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Thursday, August 12, 2010

Mobile number portability will be rolled out from Oct. 31

The telecom regulator on Thursday said mobile number portability (MNP) will be implemented nationwide from October 31, ruling out any further delay.

The MNP is a service that allows a mobile user to change his operator while retaining the number.

"There will be no further delay in the implementation of MNP," the telecom regulatory authority of India (TRAI) Chairman, Mr J.S. Sarma, said here.

The Department of Telecom (DoT) on Wednesday said the operators must ensure that all inter-operator tests for porting the numbers from one service provider to another are completed before September 1, 2010.

The Dot made it clear to all telecom operators that in case they fail to implement MNP as per the scheduled deadline, they will be barred from launching any new commercial services from September 1.

"It has been decided that permission to launch commercial service in any area with effect from September 1, 2010 shall be given to only those licensee(s) who are MNP compliant," said a DoT note.

Mobile service providers - Bharti Airtel, Reliance, Vodafone Essar, Tata Tele, Idea, STel and Aircel - are getting ready to launch high-speed 3G services from next month.

State-owned telcos Bharat Sanchar Nagar Nigam and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited have said they are ready with the infrastructure to implement the MNP service.

The earlier June 30 deadline for the implementation of MNP was deferred as the operators were not ready with the infrastructure to provide the service.

The MNP was to be implemented by December 31, 2009 in all the metro cities as well as in the states of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

The deadline was then changed to March 31, 2010 and thereafter to June 30, 2010.

Asked about the rolling out of 3G services, Sarma said: "I see no reason to believe that there would be any delay."

Psychic looks for girl, finds woman's body

A psychic acting on a hunch that the body of a missing Sydney schoolgirl would be in a public park found the torso of a missing woman there instead, police said on Thursday.

Police have contacted the family of a 31-year-old mother not seen for two months but would not confirm a link with the headless, armless and legless corpse found wrapped in plastic sheet.

"It's very sad to say that an adult female torso has been found where the witnesses said they thought there was a body," the Chief Inspector, Mr Pam Young, told reporters.

"It's quite interesting that a woman had a sense or a feeling that it was worth her while to come to this particular part of the park."

The psychic was searching for a six-year-old girl missing from her Sydney home for almost two weeks.

"For those who believe in such things, I understand that the woman thinks that she might have some powers along that line," Young said. "I have certain strong feelings about people who claim they are psychic. I don't think it will help if we enter a discussion on that."



Russia's Agony A 'wake-Up Call' To The World

'The smartest thing the U.S. could do is phase out ethanol subsidies,' says Brown, the founder of the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute, in reference to rising food prices resulting from the unprecedented heat wave in western Russia that has decimated crops and killed at least 15,000 people.

'The lesson here is that we must take climate change far more seriously, make major cuts in emissions and fast before climate change is out of control,' Brown, one of the world's leading experts on agriculture and food, told IPS.

Average temperatures during the month of July were eight degrees Celsius above normal in Moscow, he said, noting that 'such a huge increase in temperature over an entire month is just unheard of.'

On Monday, Moscow reached 37 C when the normal temperature for August is 21 C. It was the 28th day in a row that temperatures exceeded 30 C.

Soil moisture has fallen to levels seen only once in 500 years, says Brown. Wheat and other grain yields are expected to decline by 40 percent or more in Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine - regions that provide 25 percent of the world's wheat exports. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin announced a few days ago that Russia would ban all grain exports.

Food prices will rise but how much is not known at this point, says Brown. 'What we do know, however, is that the prices of wheat, corn, and soybeans are actually somewhat higher in early August 2010 than they were in early August 2007, when the record-breaking 2007-08 run-up in grain prices began.'

Emissions of greenhouse gases like CO2 from burning fossil fuels trap more of the sun's energy. Climate experts expected the number and intensity of heat waves and droughts to increase as a result. In 2009, heat and fire killed hundreds in Australia during the worst drought in more than century, which devastated the country's agriculture sector. In 2003, a European heat wave killed 53,000 people but as it occurred late in the summer crop, yields were not badly affected.

If a heat wave like Russia's were centred around the grain- producing regions near Chicago or Beijing, the impacts could be many times worse because each of these regions produce five times the amount of grain as Russia does, says Brown. Such an event could result in the loss of 100 to 200 million tonnes of grain with unimaginable affects on the world's food supply.

'Russia's heat wave is a wake-up call to the world regarding the vulnerability of the global food supply,' he said.

