Thursday 27 November 2014



Six Android Apps Every World Traveller Needs
 
Travelling the world is a now seemingly ubiquitous pastime for everyone from students to pensioners.

With smartphones and tablets equally as ubiquitous, we thought we'd put the two together to come up with the definitive list of eight Android apps that every world traveller needs.

Before beginning, it's important to consider what are the essential bits of information that you need while travelling? Apps with offline capabilities are certainly preferred, you'll need currency data, a way to contact home, on-the-go translations, and a way to record all your wonderful memories. Let's see what the Google Play Store can offer.

PACKING AND ORGANISING -

Before you even leave for your trip you'll be faced with a growing to-do list.

Flight tickets, hotel bookings, and car hires all need to be logged, and you'll need to make sure you don't overlook anything while packing, especially if you're going for a long time.

The answer is the TripIt Travel Organiser. The app lets you create lists for packing and organising your holiday, but also gives you a way to forward any important email to the app and get it automatically added to your itinerary.Gmail users will even find that details from any emails sent to their inboxes will be automatically added to their TripIt schedule without any human input.

TRANSLATION -

There are two apps worth mentioning in this category: Google Translate and Word Lens.Google Translate is known by eve ryone. If you live in a foreign land, have foreign relatives, or travel with any degree of regularity, you're bound to have used it. Two Google Translate features stand out for a world-weary traveller: the ability to translate offline while travelling, and the ability to talk directly into the microphone and let the app give an on-screen translation. If you do plan to use the app offline, be aware that you need to download the language package.

Word Lens is an augmented real ity translation app. In practice that means that you open the app, point it at the text you want to translate, and see the translated text on your screen. It means no more typing in long and complex sentences ­ making it particularly useful for things like menus, signs, and labels. Like Google Translate, it is also available offline. Its number of languages is more limited though. Whereas Google Translate boasts 80 languages, Word Lens only has English, Spanish, French, Italian, Russian, German and Portuguese.

CURRENCY CONVERTOR -

There's only one app worth mentioning here: XE Currency.

The app lets you convert amounts between virtually any global currency, meaning you'll never give accidently give a taxi driver in Thailand Rs 500 instead of Rs 50.

Like the two translation apps, XE Currency works offline, meaning you'll never be caught out if you're without signal

CONTACTING HOME -

After a while on the road you might feel the need to contact loved ones.

There are no offline apps in this category. There are the apps such as the everpresent Skype and WhatsApp that should be on your phone regardless, but you should also consider Tango.

Tango is a Skype alternative that lets you make free video calls, voice calls, and texts.The app includes “channels“ that let you stay on top of news and sports, and you can even discover and share songs on Spotify. 

MEMORIES -

One of the best parts of travelling is recalling your memories once the trip itself is in the distant past. To do this, you'll need a great way to organise your thoughts, photos, and videos. Looking beyond standard apps such as Evernote and Facebook, you could consider trying the free Vacation & Travel Journal.

The app lets you track and document your journey by using images, video, audio recordings, and text, and it lets you sync all your data onto a Web site which can be shared with family and friends.

It has several cool features, including automatically logging the weather, longitude, lati tude, altitude, time, and date for each entry you make, logging your entire trip via GPS, and making shared trips so multiple people can upload memories to the same log.

Source | Mumbai Mirror | 27 November 2014


Teacher education, not training


Words can shape and limit our notions. They can also guide action and inaction. In education this is particularly important 

Many conversations where people want to know what we do go like this: “So you train government school teachers?” and I say, “We don’t train.” That leaves them puzzled: “If you are trying to help improve how teachers teach, what else do you do but train?” I often sidestep the real issue by asking them about their experience with training, which in almost all cases is unsatisfactory. It then becomes easier to communicate that we do many things that help develop capacities of teachers, but these things can’t be called training. 

The real issue is the word training. It implies a narrowness of purpose and a high degree of instrumentality. This makes training inadequate for capacities related to education, which are fundamental, complex and deep. Also, our common experiences have associated training with shallowness.
None of this makes training a bad word, but does make it inappropriate to use in the context of development of teachers. Since the connotations of the word training are commonly understood, its use often implies an implicit notion of teacher development, which is problematic. Given the actual complexity of the capacities and abilities expected from a teacher, education is more appropriate than training.

