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Friday, January 23, 2015

Strengthening India-UK education partnership


On seeing the potential of Indian education system, UK has collaborated with India in area of education, and changes in the UK to ensure that schools, colleges and universities provide people with the skills they need in a globalised knowledge economy.
The British High Commission supports the cross government bilateral UK India education and research initiative (UKIERI), managed by the British Council of India. In the last five years, UKIERI has played a pivotal role in establishing a step change in the educational relations between the two countries in a range of areas, including schools, skills, higher education, research and policy dialogue.
Their work in India on education includes range of British organisations:
  • British Council: As well as managing the UKIERI programme, the British Council operates a wide range of education partnership programmes that link the UK and India, and Project English to provide quality English language teaching and training.
  • Department for International Development: DFID spends more than £70m each year on education in India, including supporting major initiatives like the Rashtriya Madhyamik Siksha Abhijan (RMSA – universal secondary education) and Mahila Samakhya (education for empowerment) programmes.
  • UK Trade and Investment: UK businesses have a long track record in a wide range of educational service sectors, including educational resources and vocational training. Service providers in India include a range of not-for-profit ventures and other businesses (not-for-profit ventures and other businesses).
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2015/01/strengthening-india-uk-education-partnership/#sthash.wpdWDPny.dpuf

Employability skill test for job seekers


To make students job ready in the competitive market, and realising the dynamics of job market and need for employable candidates, Association of India University (AIU) has tied up with Wheebox, an online talent assessment company, LinkedIn, and Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) to implement Wheebox employability skill test (WEST) across universities in India.
The test is on the lines of GMAT, and the undergraduate & post-graduate students will take online adaptive test and thus will be provided with ranking that will be accessed to the influential network of professionals and recruiters on LinkedIn (partner for publishing India Skills Report 2015 as well). These rankings are the single metric that is consistent across the applicant pool. It provides a benchmark to the employer’s network to compare candidates against one another and against the student profile. This test will also help Universities to take preemptive measures to improve employability skills based on scientific data provided by Wheebox.
Nirmal Singh, Founder & CEO, Wheebox, “Today companies & universities are grappling with the concern of talent mismatch. They are devising strategies to counter this concern. He further added, “Thus, today there is a need to impart skills to the students and thus make them ready for the Job market.”
Dr Furqan Qamar, Secretary General, AIU said, “The percentage of  employable students being low, which has been indicated from all the research reports, and this necessitated us to make the students employable and job ready that would be beneficial to both the employers & students.
The exam is designed for 60 minutes that measures candidate’s English language proficiency, problem solving skills, numerical aptitude, computer literacy and soft skills viz. learning agility, interpersonal skills and adaptability for final year pass-outs. The test has been endorsed by CII that will measure critical competencies for employment of undergraduates and postgraduates.
Many organisations have shortlist the first round of candidates as per the scores of the test. Many professional and vocational training organisations have also used WEST to empower students to work on areas that might require improvement before they pass out and step out in job market.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2015/01/employability-skill-test-for-job-market/#sthash.Bj5KaMb1.dpuf
Jan 23 2015 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
Tablets to Boost MGNREGA Soon
New Delhi