The global climate is warming and most food crops are both heat and drought sensitive. Rice yields have already fallen by 10-20 percent over the last 25 years in parts of Thailand, Vietnam, India and China due to global warming, new research has shown. Data from 227 fully-irrigated farms that grow 'green revolution' crops are suffering significant yield declines due to warming temperatures at night, researchers found.

'As nights get hotter, rice yields drop,' reported Jarrod Welch of the University of California at San Diego and colleagues in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) Aug. 9. Previous studies have shown this result in experimental plots, but this is the first under widespread, real-world conditions.

With such pressures on the world's food supply it is simply wrong-headed to use 25 percent of U.S. grain for ethanol as a fuel for cars, said Brown.

'Ethanol subsidies must be phased out and real cuts in carbon emissions made and urgently,' he said.


Commonwealth Games OC justifies deal with Fast Track

Stung by the CAG's interim report which has found discrepancies in some deals, the CWG Organising Committee on Thursday defended its broadcasting rights deal with Fast Track despite a high commission paid to them, saying the UK company had doubled the revenue target.

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) in its interim inspection report has pointed out that Fast Track was preferred over Sports Marketing and Management (SMAM) despite a high comission and thus OC lost on revenue generation.

SMAM had offered its services for 12.5 per cent while OC gave 15 per cent to Fast Track.

OC secretary general, Mr Lalit Bhanot, said it was a well thought out decision to award the deal to Fast Track as they did not want to give too many contracts to SMAM, which already had bagged the sponsorship contract.

"Fast Track is a well known company in this field and we have to ensure that company which has the experience is given the job. They had done it in Melbourne and other Commonwealth Games. It was a very wise (decision) that we did not put all the eggs in one basket," Mr Bhanot said.

"Fast Track has almost doubled the revenue we targetted. I think it's fully justified and a proper procedure was followed and it was a decision taken by the Board that not to give both the contract to one firm despite the fact that they were charging less.

"But now the end result is that we have achieved double the target... we have earned more," he said.

The OC had recently scrapped its sponsorship deal with SMSM on grounds of 'non-performance', a claim that has been refuted by the Australian firm, which said the charges against it are "imaginary".

The CAG report, it is learnt, has also alleged that high profile officials such CWG chief, Mr Mike Fennel and CEO, Mr Mike Hoper, were involved in various discrepancies.

Mr Hooper refused to comment on the developement.

"I have not seen the CAG report myself. I have seen only media reports. I will ask OC to get us a copy of the CAG report. Will comment only after seeing it," Mr Hooper said.




South Africa: 'Children are Dying Needlessly'

Khumalo, who is HIV-positive, had decided not to breastfeed her child, probably because health workers at her local clinic did not educate her about the fact that exclusive breastfeeding reduces the risk of transmitting the virus to the baby. And since Khumalo is unemployed and struggles to make ends meet, she was unable to buy formula for her child.

For months, Khumalo had fed her daughter mainly tea, which did not provide the baby with sufficient nutrition and which she prepared from an unclean water source.

Unfortunately, Khumalo’s case is not an exception. Experts say that young children in South Africa are bearing the brunt of the country’s failure to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) partially due to the state of the country's public health system.

In South Africa, HIV and childhood infections (such as diarrhoea and lower respiratory infections) are the leading causes of death for children under five, according to the South African Child Gauge 2009/2010, an annual review of the situation of children in the country, which was released on Jul. 27 by the Children’s Institute (CI) of the University of Cape Town (UCT).

The report shows clearly that South Africa has failed to reduce child mortality for the past two decades, since 1990. This means that the country will not be able to meet MDG 4, which aims to reduce child mortality by two thirds by 2012.

On other MDG targets for reducing child hunger, HIV and tuberculosis, South Africa is not making any progress, either, the report states. Although there have been some slow improvements for access to basic sanitation, education and gender equality.

'The bottom line is that, currently, children are dying needlessly in South Africa,' warned Professor Haroon Saloojee, head of the division of community paediatrics at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, and one of the authors of the Child Gauge.

Poor child health causes a vicious circle of poverty and death that will have a lasting effect on generations of South Africans. Malnutrition, for example, leads to poor cognitive development, which in turn causes poor school performance, which means that affected children are likely have reduced career opportunities as they enter adulthood and thus a smaller chance to be economically successful and a higher risk of suffering from poverty.

'If we don’t address child health today, we are trapping children in a cycle of ill health and poverty. It is extremely important to break this cycle early on,' cautioned CI commissioning editor Lori Lake. She further noted that the indicators of the Child Gauge report are 'of extreme concern' since they show that young children bear the brunt of South Africa’s failure to address the MDGs.