Such words that reflect notions or ideas about some complex matter are used commonly by all of us. When that matter is not in our area of work or expertise, we sometimes use such words without adequately examining our underlying notions, or sometimes not being conscious of the nuances of the notions.
Almost all of us are interested in education, either broadly about the system or specifically for our children, and so we talk a lot about it. We end up using many such words, which imply specific notions, but are perhaps unexamined by us. Let’s take a few examples.
The word impart is another such word. Imparting education is a commonly used phrase. It assumes that education is something that can be given because that is the connotation of impart. This is one of those traditional ideas of education, which survives despite advances in our understanding of the process of education and our substantially enhanced expectations from it.
Education involves the process of the child learning and developing on multiple dimensions, facilitated by the teacher, who is guided by a curriculum. This is not a process where the teacher is giving packets of knowledge to the child because that process is ineffective. Effective education is a process where the teacher, the children and the school is involved and participating actively. Or, at least that is how it should be. 

The use of the word impart is not only reflective of the giving-away-in-packets notion of education, it is unfortunately also reflective of the current pedagogic reality; it’s chalk-and-talk and rote that is most often practised in our classes. None of us want it this way anymore, but the moment we use the word impart, we implicitly endorse the very idea of education that we don’t want.
A closely associated word to impart is deliver. There is often talk of delivery of education, which is also reflective of a notion that education can be given. Though deliver goes further than impart, it is infused with a sensibility that arises from mechanistic systems and from economics. The use of the phrase delivery of education makes economics and mechanistic systems the default frame of thinking about education. Whereas education is much more than that and infinitely more complex than that. In reality education is a humanistic social endeavour, so the word delivery misleads us away from the essence of education. A related word similarly loaded with misleading directions is accountability. I wrote about this at length on 19 March.
Reform is another interesting word; it takes us to another dimension of this discussion. Its common meaning is improvement. However, it’s not possible to use the word without invoking deeper and associated meanings.
These days reform doesn’t invoke Luther setting the Christian world afire in 1517 with the Ninety-Five Theses or the socio-religious changes in Bengal in the early 19th century. What it invokes is economic reforms. Even more specifically it invokes changes in economic policies, moving towards more market-friendliness. Since in the common lexicon today, the word reform has got loaded with this connotation, the use of the word reform in education also somehow implies more market-friendly policies. This whole lexical situation conflates the actual meaning of reform, improvement, with the acquired connotation of reform, which is market-friendliness. This implies that market-friendliness in education is good and is the route to improving education. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Words reflect our notions. They can shape and limit our notions as well. They can also guide action and inaction. In education this is particularly important because even those of us who are not directly in education tend to get involved with the discourse. Examining our words and their underlying notions is one effective route.
Source | Mint – The Wall Street Journal | 27 November 2014

Monday 1 September 2014

Free Online Learning Tools that will make you Smarter


Continue educating yourself in a range of subjects from science and math to history and humanities 

You have a degree in a subject of your choice and are pursuing the field you were always interested in. However, it's not enough to sit back and rest on your supposed laurels.The mark of a truly excellent individual is one who continues learning and updating himself, within and outside his field of work and interest. We let you in on some tools for self-education that you can use to do more, and live better. 

HARVARD OPENCOURSEWARE 

Always wanted to say you studied at Harvard? Well, you could do that now...almost! Harvard is one of the most respected college on the continent so whatever they have to teach is worth learning. The respected university offers a bunch of courses, free of charge to the general public. They come in a range of subjects from computer science to literature. 

MIT OPENCOURSEWARE 

It's one of the most powerful, fun, and free resources available for learning.MIT has courses available in over a dozen courses from technology to business. Enroll for free and access all the coursework for free. It's a great way to learn from one of the most distinguished colleges in the US. 

YOUTUBE 

Giving the DIY ethic a boost is videosharing website YouTube and the amazing array of free educational channels that increase your knowledge base and also show you how to get things do, visually . People and groups put up videos on everything from learning guitar for beginners and pros, to presentations on cloud computing. It has led to a whole new way of learning called the Maker Culture. 

UDEMY 

This is an online course-based website where you can buy and take individual courses. There is a truckload of subjects to choose from -languages to computer science, design to cooking, and many other things you've probably not even thought of. There is an option to also buy the course once and keep it with you for eternity. It comes with video and text lectures to show you how everything works. 

OXFORD MATHEMATICS OPENCOURSEWARE 

Love it or loathe it, math is a requirement in most careers. Brush up on your mathematic skills with the courses available here on subjects like algebra, math logic, and even computer math.Oxford is an internationally recognised learning institution, and a reputed place to learn. 

