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Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Current Affairs-February 14, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • ‘Bharat Rang Mahotsav’, the Annual festival of National School of Drama to start in New Delhi.
  • Supreme Court of India upholds formation of J&K delimitation panel.
  • West Bengal Governor C.V. Ananda Bose will continue to function as the Chancellor of State universities.
  • Govt constitutes high-level committee for drafting revised guidelines for operationalization of Ro-Ro/Ro-Pax ferry transportation service
  • Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to host Defence Ministers’ Conclave in Bengaluru on sidelines of Aero India 2023.

ECONOMY

  • India’s Retail inflation rises to 6.52% in January, after a two-month figure below the 6% mark.
  • Renault-Nissan set to invest ₹5,300 cr. in Tamil Nadu; plans to make six new car models at its plant near Chennai.
  • State-run General insurance companies have total exposure of ₹348 crore in the Adani Group of Industries.

WORLD

  • Turkey, Syria earthquake toll crosses 35,000.
  • Amazon’s  self-driving vehicle unit, Zoox tests robotaxi with employees as passengers on a public road.
  • World Health Organisation (WHO) confirms Marburg disease outbreak .
  • New Zealand declares National State of Emergency after being hit by Cyclone Gabrielle.

SPORTS

  • The Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championships 2023 starts in Dubai.
  • Women’s Cricket T20 World Cup: India defeated Pakistan by 7 wickets.

UPSC IAS Exam: Busting five major myths about the preparation

 Millions appear for the Civil Services examination of the Union Public Services Commission every year. Aspirants begin preparation as school kids. Their parents are even more enthusiastic and anxious. That is the brand power of the IAS.

There are more candidates who fear appearing for the Civil Services examination of the UPSC than the ones who actually appear. The reason has more to do with mythology and scare than reality. Let's pick five of the biggest myths and see the true content of each one of them. Are they half-baked or exaggerated or deliberately circulated to generate a sense of awe among the aspirants? It is the need of the hour to critically examine the folklore so that the aspirant is unburdened and their preparation gains true momentum.

Top 5 Misconceptions Centring Around UPSC IAS Exam

The top 5 myths that a genuine eager-beaver needs to dispel before the UPSC IAS exam are as follows:

Myth #1: It is the hardest and mother of all exams.

People are given to understand that the civil service exam syllabus has no limitations and is the most difficult to tackle. It tests at the objective, subjective, and personality levels. A vast syllabus cutting across natural and social sciences which includes the current developments is unheard of for any other examination in the country. Not even the IITs. Take, for example, quantum computing; the aspirant needs to know the concept and the Government initiatives. Take nuclear fusion; the latest breakthrough in the US needs to be understood along with the conventional concept. But it is interesting. There is a lot of literature on it. Indian newspapers are second to none and the clarity with which these developments come across in the media is exciting. So toughness converts to excitement and challenge.

Myth #2: Aspirants need to know everything but the kitchen sink.

Undeniably, the UPSC IAS exam syllabus is vast as indicated above, but that does not mean you have to be a walking encyclopedia to crack the exam. There is a method in the madness. There are thresholds - both in the range and the depth. NCERT books are the base and newspapers are the superstructure. Post-graduation books are toxic for the examination. For any topic to figure on the radar, it should be resoundingly important that any good graduate student knows about it. The key point is that the UPSC is a generalist exam, necessitating a broad conceptual mastery of all areas and topics listed in the syllabus. Threshold and range are everything.

Myth #3: It is a game of luck!

As in life, so in the UPSC. Luck is everywhere. Even after one puts in all that she/he is capable of, there is a chance for luck. Seeing so many aspirants, one has to admit that luck separates two equally brilliant aspirants. But, bad luck does not last. Aspirants do get to their mark of ability and sweat. So how to beat luck or to put it another way, how to invite luck? Luck can be deserved by working hard on a strategy based on previous papers with conceptual clarity and ambition. Ambition in terms of learning a little more clearly and a little more in terms of detail, to be ahead of the competition.

No one ever has been denied entry into civil services purely by luck. Work smart and hard so that you are ready for luck.

Myth #4: You should have a strong command of the English language.

Far from true. UPSC like any other credible and authentic body rewards clarity, simplicity, and effectiveness. It is possible with functional English. Who does not speak basic English in India among the ambitious? English is as much an Indian language today as anybody else's. The preliminary exam may not need so much English as one needs to tick the right code in the multiple-choice questions. In CSAT, however, there is a need for some English. The main exam to requires nice presentation skills. Interviews are available in vernaculars even if one chooses English for the Mains examination and vice versa. Simply put, the medium of instruction is only a vehicle for communicating your ideas and not a main factor in the success of your examination. Rest assured, English is the last and least of the hurdles.

Myth #5: You need to study for extensively long hours to pass the exam.