Despite all this, child health is not made a priority in South Africa. 'We are calling for concerted action across government departments, led by the health department, to urgently improve child health in the country,' said Lake, who blames the 'ongoing and protracted crisis' in South Africa’s public health system for the lack of progress. 'We have known at least since 2000 that we are in trouble, but child health has still not been made a priority,' she lamented.

Health specialists believe South Africa will only achieve true progress in the field of child health if there is sufficient political will to do so. Professor Louis Reynolds, senior specialist at UCT’s School of Child and Adolescent Health, calls on government to 'put child health at the centre of the national development agenda' and ensure coherent action across all sectors of government. 'We need to make budgets available not only for primary health care, but also for sanitation, education and job creation,' he explained.

National health minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi admits that 'there needs to be a renewed commitment to caring for children' if South Africa wants to reduce child mortality and calls on 'communities and health workers, researchers and policy-makers to place children first.' Health experts say they are relieved to see renewed political commitment from the national health department.

But it is not only about allocating more finances towards child health. It is also crucial to better manage available health budgets.

Saloojee says poor quality of basic services are often caused by inefficient management and use of financial and human resources, primarily due to poor leadership and the absence of accountability in the public health care system. The health department should therefore set clear norms and standards for all public health facilities so that they can be held accountable for their performance.

Saloojee suggests that, apart from bigger budgetary allocations towards child health, improved staffing ratios at clinics and community health centres should translate into shorter queues and better performance. He also recommends improving the quality of care at district hospitals through training and support from paediatricians and other health professionals.


80-yr-old struggles for ration

Aug. 11: An octogenarian from Pammal was made to run from pillar to post to prove that his ration card was genuine and not a fake as was branded by the state civil supplies department.

Mr Damodharan, a retired railway employee, has been residing at Anna Nagar, in the south Chennai suburb of Pammal, for the last three decades but last week, when he went to collect supplies from the ration store, the staff sent him away saying that his card was a fake. According to Mr Damodharan, his son had started living separately after getting married in 2004. After that his son’s name was deleted from the card but the officials had put a wrong address in his card.

“When I informed the St. Thomas civil supplies officials about the incorrect address, they corrected it. I was asked to receive ration from the Pammal-2 ration store. During the recent bogus card elimination drive, the officials even verified my card and told me that it was original. However, last week, the ration store staff said my card was a fake,” said Mr Damodharan.

“They also mentioned on the ration store notice board that my card was a fake. I complained to the higher officials and filed a petition,” he added. Admitting the negligence of his staff, Mr Veera Manikandan, assistant commissioner, civil supplies, St. Thomas Mount region, told this newspaper that the store staff was not aware of the ration store rules and regulations.

“It was the fault of the store-keeper. He was appointed recently and is not a trained staff. We have cleared the issue and apologised to Mr Damodharan. He will be provided all the products without fail in future,” he said.



Racism

Image © Understanding Race Racism is the belief that characteristics and abilities can be attributed to people simply on the basis of their race and that some racial groups are superior to others. Racism and discrimination have been used as powerful weapons encouraging fear or hatred of others in times of conflict and war, and even during economic downturns.

Racism is also a very touchy subject for some people, as issues concerning free speech and Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights come into play. Some people argue that talking about supporting racial discrimination and prejudice is just words and that free speech should allow such views to be aired without restriction. Others point out that these words can lead to some very dire and serious consequences (the Nazi government policies being one example).

Race: Are We So Different, Understanding Race, American Anthropological Association (AAA), July 8, 2009

In a short introductory video the Understanding Race project from the American Anthropological Association says race is a powerful idea and an enduring concept, invented by society. It has also fostered inequality and discrimination for centuries, as well as influencing how we relate to other human beings.


Climate Change Affects Biodiversity

The link between climate change and biodiversity has long been established. Although throughout Earth’s history the climate has always changed with ecosystems and species coming and going, rapid climate change affects ecosystems and species ability to adapt and so biodiversity loss increases.

Biodiversity and Climate Change, Convention on Biological Diversity, December, 2009

From a human perspective, the rapid climate change and accelerating biodiversity loss risks human security (e.g. a major change in the food chain upon which we depend, water sources may change, recede or disappear, medicines and other resources we rely on may be harder to obtain as the plants and forna they are derived from may reduce or disappear, etc.).