CODECADEMY 

This is an online resource that teaches you various programming languages. Available is JavaScript, CSSHTML, Python, PHP , Ruby. Log in via Twitter, Facebook or Google+ for easy access. It is great for entry level learning and, in some cases, intermediate levels of programming. 

YALE OPEN COURSES 

Not to be left out in the dark, Yale also offers open courses. Much like the others the subjects are vast and include things like literature, music, finances, business, and others. Like the others, it's a prestigious college with great professors. It's also free and that's good news. 

JOHNS HOPKINS OPENCOURSEWARE 

Continuing with the OpenCourseWare from various colleges is Johns Hopkins.It's a world renown medical school with a number of free courses available for those who are thinking of studying medicine or maybe for those who know medicine and need a quick brush up. It has courses on things like child development, nutrition, and even fundamentals on specialties like oncology. 

FREE COMPUTER BOOKS 

The website (http:www.freecomputer books.com) looks like it was designed in the stone age but the goods are great.
Using it you can get hundreds of free books about computer programming, mathematics, data logic, design, and other books. It's great for anyone look ing to get more into computers and it even includes books on Java (Android development), C++ (Windows develop ment).

LIFEWRITE 

If it's writing you need to brush up on, Lifewrite.com is a good place to go. It offers a free nine week course for free along with a number of free tips and exercises. Writing is one of the toughest things to do well and it takes a lot of work and practice to get it right. Why not start off the right way by learning from a professional? 

KHAN ACADEMY 

People use it to brush up on their basic math but it's also a good tool for advanced learning. You will find over a thousand instructional videos that cover everything from basic arithmetic to differential equations. It's free of cost. Signing up is easy since it has Facebook and Google+ support. 

PURDUE ONLINE WRITING LAB 

If you want a little more structure, look up Purdue University's online writing lab. It includes classes on grammar, writing styles, and even professional writing. It's a great free resource for any writer looking to brush up on the basics. There are even instructional videos to watch. 

DUOLINGO 

Duolingo is a free service that teaches you another language -Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, and others. There are Android and iOS apps available which are also free. It was a huge hit last year and the courses really do work if you stick with them. It teaches you in the form of a game so it remains interesting even during the hard portions. 

WIKIVERSITY 

Wikipedia isn't the most trusted source out there but it is getting a better reputation all the time. Most of the stuff that's on there is at least mostly accurate and that makes it a pretty decent platform for learning. It uses Wiki's classic interface to link you to resources, courses, and labs to help you learn a bunch of stuff in a bunch of subjects. It's a great free resource. 

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA BOOK PAGE 

The last free book resource on the list is the University of Pennsylvania Book Page. Using this site you can gain access to an untold number of free books used by the students of the University of Pennsylvania. It's a very minimal site so you'll have to go back to getting used to white web pages with blue links everywhere but it's still a great resource for free information, essays, books, and other educational texts.People stick with favourites in sea of mobile apps. 

Source | Times of India | 28 August 2014

Tuesday 26 August 2014

Podar International School to go digital from 2015, no more 

textbooks for students

Three years ago, Podar International Schools having Cambridge International Examination (CIE) and International Baccalaureate (IB) boards started teaching students via iPads. However, from the next academic year, 2015-16, the institute has decided to start complete digital learning, where there will be e-textbooks, e-workbooks, e-notes, etc.

From October this year, the school will begin a pilot project on digital learning, for six months. Dr Vandana Lulla, principal of Podar International School, said, "During our pilot project, we will see if we are facing any issue in going completely digital. We take precautions against students using any other sites. The most important thing is that they will not have to bring their bags with many textbooks."

The digital learning will be initiated for standards III to XII students. Abdul Chaohan, an expert from EssaAcademy in the UK, will train teachers. Once the students get the device in school, they have to register it with the school, to enable the WiFi connection.

Vijay Mukhi, an IT expert, said, "There are pros and cons in introducing digital learning. Having complete digital learning will benefit students as no company sends any letter on paper, but make use of emails in sending any message or appointments. But a major drawback is when students from economically backward families come to such schools, they may not be able to afford such devices, which cost over Rs30,000. The school introducing such technology will have to make sure that when students are making use of such technology at home, there should be someone to help them. There are chances that students can copy from each other, the projects or homework as there is no handwriting involved. On the other hand, if a school is sending any email which bounces back, and child could not get, it will be child's words against the school."

