Ambedkar's warning on inequality


Political equality as enshrined in our constitution cannot coexist with widening social and economic inequality
Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar and Mohandas Gandhi are two of the tallest personalities in India’s struggle for freedom.Their influence on modern India will be long lasting. It would be inadequate to describe them merely as political leaders or social reformers. Their thinking has had a deep, abiding impression on large sections of Indian society. Even to this day they continue to inspire us, and also arouse strong and passionate criticism from some sections. Love them, hate them, but you cannot ignore them.
Interestingly, even though both Ambedkar and Gandhi worked toward a vision of India free from caste divisions, they had fundamental differences. Their differences became almost irreconcilable after the episode of the Temple Entry Bill of 1933. Prior to this in 1932, Gandhi had vehemently opposed a separate electorate for untouchables in the Legislature, as demanded by Ambedkar. Gandhi opposed it, even though he had accepted this for Muslims, Christians, Sikhs and Anglo-Indians. Gandhi even threatened to fast unto death. Finally, Ambedkar had to back down and compromise (the famous Poona Pact of 1932).
Ambedkar refused to support the bill Temple Entry Bill, which was to be introduced in Legislative Councils of various provinces. This bill had proposed to throw open the doors of Hindu temples to untouchables, which according to Gandhi would give dignity to the outcastes. He said that the untouchables were not begging to be let in. In fact it was a side issue. The real issue was the complete eradication of untouchability, nay the caste system. He said that untouchability is sinful and immoral, even if it is acceptable to majority of Hindus. The surest salvation for the untouchables was in higher education, higher employment and better ways of earning a living, not in getting a right to entering temples. To open their temple doors to outcastes, was for (caste) Hindus to consider, not for untouchables to agitate, said Ambedkar. If the Temple Entry Bill was passed it would entrench the caste system, and confer symbolic capital to high caste Hindus. The untouchables were determined not to be a part of a religion which tried to defend or rationalise so cial inequality. After 1933 the schism between Gandhi and Ambedkar widened, leading the latter to walk away from the Congress Party. Ambedkar also grew suspicious of all majoritarian politics because of this episode.
Ambedkar dreamt of an India based on ideas of liberty, equality and fraternity. He made a prophetic speech on November 25, 1949 in the Constituent Assembly. This was when most of the debates on the Constitution were over, and India was on the verge of adopting the final version. His fight for eradication of the caste system was not so much to gain rights for the downtrodden outcastes, but much more to reach the ideal of social equality. It is worth reproducing that part of this speech: “On the January 26, 1950, we are going to en ter into a life of contradictions. In politics we will have equality and in social and economic life we will have inequality. In politics we will be here cognizing the principle of one man, one vote and one vote one value. In our social and economic life, we shall, by reason of our social and economic structure, continue to deny the principle of one man, one value. How long shall we continue to live this life of contradictions? How long shall we continue to deny equality in our social and economic life? If we continue to deny it for long, we will do so only by putting our political democracy in peril. We must remove this contradiction at the earliest possible moment or else those who suffer from inequality will blow up the structure of political democracy which is Assembly has to laboriously built up.“