The UN’s Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, in May 2010, summarized some concerns that climate change will have on ecosystems:

Climate change is already having an impact on biodiversity, and is projected to become a progressively more significant threat in the coming decades. Loss of Arctic sea ice threatens biodiversity across an entire biome and beyond. The related pressure of ocean acidification, resulting from higher concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, is also already being observed.

Ecosystems are already showing negative impacts under current levels of climate change … which is modest compared to future projected changes…. In addition to warming temperatures, more frequent extreme weather events and changing patterns of rainfall and drought can be expected to have significant impacts on biodiversity.

Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2010), Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, May, 2010, p.56

Some species may benefit from climate change (including, from a human perspective, an increases in diseases and pests) but the rapid nature of the change suggests that most species will not find it as beneficial as most will not be able to adapt.


Addressing Biodiversity Loss

At the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development (the “Earth Summit”), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was born.

192 countries, plus the EU, are now Parties to that convention. In April 2002, the Parties to the Convention committed to significantly reduce the loss of biodiversity loss by 2010.


Massive Extinctions From Human Activity

Despite knowing about biodiversity’s importance for a long time, human activity has been causing massive extinctions. As the Environment New Service, reported back in August 1999 (previous link): “the current extinction rate is now approaching 1,000 times the background rate and may climb to 10,000 times the background rate during the next century, if present trends continue [resulting in] a loss that would easily equal those of past extinctions.” (Emphasis added)

A major report, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, released in March 2005 highlighted a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the diversity of life on Earth, with some 10-30% of the mammal, bird and amphibian species threatened with extinction, due to human actions. The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) added that Earth is unable to keep up in the struggle to regenerate from the demands we place on it.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) notes in a video that many species are threatened with extinction. In addition,

  • 75% of genetic diversity of agricultural crops has been lost
  • 75% of the world’s fisheries are fully or over exploited
  • Up to 70% of the world’s known species risk extinction if the global temperatures rise by more than 3.5°C
  • 1/3rd of reef-building corals around the world are threatened with extinction
  • Every second a parcel of rainforest the size of a football field disappears
  • Over 350 million people suffer from severe water scarcity

Is this the kind of world we want, it asks? After all, the short video concludes, our lives are inextricably linked with biodiversity and ultimately its protection is essential for our very survival:

What kind of world do we want?, IUCN, December 2008

In different parts of the world, species face different levels and types of threats. But overall patterns show a downward trend in most cases.

Proportion of all assessed species in different threat categories of extinction risk on the IUCN Red List, based on data from 47,677 species. Source: IUCN, pie chart compiled by Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2010) Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, May 2010

As explained in the UN’s 3rd Global Biodiversity Outlook, the rate of biodiversity loss has not been reduced because the 5 principle pressures on biodiversity are persistent, even intensifying:

  1. Habitat loss and degradation
  2. Climate change
  3. Excessive nutrient load and other forms of pollution
  4. Over-exploitation and unsustainable use
  5. Invasive alien species

Most governments report to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity that these pressures are affecting biodiversity in their country (see p. 55 of the report).

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) maintains the Red List to assess the conservation status of species, subspecies, varieties, and even selected subpopulations on a global scale.

Extinction risks out pace any conservation successes. Amphibians are the most at risk, while corals have had a dramatic increase in risk of extinction in recent years.

Threat status of comprehensively assessed species by IUCN. Source: IUCN, compiled by Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2010) Global Biodiversity Outlook 3, May 2010, p. 28 (visit for larger image)

The reasons vary from overuse of resource by humans, climate change, fragmented habitats, habitat destruction, ocean acidification and more.

Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 official video, Convention on Biological Diversity, UNEP, May 2010

Research of long term trends in the fossil record suggests that natural speed limits constrain how quickly biodiversity can rebound after waves of extinction. Hence, the rapid extinction rates mean that it could take a long time for nature to recover.

Consider the following observations and conclusions from established experts and institutions summarized by Jaan Suurkula, M.D. and chairman of Physicians and Scientists for Responsible Application of Science and Technology (PSRAST), noting the impact that global warming will have on ecosystems and biodiversity:

The world environmental situation is likely to be further aggravated by the increasingly rapid, large scale global extinction of species. It occurred in the 20th century at a rate that was a thousand times higher than the average rate during the preceding 65 million years. This is likely to destabilize various ecosystems including agricultural systems.

…In a slow extinction, various balancing mechanisms can develop. Noone knows what will be the result of this extremely rapid extinction rate. What is known, for sure, is that the world ecological system has been kept in balance through a very complex and multifaceted interaction between a huge number of species. This rapid extinction is therefore likely to precipitate collapses of ecosystems at a global scale. This is predicted to create large-scale agricultural problems, threatening food supplies to hundreds of millions of people. This ecological prediction does not take into consideration the effects of global warming which will further aggravate the situation.