Source | Daily News Analysis | 26 August 2014

Thursday 21 August 2014


JournalTOCs - Free - Table of Contents for over 24645 Journals:-


JournalTOCs is the biggest searchable collection of scholarly journal Tables of Contents (TOCs). It contains articles' metadata of TOCs for over 24,645 journals directly collected from over 2283 publishers.

JournalTOCs pulls together a database of Table of Contents (TOCs) from scholarly journals and provides a convenient single "one stop shop" interface to these TOCs.

JournalTOCs is a Current Awareness Service (CAS) where you can discover the newest papers coming directly from the publishers as soon as they have been published online.

JournalTOCs is for researchers, librarians, students and anyone who's looking for the latest or most current papers published in the scholarly literature with international coverage.

JournalTOCs is a free service for individual users.


Saturday 19 July 2014

Interactive Online Learning on Campus



Testing MOOCs and Other Platforms in Hybrid Formats in the University System of Maryland


Online technologies show promise for educating more people in innovative ways that can lower costs for universities and colleges, but how can higher education leaders move forward, confident in their choices about how best to integrate these technologies on their campuses? With a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Ithaka S+R is working to help provide the answer.

Since November 2012, Ithaka S+R has been working with the University System of Maryland (USM) to test a variety of online learning technologies, assess student learning outcomes, and document lessons learned from these implementations. The USM is serving as a test bed for employing MOOCs from Coursera, the Open Learning Initiative (OLI) from Carnegie Mellon, and Pearson in a variety of subject areas on different campuses. 

 

Tuesday 8 July 2014

13 web resources to IMPROVE YOUR PRODUCTIVITY

Use these tools to draw out your maximum potential and refocus on what's important

In today's fast-paced world, we don't want to waste any more time than necessary.

Here are some highly useful and innova tive web resources that will help make you more productive: CLEAR FOCUS This timer uses the Pomodoro Technique to pre vent you from wasting time on distractions. Instead, it helps you focus by alternating work sessions with small breaks.

·         COFFITIVITY It has been proven that people work better with white noise in the background.

This site replicates the sound of a coffee shop to achieve the perfect combination of calm and commotion. It'll help you get your creative juices flowing so you won't feel stuck.

·         DO NOTHING FOR 2 MINUTES Although it seems coun terintuitive, this website is the perfect way to refocus your mind after a hard meeting or stressful call, all in just under 120 seconds.
 
·         DOODLE Trying to schedule a meeting? You never need to endure tedious email threads about everyone's available times again. Instead, use Doodle to identify a few potential windows of time and collaborate with others.
 
·         EVERNOTE This simple yet sophisti cated note-taking app is legendary for productiv ity. It organises your notes, allows you to search for text within an image, captures everything from PDF to web pages, and even has a Webclipper so you can save anything with a single click.
 
·         FOCUSWRITER T his tool provides a si mple, d i st r ac t ion free writing environment. You get a nice, full-screen blank canvas to focus on the next paper you have to write. It also includes timers, alarms, goal setting, themes, typewriter sound effects, and spell checking.
 
·         HOOTSUITE If you need to manage multiple social media accounts, this is the site for you. Hootsuite is a social media dashboard that helps you save time and stop procrastinating on Twitter and Facebook by scheduling posts for the upcoming weeks.
 
·         POCKET Use Pocket to help you store i n for mation, links, and images so you can search through them later. It's also great for bookmarking things to read for later.
 
·         PRODUCTIVITY OWL This Google Chrome ex tension will force you to be more productive. An owl follows you to every website you visit and swoops across the page when you're not being productive.
 
·         SELFCONTROL This incredibly useful app temporarily blocks you from any distractions or addicting sites such as Facebook, Tumblr, and Youtube.
 
·         It's only for Mac users, but don't worry -Cold Turkey has the same functions, specifically made for Windows users.
 
·         UNROLL ME When you sign up, you'll find a list of all your subscription emails. Unsubscribe from whatever you don't want. For subscriptions you want to keep, Unroll Me will “roll“ them into one message so you can see them at a glance.
 
·         WAKERUPPER This site provides you simple telephone re minders, so you can set a wake-up call at a specific time, remind yourself of important events or even remember to take your medication on time.
 