Govt will roll out the first phase of this system on April 1 in 35,000 gram panchayats
The Narendra Modi government is all set to give a digital boost to the flagship rural jobs programme by providing tablets to 2.65 lakh gram panchayats in the country to monitor its implementation.The mobile monitoring of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) will cost the Centre about ` . 265 crore, with the rural development ministry distributing tablets costing `. 10,000 each to the gram panchayats, officials said.
The government will roll out the first phase of the mobile monitoring system on April 1 in 35,000 gram panchayats, a senior government official told ET.
The initiative comes after the government has already decided to switch over to direct benefit transfer under the scheme, which is expected to be expanded to the entire country in the next one year.
The previous UPA government had, in March last year, notified usage of tablets to monitor the scheme in 10,000 gram panchayats. However, the plan did not take off because of the unavailability of AakashIV tablets, promoted by the department of electronics and IT, to be used to digitally update the scheme.
The ministry has amended the earlier provision and extended the proposal to cover all gram panchayats in the country under the scheme, starting with 25,000 gram panchayats along with 10,000 identified by the pre vious government in the first phase.
The government hopes mobile monitoring will en able access to real-time dan ta at the village level, there by improving implementation of MGNREGA, which has drawn a lot of criticism for its failure to create new and durable assets.
“The government has decided to extend the mobile monitoring to all gram panchayats and technical or supervisory per sonnel involved in implementing MGNREGA to empower them with live data from worksites besides location of assets with geo-tagging for easy verification. This will lead to complete transparency in the system,“ said the official, requesting anonymity.
The states have been asked to identify the gram panchayats under the first phase by January 31 and immediately start procurement of devices as well as training of personnel, the official added.
According to the ministry officials, the mobile monitoring of MGNREGA will serve the twin purpose of making the scheme more effective and giving a panIndia platform to the government for rolling out its Digital India drive.
The annual allocation for MGNREGA is . 34,000 crore and so far nearly ` ` . 2 lakh crore have been spent under the scheme.The scheme guarantees 100 days of wage employment in a financial year to a rural household whose adult members volunteer to do unskilled manual work. On average, 25% of rural households seek employment under the scheme annually.
Jan 23 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
2 schemes launched to give girls fair deal
Panipat:


PM Tugs At Heartstrings To End Bias
Exhorting people not to regress to an 18th century mindset, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday made an emotional pitch to end discrimination against the girl child. Modi launched the twin programmes of `Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao' and `Sukanya Samridhi Yojna' in a bid to encourage birth and education of girls and tackle the abysmally low child sex ratio of 918 girls for 1,000 boys.Describing the desire to indulge in female foeticide as a “mental illness'', Modi said if this discrimination does not end it could cause a `terrible crisis' soon because of a lack of women in the country . Incidentally , the Prime Minister launched the two schemes from Panipat in Haryana that has among the lowest child sex ratio in the country (837 girls to 1,000 boys).
The launch took place amid much fanfare with senior Cabinet ministers Maneka Gandhi, Ravi Shankar Prasad, J P Nadda, Smriti Irani, Haryana chief minister M L Khattar and actor Madhuri Dixit present.The Prime Minister, who slammed the audience for “double standards'' in killing daughters but desiring educated daughters-in-law, also chose to attack doctors who assist in sex selective abortions. Pleading to end this ill practice, he said the Prime Minister of the country had come to them like a beggar and was begging for the lives of daughters.
Referring to Haryana, he said it was very painful for him to see that in a state which produced a woman like Kalpana Chawla, the first Indian woman to have travelled to space, “other Kalpana Chawlas are killed in the wombs of their mothers“.
He also launched the Sukanya Samridhi Yojna (girl child prosperity scheme), under which girl children below 10 years will have bank accounts with more interest and income tax benefits.
The campaign will be initially implemented in 100 districts, including 12 in Haryana, of the country where the sex ratio is rather poor.
Citing the 2006 Prince incident, in which a five-yearold boy was rescued in an over-50-hour operation after he had fallen into a borewell in Kurukshetra, Modi said the whole country had prayed for him. He wondered why the same people become so insensitive when so many girl children are killed around them.
For the full report, log on to http:www.timesofindia.com

Jan 23 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Govt plans free Wi-Fi in 2,500 cities & towns


As part of its `Digital India' scheme that aims to boost internet connectivity, the Centre will roll out free high-speed Wi-Fi in 2,500 cities and towns over the next three years, reports Pankaj Doval.BSNL will implement the Rs 7,000-crore scheme.However, after an initial period, one will have to pay for the service. The Wi-Fi speed will be “of 4G levels“ and 50,000-60,000 Wi-Fi hotspots will be set up.