Industrialized fishing has contributed importantly to mass extinction due to repeatedly failed attempts at limiting the fishing.

A new global study concludes that 90 percent of all large fishes have disappeared from the world’s oceans in the past half century, the devastating result of industrial fishing. The study, which took 10 years to complete and was published in the international journal Nature, paints a grim picture of the Earth’s current populations of such species as sharks, swordfish, tuna and marlin.

…The loss of predatory fishes is likely to cause multiple complex imbalances in marine ecology.

Another cause for extensive fish extinction is the destruction of coral reefs. This is caused by a combination of causes, including warming of oceans, damage from fishing tools and a harmful infection of coral organisms promoted by ocean pollution. It will take hundreds of thousands of years to restore what is now being destroyed in a few decades.

…According to the most comprehensive study done so far in this field, over a million species will be lost in the coming 50 years. The most important cause was found to be climate change.

…NOTE: The above presentation encompasses only the most important and burning global environmental problems. There are several additional ones, especially in the field of chemical pollution that contribute to harm the environment or upset the ecological balance.

Jaan Suurkula, World-wide cooperation required to prevent global crisis; Part one— the problem, Physicians and Scientists for Responsible Application of Science and Technology, February 6, 2004 [Emphasis is original]

Additionally, as reported by UC Berkeley, using DNA comparisons, scientists have discovered what they have termed as an “evolutionary concept called parallelism, a situation where two organisms independently come up with the same adaptation to a particular environment.” This has an additional ramification when it comes to protecting biodiversity and endangered species. This is because in the past what we may have considered to be one species could actually be many. But, as pointed out by scientists, by putting them all in one group, it under-represents biodiversity, and these different evolutionarily species would not be getting the protection otherwise needed.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

School education in India expensive than university
(source:www.TimesofIndia.com)

Families in India have to spend more on primary school education of their children, making the fundamental right to basic education for the Indian poor a distant dream, according to a recent UNESCO report.

In contrast, university education, which typically helps the better off students, remains subsidised and costs just the half of the primary school spending.

"Households pay for more than one-quarter, 28 per cent, of the cost to send their children to primary and secondary school. This poses a big barrier for the children of poor families," the report 'Global Education Digest 2007', released by UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS), said.

"Yet at the same time, households assume just 14 per cent of the costs for university education, which typically benefits better off students," it added.

Mapping latest education statistics from primary to tertiary levels in more than 200 countries, the reports focuses on the financing of education and provides a series of indicators to compare spending patterns across countries and levels of education.

The report stressed the need to monitor the balance between public and private expenditure.

"Systems that are overly reliant on private contributions, especially at the primary level of education, raise the risk of excluding students from poorer families," it warns.
Hi Folks,
India, has a demographic advantage over the fast ageing societies of Europe, North America and Japan with half of its population below 25 years of age. It is the youth who need to sustain the economic growth of this country.

Do you think the present education system, terribly infrastructure, low literacy rate and inadequacy of opportunities in higher education, will be able to shoulder this responsibility to sustain the economic growth? If not, what are the measures needed to be taken by policy makers to sustain the economic growth.

On another note, I would also want to know your views regarding the major showstoppers in the present policies of Ministry of Human Resource Department.


Education Reforms- I


As we all know, India is soon going to be the only country with the maximum number of young people in the world. In this context, education takes on a special significance. The following reforms are desirable

1. More emphasis on vocational education. The purpose of education isnt just knowledge acquisition and growth, but also preparation for future life, evryone should be capable of earning their own bread, that is the basic key to empowerment of any section or calss of society

2. Child-centric and contextualised education at the pre-primary level- We realize how de-contextualisted our education has become. Eg. we teach rhymes like "polly put the kettle on" to rural children, they have never heard of a name called polly, they have no idea what a kettle is, and so on. Instead, nursery level and lower primary level education should be a very light,enjoyable and most importantly, undertsandable experience.

Also, teachers at that level are most important, there is provision for nursery teacher training, but its more of theory than actual practice. A special course in child psychology and in-service training for nursery teachers is most essential.

3. At the primary level, most important is reducing the workload. It's all right if they don't know all the world's history and geography and science and math by class 5 !!
Classes 6,7 and 8 are again repitive in nature. Curriculum needs to be streamlined some more. It gets very boring when kids learn the same things over and over again, and it is also a huge waste of time and resources.