·         WORKFLOWY With this tool, you'll be able to unclutter, as it helps you organise personal to-dos, collaborate on team projects, take notes, write research. papers, keep a journal, plan a huge event, and much more

Source| Economic Times | 2 July 2014
Internet Classrooms: How India Is Studying Online

online_education_story_3.jpg
When you think about online education, you probably think of government schemes to bring education to people in remote villages, or you think of international sites like Khan Academy and Coursera, which are used for continuing or supplementing education. However, these international sites aren't very relevant when you're looking for tools that will help your kids with her school exams. There are however, several Indian sites which cater specifically to this need, with coursework and questions tailored around the Indian curriculum.
These sites - designed to be used by schoolchildren, their parents and teachers - offer everything from coursework to testing and virtual classrooms. Perhaps the most visible name in the category is Meritnation, thanks to its television ad campaign. Formed in 2009, the company now advertises a total of 6.7 million and growing list of registered students on its website and reported an operating revenue of Rs. 20.28 crores in 2013-2014. Having raised Rs. 71.5 crores from Info Edge (which owns 55.81 percent of the stake in the company) in multiple rounds, it now plans to expand even more into the smaller cities in India.
Pavan Chauhan, MD and co-founder of Meritnation says that over the last few years, there has been a rise in the student populace flocking to them. And why wouldn't they? A wide variety of choices, better connect with teachers and other students, and even getting tailor-made coaching all for a low price - or at times even free - have started to draw audiences towards them. This, combined with the ease of accessibility via mobile devices helps sweeten the deal further for students. 
online_education_merit_nation.jpg
Not everyone agrees. Take the case of 44-year-old Neelima Sengupta who is mother to a 13-year-old girl studying in Delhi. Sengupta's daughter [name withheld on request], is now in the eighth standard and has been attending private tuition classes for the last two years. After seeing the ads on television, she decided to sign up on Meritnation as a free member, to see if it can be useful for her child.
"The site is initially very confusing," Sengupta says. "There's a lot of different sections and the first time I logged in, there was so much in front of me that I just closed the site," she admits. But after that, she went back to the site, and discovered that it's possible to find a lot of content such as lessons, model tests and videos.
"Most of it is locked for paid members, and after spending some time on the site I realised it wasn't for us," she adds, saying, "because my daughter doesn't have the discipline that's required for something like this. You have to be motivated to make use of this site, and she's always trying to avoid her classes. [With private tuition classes] at least she has to go and sit in a room, and so she ends up having to learn things."
But Sengupta's experience isn't typical - one of her daughter's friends, Amrita is a paid user. Her mother, Ranjani [last name withheld on request], says, "These days, you don't want to send off your child to a stranger's place for tuitions, and if you call a teacher over, you have to be home all the time. For us, Meritnation was very convenient, because Amrita can log in every day from home by herself, and we can monitor her progress at night. There are safeguards on the computer which let her visit only sites from an approved list, which is much better than having to take her to tuitions every day. And my husband and I also are more involved in her studies this way, which is important to us."
Meritnation, of course, is just one of the players in this increasingly crowded market, which includes players like like TestbookGradestack and even companies with a physical presence, like the Aakash Institute have entered the space.
This year, a total of over 10.2 lakh students took the class XII CBSE exams in India. Another 1.5 lakh students took the ICSE exam in the country and abroad, and over 66,000 students took the ICE examination in India and abroad. And these numbers do not include the state boards. According to Global Information Inc., the Global Market for eLearning is set to reach $169 billion by 2018. 
What's on offer?
To say that online education sites will remove the interpersonal relationship between students and teachers is a gross mistake. Because for most of the online education portals the idea is to take coaching to the masses. This combined with facilities like online testing, real time results, providing counselling specific to the students problems and also giving animated as well as interactive lectures in the form of videos are just some of the things that sites are doing now in India.