The number of hours that one should study has been another item of shock and awe. Most say 12-18 hours a day and Sunday hardly enter the dictionary. It could be one of those carefully orchestrated myths once again. How many hours one studies is purely a personal choice. However, 6-8 hours is the bottom line. The excitement about becoming a civil servant and the nature of knowledge one needs to acquire; along with lucid study, material propels the student to study limitlessly. But that is another matter: Purely a personal affair with prep. The need is a regular 8-hour regime, with Sunday excluded for renewal. Many people pass the examination even if they are working full-time. It is a matter of efficiency that comes about with a sense of confidence and urgency.

To conclude, try to ignore all the myths, go for your goal with a positive attitude, and have a proper stage-wise preparation plan to clear the exam and get your dream job.

Source: The Telegraph, 13/02/23

Passive consumption: The growing commodification of education

 When the idea of inviting foreign universities was mooted in 2010, the then minister for human resource development had said that his objective was “to provide a Harvard Education” within India at a fraction of the cost. Implicit in this remark was the view that ‘Harvard Education’, hence by implication education itself, was a commodity; indeed his remark was of the same form as saying that he wanted ‘to provide a kilo of fish at one’s doorstep at a fraction of the cost’. This idea of providing ‘Harvard Education’, of course, was patently unrealistic, for no off-shoot of Harvard in India can ever be a clone of the original: if local academics are recruited as faculty, then they would forever be seeking to migrate from the off-shoot to the original, and if academics come to the off-shoot on a temporary basis from the original, then they would be more concerned with sight-seeing than with any serious academic activity. But the commodification of education that the proposal entailed was an assault on the very concept of education as an activity; the University Grants Commission is now taking this idea of inviting foreign universities and commodifying education much further.

Inviting foreign universities to set up off-shoots in India presumes two things: first, that education is a homogeneous activity which involves imparting an identical set of ideas no matter where such imparting occurs; second, that this imparting, which is the essence of education, occurs in a better manner at Harvard than at any Indian university, which is why creating such an off-shoot of Harvard and other well-known foreign universities is beneficial for Indian students.

Both these presumptions are wrong. Education does not entail imparting an identical set of ideas. For instance, an Indian student should have an awareness of the impact of colonialism on the Indian economy, for which he or she must have some exposure to the work of Dadabhai Naoroji, Romesh Chunder Dutt and other, recent, scholars; he or she, in short, must have some exposure to the view that underdevelopment is linked to the phenomenon of imperialism. But in Harvard and other such foreign universities, the faculty teaching development economics would scarcely have heard of Naoroji or Dutt, and colonialism would scarcely ever figure in the curriculum. A homogenisation of the curriculum, therefore, necessarily means imparting to Indian students an understanding of underdevelopment that is favoured by imperialism, and that institutions like Harvard typically advance, perhaps unwittingly.

In the social sciences, inviting foreign universities is thus tantamount to buying wholesale the imperialist obfuscations about slavery, colonial exploitation, economic ‘drain’ and the recurrent famines under colonial rule. Even as regards the natural sciences, the eminent British scientist, J.D. Bernal, was of the view that the course contents and curricula in universities in countries like India had to be different from those in British and American universities since our problems were so different. The presumption of homogeneity, in short, is completely incorrect.

Second, education is concerned not just with imparting a set of ideas to students; its objective, above all, must be to arouse questioning among students, for critical questioning is the source of creativity. The commodification of education — of which the invitation to foreign universities is an obvious manifestation — far from creating any questioning, actually destroys it. A commodity, after all, is a well-packaged entity that is supposed to be consumed; it is not supposed to agitate or disturb the consumer’s mind. When education gets commodified, it becomes synonymous with the imparting of ‘skills’, not with the application of creative minds to a set of ideas not limited by imperialist perceptions or prejudices.

The destruction of creativity is the hallmark of the education system being developed now. Three factors contribute towards making it so. The first is the discomfort of the ruling Hindutva elements with questioning minds; such minds become much more difficult to manipulate into accepting a discourse that generates hatred against hapless minorities. The second is the eagerness of globalised capital to homogenise course contents and curricula across the world so that wherever capital relocates, it finds potential employees of equal levels of training and docility. The third is the desperate need of middle-class youth to secure employment: questioning minds are unnecessary, even a handicap, for securing such employment, while degrees from European or American universities are far more valued by selection committees both at home and abroad than degrees from Indian universities.

This last point suggests that we cannot build a proper education system in the country, creating questioning and interested students who go on to become “organic intellectuals” — to borrow a Gramscian concept — of the people of free India, unless we simultaneously build a welfare State that guarantees employment to all.

But one should not despair. An Indian academic who teaches in a top Ivy League university in the United States of America was visiting India recently and gave a lecture at the Jawaharlal Nehru University. He was impressed because the students’ discussion with him was so intense and prolonged that the event had to be ultimately cut short after four hours. This is a university that has been under massive and continuous attack from the Hindutva elements for over seven years now. And, yet, they have not been able to destroy the institution, as is evident from the overwhelming intellectual engagement and passion among the students. Many such institutions in India still remain which the Hindutva elements have not succeeded in destroying. The hope for the country’s future lies in them.