Counselling should begin at this age itself, in the pre-adolescent-and-going-to-adolescence stage to prepare them for the future changes.

At a more general level, there needs to be more fund allocation at the primary level. Drinking water facilities, sanitation, mid-day meals etc. Mid-day meal system could do with a lot of improvement, instead of cooking in schools ( it is dangerous in one-room schools and even otheriwse with very small children around) nutritious, pre-packed food or fruit or eggs can be given. Regular inspection is needed about hygiene and working conditions while prepaption of mid-day meals.

At the secondary level, there should be separate vocational streams to choose from. CBSE has introduced a course in finance at class 11 level, it would another stream just like humanities, science and commerce. It a step in the right direction.

Ganesh Sir, i agree it is a healthy trend that teachers are offered jobs in rural areas, but the situation is still very dismal. There was a scheme, i dont know if it still exists, when a postman was made the temorray teacher for the viallges where there was no other option, and it seems to have worked. Teacher training needs some great overhaul, it has become outdated..In urban schools where compuetrs have made a foray for study of every subjects, students find it very funny when even the best-trained teachers (read coming from the best teacher-training colleges) try to teach them with a chart or roller blackboard , which i feel is one of the most outdated teaching aids for public schools, but the most uselful one for govt schools. A better trained tecaher should be able to use all kinds of teaching aids.

Most teachers posts are lying vacant in govt schools because of lack of funds. Govt schools in urban areas have computer rooms, but they are locked because computer teachers haven't been recruited. On the other hand, there are so many 'qualified' teachers, who have no real knowledge or training of their subjects, they are there just because a B.Ed degree is so easily available ..There has to be a stop on the number of private B.Ed colleges that are coming up...schools offer measly salaries to such teachers and the better trained may be left out because they refuse to accept anything lower than a govt scale..this is a kind of unhelthy competition that severely affects the quality of education.

Not just that, a teacher too is overburdened ( contrary to the popular perception that it is a "lighter' job), she has to think of so many new ways n schemes to burden the kids themselves, and that isnt easy! Jokes apart, she is delegated so many extra jobs that she has little time left for the preparation of the subject to be taught the next day, there is a latest thing in teacher recruitment where they almost make us sign a bond that we would not marry if we are unmarried ( atleast for 1-2 yrs), and if one is married, they cannot have a child for 1-2 yrs..if the job is to be taken. The teacher is not even free to teach as she likes, there is the imposed curriculum ( which is also sumtimes full of textual/factual errors) and the sword of finish-thesyllabus-before-its-too-late hanging over the head. All n all, it has to be realized that only a good teacher can bring out the best in students n is very essential to improving the quality of education.

A different approach; maybe at the macro level!-
In this context, it is apt to mention the infamous "vicious three" circle. Health, Poverty and Illiteracy(Education). Each one leads to the other. It is difficult to address anyone one of these without addressing the other two. If people are poor, they cannot afford good health. When health is bad how can they sit in the class room and get educated? Statistics reveal that an average Indian spends 45% of his income on food only. this means that he has lesser Money( when compared to his counterparts in US & European countries) to spend on entertainment and to pursue his intellectual growth. The same is the case with our government. It has less money to be spent on the "vicious three'.Educational cess is one important step in this direction which can improve the situation.
The educational system in the cities and towns is perfectly okay with private and aided instiutes which fill the lacunae. International degrees and schools have raised to the global standards at the primary level.
This is one aspect.
But, apart from all the problems being discussed, is it not a fact that some institutes have become centers for religious propagation and have a proselyting effect on the students???We reap what we sow. Nationality and community feeling should be instilled in today's children.A common ideology and patriotism is lacking.
As far the government schools in rural areas are concerned the government has come up with School Development and Monitoring committees(SDMCs). It is a very good step. But here again politics has crept in.Recently in Karnataka a Head Mistress committed suicide because she was constantly being harrassed(As being anti-dalit) by an SDMC head. So the problem continues...
And also the system of evaluation of students based on the type of answers they give in an examination has some limitations.The answers would be more or less similar. Why not assess a student by the kind or type of question he asks?...this would increase the scientific temparment.