Thursday, January 22, 2015

UCD offers scholarship for Indian students


University College Dublin (UCD) has launched 2015 UCD Scholarships for Indian undergraduate and postgraduate students. The university is granting 4 full scholarships in recognition of V. V. Giri, the fourth President of India, who studied law in UCD from 1913 to 1916.
Students applying for post graduate courses under V.V. Giri Scholarships (Graduate) program will be entitled for 100% scholarship based on their grades in undergraduate courses. Graduate (Taught Masters) Scholarships will be given on the merit based to the students applying for post graduate courses. 100% merit based tuition scholarships worth €3,000 each specifically for Indian students applying for postgraduate courses (applied to applicants who accept offers in first come, first served basis).
UCD is also offering U21 Delhi University Scholarships worth €3,000 each specifically for Indian students graduated from Delhi University, UCD’s Universities 21 partner, applying for postgraduate courses.
The university is also offering undergraduate scholarships. These are:
  • Undergraduate Global Excellence Scholarship. This is a merit based tuition scholarship.
  • 5 merit based tuition scholarships worth €5,000 each for undergraduate students
  • 10 merit based tuition scholarships worth €3,000 each for undergraduate students
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2015/01/ucd-offers-scholarship-for-indian-students/#sthash.qAemoiX2.dpuf

‘Let Digital, Traditional Go Together’