Prabhat Patnaik is Professor Emeritus, Centre for Economic Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

Source: the Telegraph, 15/02/23

Monday, February 13, 2023

Quote of the Day February 13, 2023

 

“There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure.”
Gen. Colin L. Powell
“सफलता का कोई रहस्य नहीं हैं। यह तैयारी, कड़ी मेहनत और असफलता से सीखने का ही परिणाम होता है।”
जन. कोलिन एल. पावेल

UdChalo Channels The Careers Of AIT Students By Rendering Scholarships

 Pune : udChalo, a leading consumer-tech start-up company that exclusively serves India’s defense forces and their dependents, announced scholarships for 32 AIT students on February 1, 2023. General Manoj Pande, PVSM, AVSM, VSM, ADC, Chief of Army Staff (COAS) graced the event as Chief Guest, followed by scholarship distribution to the students. Aimed to further augment the role of building a nation, udChalo is creating opportunities for deserving students.

udChalo has collaborated with AIT in Pune since 2018. Through this scholarship, every year, 32 talented students are given the opportunity to seek higher educational pursuits on the basis of their merit.

This scholarship comes to the aid of these competitive students. udChalo, in partnership with the AIT administration, identifies these students who are deserving of this scholarship. The AIT scholarship encourages students, right from the beginning of their education, to become a solid defense shield for our country to veterans and after.

Ravi Kumar, founder, and CEO, udChalo said, “It has been observed that our colleges, such as AIT, serve as an incubator for developing the best-armed force personnel, providing them with hands-on experience to develop a solution-oriented analytical approach. This scholarship motivates and inspires the students to hold on to a core value of humanity with a strong defense shell for the country in the future.”

Committed to the motto of “making life simpler for soldiers” udChalo’s AIT scholarships is a testament to the brand’s support to the armed forces. Apart from this, udChalo has recently tied up with Seed Spark’s five-month online entrepreneurship program.

With these initiatives udChalo is being instrumental in lives of jawans from the beginning of their careers up to their retirement and beyond.

Source: indiaeducationdiary.com. 6/02/23

Current Affairs- February 11, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • The Central government appoints two new Supreme Court judges, taking the top court’s strength to full.
  • Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw inaugurates National Philatelic Exhibition- AMRITPEX in New Delhi.
  • Wildlife enthusiasts spot 145 different species during first Sundarban bird festival
  • Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) has withdrawn its appeal urging people to celebrate February 14 as ‘Cow Hug Day’.
  • Prime Minister flags off two Vande Bharat trains in Maharashtra high-speed rail connection.

ECONOMY

  • MobiKwik launches UPI payment with Rupay credit card; becomes first app to do so.
  • Union government signed loan agreements to borrow up to ₹13,879 crore to strengthen health infrastructure from international agencies.
  • India’s industrial output growth moderated to 4.3% in December 2022 from 7.3% in November,
  • IMF calls for comprehensive reforms of China’s growth model

WORLD

  • U.S. to resume ‘domestic visa revalidation’ for H-1B holders
  • 11th India-Mongolia Joint Working Group Meeting was held in New Delhi
  • Moldovan Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita stepped down from her position

SPORTS

  • Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Anurag Singh Thakur flagged off the Formula E Championship in Hyderabad.
  • Deaflympic champion Jerlin Anika Jayaratchagan qualifies in the general category at the Olympics.

Current Affairs- February 12, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • President accepts resignation of Maharashtra Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari, appoints Ramesh Bais as new Governor.
  • The country’s first lithium reserve, found in Jammu and Kashmir is of the best quality: Officials.
  • DRDO asks Indian industry players to join development of indigenous fifth generation fighter jet, Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA).
  • Year-long celebrations commemorating 200th birth anniversary of Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati commences in Delhi.
  • All India Radio announces to start broadcasting news in local dialect in tribal- Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
  • The 1st International Conference on Communication, Electronics and Digital Technologies – NICE-DT 2023, lead event of G20 begins.

ECONOMY

  • Gross direct tax collections grew 24 per cent to Rs 15.67 trillion so far this fiscal: Finance Ministry.
  • RBI directs financial institutions and NPCI to allow access to UPI to foreign nationals.
  • Reserve Bank of India revises market hours of government securities from 9:00 AM to 3:30 PM to 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

WORLD

  • Mozambique has been hit by floods: four dead, 14,000 persons evacuated
  • 12th World Hindi Conference to be held in Fiji from February 15 to 17; to highlight links with Pacific Ocean region.
  • Scientists find a third natural source of quasicrystals.
  • Study: The world lost about 20% of its natural wetlands between 1700 and 2020.
  • Jaffna Cultural Centre (JCC), which was built with the grant assistance of the Government of India, was dedicated to the people.

SPORTS

  • Border Gavaskar trophy: India register victory over Australia by an innings and 132 runs in first Test.