Learning to juggle can change your brain


London: Learning to juggle leads to changes in the white matter of the brain, a study has shown. The Oxford University study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, appears to show connectivity has improved in parts of brain involved in movement-making in juggling. "We tend to think of the brain as being static, or even beginning to degenerate, once we reach adulthood," says lead researcher Heidi Johansen-Berg of Department of Clinical Neurology. "In fact we find the structure of the brain is ripe for change. We’ve shown that it is possible for the brain to condition its own wiring system to operate more efficiently." PTI

‘Self-learners’ creating university of online

Websites, Universities Offer Expert Material Free To Anyone, Anywhere


Few months ago Daniel Conn was scouting the internet wondering how and where he might obtain a degree. At 26, having skipped university when he left school, he was, as he puts it, "a bit unsure of my study skills".
By chance he discovered a website called Open Learn, an offshoot of the Open University (OU), which is in the vanguard of a new era of education. Shortcircuiting tuition fees and over-priced student flats, Open Learn offers expert material, accessible via the internet, free to anyone, anywhere.

Unlike traditional "distance learning" courses, you do not have to register and pay to receive course materials. You just click and pick from a vast array of subjects -say, an introductory course on life in the Palaeozoic era to one on the meaning and value of textiles in Ghana.
Although it is not designed to deliver a degree, it is a start. "I found the material to be very engaging and reassuring," said Conn, who tried units on IT and computing.
"I wanted to see how I would cope. I studied for about a month. I couldn’t put it down."

He was so encouraged that he signed up for a full OU degree course, which he started this month. "A week in and I don’t regret it," said Conn, who plans to study in the evenings and at weekends while continuing to work as an administrator at a garage in Brighton.
While Open Learn is a natural evolution for OU, what is striking is how some of the most prestigious universities in the world are moving in the same direction, making first-class educational resources available for free. This month You-Tube began carrying mate
rial from 45 universities in Europe and Israel on a strand it has dedicated to education.
"YouTube EDU is a global classroom where ... everyone can watch and engage with a range of videos that have been uploaded by some of the world’s great universities," said a spokeswoman.
Even more far-reaching, in many users’ eyes, is the light-speed expansion of iTunes U1—a sort of university in the sky hosted by the online music store. There you can find lectures by professors at Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, Stanford, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and many others.

Among last week’s most popular downloads were lectures entitled Einstein’s ethics; your brain on jazz: neural substrates of spontaneous improvisation; and building a business: entrepreneurship and the ideal business plan.
In just a year of posting material on iTunes U, Oxford has seen well over 1m downloads of lectures or other academic works. "Podcasts that were scattered on the university’s departmental sites are now on iTunes," said Carolyne Culver, head of strategic communications at the university. "We are getting many more downloads."
Word is spreading fast as a glance at Twitter last Friday revealed. Tweeter
drdav99 wrote: "just found out about iTunes U. this is incredible." Another tweeter, known as bfalke, claimed: "iTunes U may be one of the most amazing tools on the internet."
As governments struggle to fund traditional university places— and this weekend 170,000 UK students starting a new university year are still waiting for loans to come through—is the internet ready to open up the cloisters of academe?
At the very least, it is reinvigorating the idea of lifelong learning. If you have ever wondered who Euripedes was or where you might find a quark, you can now find a suitable lecture to listen to on your way to the office or sitting at home in front of your PC.

This time last year Marianne Talbot was embarking on a standard series of lectures on philosophy at Oxford University. Her words are still echoing around the world.
"It was a perfectly ordinary lecture I gave to an audience, but the university asked me if I’d mind if they recorded it and made a podcast," said Talbot last week. "The next thing I knew it had hit No1."Her talk, "A romp through the history of philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to the present day," had topped the list of mostdownloaded items on iTunes U.

Children can be taught to imagine away pain: Study



Anew study in the US claims that children can learn to use their imagination to endure stomach pain, research shows.
A relaxation-type CD, asking children to imagine themselves in scenarios like floating on a cloud led to dramatic improvements in abdominal pain.
Researchers from the University of North Carolina and Duke University said the technique worked particularly well in children as they have such fertile imaginations. In this study, the children had 20 minute sessions of “guided imagery” — a technique which prompts the subject to imagine things which will reduce their discomfort, the BBC reported.