Take the case of the recently started online portal, Testbook. Started six months back by six IIT graduates, the website offers students wanting to appear for exams like the GATE, SBI PO, and the SBI Clerk exams a chance to take mock tests. Not only that, but it provides analysis of the students' exam results, giving them part by part feedback about weaknesses and strengths. The best part is it is free - the founders say that they are building a subscriber base for now, and will bring in paid premium features over time.
"We wanted to help students preparing for these exams," says Ashutosh Kumar, one of the founders of Testbook. "A lot of them do not have access to give the mock tests online, or even if they do there is no way to compare and check the same against a very wide population base. That is what we wanted to change."
Six months after the beta version of Testbook went live, the service now has over 28,000 registered users, who have solved a total of over nine lakh questions.
"There is a difference between a traditional coaching class, which conducts test series and an online portal," says Kumar. "For one, not all students are the same and neither is their ability to grasp the concepts. An online portal allows for a tailor made solution, unique to each student. We analyse the student's responses, [and] if a student cannot answer a difficult question the following questions are easier so that he or she can first work on the basic concepts. The results can then be analysed after the test is over."
online_education_testbook.jpg
A relatively new player in the market is Gradestack, which allows users to choose from a wide variety of courses beginning from class 11 and 12 exams to higher education.
Explaining how online education portals have evolved in the last five years, Meritnation's Chauhan says that there was a definite market as well as need to reach out to students and provide them with that extra edge for their academic life.
"One of the most important question that we wanted to address was, can we take coaching to a student's desktop or laptop or mobile device and provide them the ease of learning with a tailor-made solution for their needs. Meritnation began with the idea of bringing a more interactive education format that could be easily assimilated by the students," he says. "Along with the mock tests also came online tutorial, videos, animations and a lot more that helped in making the learning more interactive. Besides all the various boards, the state boards, central board and the ICSE board have different syllabi and accordingly need to be prepared for in an interactive manner so that the students can benefit from it."
Taking coaching online isn't restricted to the digital startups either. Aakash Educational Services Limited is better known for its brick and mortar coaching centres, but the company recently launched a service called iConnect. Barely 20-days after launch, it had already seen over 3000 students sign up. 
Aakash Chaudhry, founder, Aakash Educational Services Ltd, says, "We really wanted to move on from the actual classrooms to the virtual ones. There was a solid reason behind it too. We wanted to connect to children studying in remote areas, who were talented but did not have access to quality education for these exams. Also we wanted to give the students both in the urban areas as well as the remote ones the freedom to choose what subjects or what sections of the subjects were their main problem areas so that they could just concentrate on those sections." 
iconnect.jpg
A complete coaching package is available for Rs. 10,999 for entrance exams - that is a pretty high price, but if a student is weak in just a few modules in certain subjects, they have the option of getting individual modules instead. A student can choose to study just one particular topic for only Rs. 99. The packages not only include the online study materials but also have full tutorial videos, which have a teacher explaining the entire chapter. After that there is the assessment section where the student is tested and results calibrated on a national level with others who have taken the same exam.
"Students can also avail for help from experts via posting their queries online. They have the option to like a video or dislike it too if they do not find it easy enough to understand," Chaudhry says. Also on offer is a 14-day free trial period where the students can register and see whether the services are good for them. "If they like it they can pay for the syllabi coaching they want, " he adds.
The fact that offline coaching centres are making a move online shows that the category is going to be very important in the future of education. As the number of Internet users in India continues to grow, this market will only grow bigger.