Despite education going digital fast at K-12 level, there’s a section that still favours the traditional mode of teaching. Nonetheless, heads at various universities still believe that live interactive sessions between students and teachers plays a crucial role in polishing the pupil’s mind.
The ICT integration supports number of policies in education but there is still variation in implementation of these policies. The access to ICT is still limited in Indian education plethora. Dr. Ajit Kumar N. Shukla, Director and Dean, School of Engineering, RK University believes, “Tablets for the curriculum is not much important but it could be linked to some courses as doable in practice. Our institution has more than hundred of that and using it for the same.”
The changing dynamics in education sector and shifting expectations for the learning environment require universities to examine teaching and learning practices. The forces of change in higher education system seem to be need of the hour. Believing the thought of using tablets as a medium of study Dr. M.K. Abdul Khader, Vice Chancellor, Kannur University, Kerala says, “With the widespread use of e-resources, irrespective of faculty/ topic of study, by teachers, students, research scholars tablets would be of great significance. Tablets are less expensive in its cost and maintenance which has replaced Laptops with lightening speed. It could be easily handled by everyone in class rooms and during presentation.”
Tablet being one of the portable knowledge base, students can retrieve information as and when needed from internet. It acts as a connecting medium with fellow students as well as the professors. So once the problem popped, it can be shared with all and can get an immediate feedback or solution.
The total number of schools in India is estimated to be 1.3 million out of which 20% of schools are privately run and only 10% of these schools have adopted multimedia. The market size for digitized school products is predicted to grow to $2 billion by 2020. The market for ICT is promising if government schools are considered too.
But is it the only way for the colleges and universities to help their students understand the concept better? Of course not, opined by Dr. Dharmender Saini, Principal, Bhartiya Vidyapeeth’s College of Engineering. He asserts, “Tablet is not the only means to make students better understand the concept, Interaction with teacher/expert is must.”
Promoting his thoughts, Shukla adds, “There are many other ways it could be done and it is done extensively by using interaction mode in the class through various activities which gives better experience.”  Coming from a different school of thought, Dr. Sraban Mukherjee, Director, Krishna Institute of Engineering & Technology shares, “Brains were nurtured and they did wonders even in the era of no electricity and modern basic amenities of living. So tablets are not mandatory, however, they do provide an ease of learning, understanding, connecting, discussing and communicating.”
An important aspect of M-learning, the technology is convenient which is accessible virtually from anywhere. But M-learning brings portability by replacing books and traditional methods of teaching with small devices filled with learning contents? “Definitely a tablet cannot replace the professor of the institution. It can serve the purpose of a physical book. As we know that different streams (medical, engineering etc.) of studies not only need textual reading but also pictorial understanding of the system. So in these cases we need a copy and pen to memorize and understand them,” shares Mukherjee.
E-book, e-content etc. are mostly passive in nature. They cannot provide learning experience that students get from interactive methods like class room teaching, group discussions, interactive video lectures etc. Tablets cannot propagate values which are lacking in the modern world. Knowledge disseminated from teachers would have lasting impression in the minds of the learner. Tablets provide knowledge indiscriminately. There are no barriers between good or bad. Conventional form of teaching builds unbreakable bond between teacher and the taught.
Universities are addressing this shifting landscape but still there seems to be little adoption. Online courses are growing in number and some universities are making it available free to everyone. To evaluate, assess a tablet before selecting for curricula the universities emphasize on its key features like portability, free OS (Android) to get the desired apps with an ease, WiFi support, 3G/4G support, capable of storing teaching learning material, processing speed, memory, support for external devices, power consumption, weight, durability, warranty and after sales support.
Use of technology to simulate everything has allowed students anywhere in the world to interact with professors and one another in real time rather than requiring physical presence. The introduction of digital tools in the classrooms has brought the narratives alive. They play a major role in the classroom teaching but the effectiveness of such tools depends on how they are incorporated into the learning process. Traditional teaching tools are to be modified so as to use along with digital tools. Though conventional teaching has its own relevance yet the optimum situation could be created by effecting a judicial balance between the two.
“This is era of digitization. So when we talk about our learning curriculum, ease to get information is the key. Every curiosity needs to be addressed quickly as well as correctly and our digital world supports it with abundance of information on internet and a tablet to harness it. However we cannot deny the importance of white chalk and black board based traditional form of education.The primary education system should always be traditional because writing alphabets is an art too which can be imbibed and enhanced in the budding mind only by a pencil in hand and not a key under the finger tip,” says Mukherjee.
The digital education is gaining momentum in education sector as the new Modi Led government has taken steps to bridge the digital divide and had launched new Digital India Campaign. Fortunately the institutions still believes that government should ensure that the in-house practices of public institutions should be improved and Government should ensure quality in teaching learning methodologies. Lack of fund is a barrier to the public institution. Specific initiatives should be taken by the government to strengthen the internet and other digital resources in public funded institutions.
“It is wrong to say that always private institution are far ahead public institution. Yes it is correct new government is committed to bridging the digital deficit and it is required also mostly using the mobile set or through android one. More so for financial transaction in this regard through PRADHAN MANTRI JAN DHAN YOJNA appears to be a turning point,” informs Shukla.
The digital road to smart education has its own share of potholes and infrastructure continues to be the bottleneck. The classrooms require modifications like installation of network link, large screen installations. To overcome this bottleneck, educational institutes should invest more on infrastructure and also ensure proper functioning of facilities so that students get services on time. The below formula can work to bridge this gap:
  • First strengthen the basic educational amenities in the depriving institutions
  • Educate the professors and the teachers about the positives of the digitisations
  • Support students for getting the modern educational aid (laptops, palmtopsetc).
The advancement of e-learning might have been good for the education institutes but it also comes with risk. E-learning do run the risk of overexposure doing harm than good. “Based on the temperament of the learner if he is exposed to the sensitive topics indefinitely than this might result in harming the society then actually benefitting it,” believes Mukherjee.
However, digital technology has the potential to change the phase of education in India and with the new model built around massive open online courses (MOOCS), it has brought closer the dream of digital equality in the country. But this dream can only take the shape into reality only if the infrastructure is placed judiciously. The shallow internet density is making a crisis out of an opportunity. Government should take steps to provide 3G/4G internet services not only in cities but in other rural places as well. Government can come to seize this opportunity by providing the dedicated lease line of internet facility as an outreach program to all the university, colleges and school throughout the state.

- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2015/01/let-digital-traditional-go-together/#sthash.quAyVa6j.dpuf