One example is letting a special shiny object melt into their hand and then placing their hand on the belly, spreading warmth and light from the hand inside the tummy to make a protective barrier inside that stops anything from irritating it.
Among kids who had used the CDs, 73.3% reported their abdominal pain was reduced by half or more by the end of the course compared with 26.7% in the standard care group. In twothirds, improvements were apparent six months later. AGENCIES

Monumental Asset

Focus on the tourism potential of heritage sites



The Union culture ministry has admitted that as many as 249 heritage sites in the country are being encroached upon. The violated sites include Sher Shah Suri’s tomb in Sasaram, Bihar, and Maratha king Shivaji’s three historic forts at Sindhudurg, Solapur and Raigad. In July last, a spokesperson of the ministry said that out of the 3,675 centrally protected monuments or sites, as many as 35 have simply vanished, because of “urbanisation, commercialisation and routine development work”.
World heritage sites in India are not being given the benefit of that status. Illegal occupation by squatters or commercial establishments is common within the circumscribed ‘no-trespassing’ zone radius of the monument. Monuments continue to be defaced by irresponsible visitors and locals. The world over, monuments are prime tourist attractions and the sites are sustained with revenue from visitor footfalls and merchandising. The local economy thrives on the activity generated by travellers who make the trip not just to gaze at a monument but to also experience whatever else the place has to offer. Should we miss out on all the benefits that can accrue to a heritage site and the region for lack of imagination and initiative?

The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has its hands full, as it were, with documentation, research and plans of conservation. It lacks the imagination and resources to develop heritage sites into much more than ruined remnants of a dead past. The answer is to outsource work relating to maintenance and beautification, security and promotion. The ASI should consider converting as many heritage sites as possible into living monuments, housing visitor centres, libraries and museums, bringing the past alive and making daily maintenance a routine. Event managers and corporate sponsors can help promote and maintain ancient monuments with more imagination, arrange for merchandising souvenirs and boost the local economy by marketing the works of local artisans and craftspersons. A few heritage attractions like Khajuraho and Chidambaram have been able to sustain cultural festivals on their sites, drawing tourists and sponsors; there is no reason why this cannot be replicated in similar destinations across the country.
Ten per cent of employment in the country is generated by tourism that contributes more than 6 per cent of GDP. Tourism can boost the hospitality industry and its subsidiary feeder industries including transport and communication, food and entertainment. All this can be promoted by maintaining our heritage. Let’s not lose it.

Green hideaway in heart of Chennai

Rs 8Cr Project Coming Up At The Erstwhile Drive-In Restaurant Site On Cathedral Road

M Guansekaran TNN


Chennai: Amidst the city’s concrete jungle, a green hideaway, a veritable microcosm of multiple gardens—rainforest, rock garden, butterfly garden, a grove of palms, bamboo garden, fern house, herbal garden, gazebo and many more—will soon come up.
With the consultant, Rajendran Associates, submitting its detailed project report for the world class botanical garden at the 18-acre site near Anna flyover (where Woodlands Drive-In restaurant was located, and the premises opposite to it), the agricultural engineering department has invited tenders for the Rs 7.91 crore first phase work.

Soon after taking possession of the prime land, where the drive-in restaurant and the agri-horticultural society used to function, after a prolonged legal battle, chief minister M Karunanidhi has asked officials to establish a world class botanical garden and horticultural research centre. Agriculture minister Veerapandi S Arumugam said it had been decided not to lease or rent out the land. Director of horticulture B Chandra Mohan told The Times of India that the work would be executed at the eightacre site (the erstwhile Woodlands spot) in the first phase
and was expected to be completed in a year. “We have decided not to cut any of the tall and old trees on the site and the park would be developed around the trees.
All the trees including 68 mast trees, 45 wild acacia, 10 nuna and 15 wild trees will be preserved and serve as live specimens to botany students, scientists and enthusiasts,” he said. The concept will be unique, entirely different from the upcoming Adyar Poonga or Marina beautification project. The tenders will be opened on November 4 but the ground work to establish the green canopy would begin after the outcome of the legal suit in the apex court. There will be a pathway beneath Cathedral Road to link the two wings and there would be no big buildings, sources said.
Explaining its recreation value, Chandra Mohan said the creation of a unique urban
park, with a combination of scenic natural settings, scientific and practical education, training sites and recreational options, would add attract more visitors. Besides a children play area and food court, the park will have an amphitheatre and space to conduct flower show. Miniatures with exotic themes and names—aroma garden, Zen garden, topiary garden, water garden, maze park, herbal garden, rock garden and tree houses—will be other important features of the garden. It will have a greenhouse and a nursery inside the premises. The consultants suggest nearly 9,000 shrubs, 200 trees and 6,875 ground covers like lily, coconut palm, snow bush and helconia dwarf to be planted. As per the plan, the entire area will have water-harvesting facility and smaller water bodies too. “We are planning for tree walks, board walk (where delicate plants underneath) and rope walk,” Chandra Mohan said, adding that the project w o u l d e n a b l e p e o p l e t o s t u d y , u n d e r - s t a n d a n d enjoy nature.

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