Every School Should Have A Well-Qualified Counsellor: Activists


Three years after the Maharashtra State Board recognised and offered concessions to students with learning disability and autism, the battle is far from over for these children. Most schools have no special educators or counsellors, deny concessions and admissions to such kids and also harass parents to submit documents annually to prove their child's condition. Mumbai-based activists demand every school should now have a counsellor and that existing rules be implemented diligently In 2011, the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education finally recognised and offered concessions to students with learning disability (LD) and autism  after city-based activists and counselors consistently fought for the cause and ensured that such kids were given proper education and accepted by the society. The lackadaisical approach of schools has a negative impact on kids with learning disabilities But three years hence, these kids continue to be ostracised by school authorities. Parents and activists have repeatedly complained about schools either acting ignorant to such cases or refusing to entertain them altogether. Over the last two years, city-based activists and counsellors have noticed a spurt in the number of cases where such special students have either been denied concessions or deprived of a chance to study in a mainstream school. Over the last two years, city-based activists and counsellors have noticed a spurt in the number of cases where special students have either been denied concessions or deprived of a chance to study in a mainstream school. pic for representational purpose only "I recently spoke to a parent where she was being harassed by the school and asked to submit documents to prove her child's issue every year. This just shows that schools target not only students, but also parents. And since the state government isn't monitoring this issue, this trend is likely to continue," said Chitra Iyer, trustee of Forum for Fairness in Autism (FFA). This group was the first to demand concessions under the state board for students with autism. She also pointed out the blatant ignorance on the part of the schools, which has been adding to the woes of children with LD, autism and other spectrum disorders. "Either the parents are not aware, or the schools act ignorant, but in the bargain, it's the child who suffers. Schools are known to misguide parents to avoid handling the case themselves," said Ashish Mehta, a city-based activist. Lack of proper resources Apart from ignorance, experts have also repeatedly pointed at lack of proper resources in schools as one of the main reasons for causing greater troubles for students with various forms of disabilities. "Most schools don't have special educators or counsellors, who can handle such cases sensitively. For students with physical disabilities, it becomes even more difficult as most schools don't have proper equipments or have other infrastructural limitations causing hindrance to the kids," said Upasana Saraf, head counsellor with Bombay Cambridge Group of Schools. Increasing number of complaints Over the last two years, the Maharashtra State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (MSCPCR) has received a series of complaints from parents of students with LD and autism. Last year, the commission passed an order against a Juhu-based ICSC school that had stopped allowing a seven-year-old autistic child from attending school. "We set up a committee to monitor the child during school hours and based on the report filed by the expert committee, the kid was deemed fit to attend a mainstream school along with a shadow teacher. This order and its recommendations have been referred to many other similar cases that the commission has witnessed henceforth," said A N Tripathi, secretary of MSCPCR. The need of the hour, say experts, is proper implementation of the rules that are already in place. "Even though the state education department states that every school should have a counsellor, this needs to be made mandatory. Proper action should be taken against schools that default. Also, there should be a compulsory education qualification that these counsellors need to possess," added Saraf. Concessions in SSC/ HSC board >> 30 minutes extra time for SSC and an hour extra for HSC students is given >> Exemption from third language for SSC students >> Students may take a vocational subject instead >> HSC students may take a vocational subject instead of the second language >> Exemption from paper II in mathematics (Algebra and Geometry for SSC students.) >> Students may take a vocational subject of 75 marks in lieu of Mathematics paper II >> 20 grace marks during board exams >> Use of a writer as per the rules. >> Visually-impaired students are allowed to use tape-recorders in classrooms >> Cursive writing is not enforced

Friday 6 June 2014

Shodhganga : A National Repository of ETD


Shodhganga : A National Repository of ETD

Implementing Agency: INFLIBNET Centre


All universities in India are expected to join the National Repository of Electronic Theses Dissertations (ETD) after UGC issues a gazette notification in this regard. Universities are signing MoU with the INFLIBNET Centre to join Shodhganga project. “Shodhganga” is the name of the national digital repository of Indian Electronic Theses and Dissertations.

Basically the universities are giving a commitment for allowingdigitisation of their old and new theses in the repository.

The universities that sign MoU with the INFLIBNET Centre are given incentives in terms of funds for digitisation of old theses as well as for setting up of ETD Labs. Besides, universities also get access to an anti-plagiarism software tool that detects plagiarism and thereby helps in improving quality of the theses. The project is so useful that it will undoubtedly motivate universities to support the digitisation of theses.

The project will grow as more and more theses get submitted and the platform is enhanced to provide better search and discovery experience.

Need for the Project

As long as theses and dissertations are not digitized, there is bound to be issues like duplication or even plagiarism. This is wastage of real talent and resources. The UGC Notification (Minimum Standards & Procedure for Award of M.Phil. / Ph.D Degree, Regulation, 2009) dated 1st June 2009 mandates submission of electronic version of theses and dissertations by the researchers in universities with the aim of facilitating open access to Indian theses and dissertation to the academic community world-wide.

Online availability of electronic theses through centrally-maintained digital repositories will not only ensure easy access and archiving of Indian doctoral theses, it will also help in raising the standard and quality of the research.

Innovation Factors
  • Shodhganga@INFLIBNET aims to encourage and support open access to publically-funded research.
  • It is a nationaproject, which makes the research result available online for public access, by publishing theses in open access format, based on UGC mandate via gazette notification 
  • First National Repository of Theses and Dissertation for all Indian Universities (About 525 universities).
  • UGCs National Scheme for digitisation of back volumes of theses for all universities. 
  Achievements
  • Well received by academic community and in a year, 43 universities have come forward in a year to sign the MoU and join the project.
  • Universities started signing MoU with INFLIBNET for joining theproject; voluntary contributed soft copies of theses have crossed 2400 as on date and it is growing.
  • Short-listed for Manthan Digital Inclusion Award and the final process is going on.
  • Though there is no mandate for private universities to join theproject, such universities came forward to sign the MoU and join Shodhganga voluntarily.

Thursday 5 June 2014

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