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Paperless opening of Colleges across India

Government recently announced that efforts are being taken to make the process of opening the new engineering and management institutions across India paperless, as a part of the educational reforms being undertaken. It will now be possible for the applicants to apply online. Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister Kapil Sibal told that the applicants would be required to produce 42 different documents before receiving letter of approval, but without dispatch of hard copies or visiting the ministry. The institutions would be required to reveal the physical infrastructure, faculty details and courses on offer along with director's credential.

All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE) Chairman S. S. Mantha told that the initiative is to introduce and enhance transparency, efficiency and swiftness in the process of decision making. The portal is to be launched on January 10, to make the process easier. It will also have provision for students to register their grievances directly to AICTE and the HRD ministry through this platform. All the technical students in existing and upcoming institutions too will have their own identity numbers to make things more transparent in the college level.

Online programmes to be shared between Ohio, Minnesota Higher Education Systems

Partnering to work together, Ohio and Minnesota Higher Education Systems have formally agreed to share tools, services, planning, and implementation strategies to boost their online student services. Consisting of a number of public campuses, the University System of Ohio and Minnesota State Colleges & Universities, have signed the memorandum of understanding to speed-up the rollout of online and hybrid courses in their respective programs.

The Ohio system will provide its E 4 ME course developed by the Ohio Learning Network, a month-long introduction to distance learning that can be adapted to another institution's needs. Adults who are 25 yeas or more with some college education, who have not yet completed a degree or a certificate course, form the main targets for the course. Electronic portfolio and eFolio Minnesota are the tools of the Minnesota system that will be shared and which allows students to share their writing, academic, and career documents with teachers and others. Its 'Goals, Planning = Success' (GPS) LifePlan application, which gives students as well as Minnesota residents an electronic tool to integrate academic and career planning into the electronic portfolio program, will also be shared.

Orphaned, Vulnerable to get New HI TECH school

In form of a new hope, new hi-tech schools are to be provided for the orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC), with world class education and life skills is nearing completion at Ndlembeni area, near Sigombeni in the Manzini region. During the first phase of construction work, over E2 million in donor funds have been used in the construction work. The school, whose vision is to provide excellent education to learners with a bias to Information and Communication Technology (ICT), Mathematics, Science will also offer and promote Arts, Culture and Sport, as extra curricular activities. An effort will be made to ensure that the children will be equipped with agricultural skills at a tender age and engage in farming activities for their own food and sale of whatever surplus.

The school is to open later in the month and is to see the first intake of about 350 learners. Volunteer teachers who are experts in computers, ICT, mathematics and sciences, have committed to come to the country and spend some years as teachers in the school. Furthermore, these children are to be exposed to the world through exchange programmes where they visit other countries to gain exposure, knowledge and skills so that they may develop their communities upon return. This will be under the banner of 'Academic Adoption'.

Creativity, Innovation in New School Curriculum

The teaching and learning processes in education in Malaysia are to see incorporation of factors of creativity, innovation and living skills, under the new school curriculum which is currently under review, reported the Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin. Muhyiddin, the Education Minister, told that this would include the transformation of areas such as curriculum content, organisation, pedagogy and classroom approaches, to enhance the effectiveness for harnessing the students' creativity and innovative potentials. He said the transformation was essential as curriculum was one of the important variables of school effectiveness and the pathway to educational excellence.

At the 23rd International Congress For School Effectiveness and Improvement Conference (ICSEI) 2010, he mentioned that the changes in the school curriculum were a must as a response to changing demand and expectations for quality education. He said quality teachers could underpin school performance and determine students' success. At the conference, Muhyiddin told that the four-day event themed 'Empowering Schools for Learning: From Improvement Policy to Effective Practice' was extremely relevant to the current demand and expectation for quality education. About 200 papers will be presented and a symposium conducted during the congress.

National film festival organized at AMU

A national film festival of short films and documentaries titled 'Filmsaaz' 09' was organized by the Aligarh Muslim University recently. Winner students were given prizes by Muzaffar Ali, noted film-maker. 'Films are a powerful medium to revolutionize the society,' said Muzaffar Ali.

'In the present scenario Indian cinema had lost its tradition and sub-standard films were being produced,' added Ali. Muzaffar Ali was appreciative of the films directed by the young students.

National Shared services under consideration by Universities

It was reported by the Joint Information Systems Committee that it will investigate a national shared services infrastructure for universities and colleges, along with other shared and managed services options in an effort to cut costs and spread expertise across further and higher education, according to its strategy document for 2010-12. The committee ensured that it would continue spending on existing infrastructure, including the Janet network, for development and upgrades. Other commitments that committee made included enhancing the efficiency and cost effectiveness of management information systems.

JISC explained that significant returns can be gained from the investments in more flexible corporate systems that complement and support new ways of working, over a particular time duration. Cloud computing will also be investigated by Jisc, to explore the potential for institutions and individuals to access resources online, without the need to store them locally or purchase them outright. It was also reported that software-as-a-service offers the ability for institutions to use sophisticated software on a flexible basis, removing the high cost in time and money involved in buying and owning it.

BETT 2010 to have Stone Group as IT Research Group

The results of the research completed by the education sector IT specialist Stone Group, will be launched on first day of BETT 2010. The technology provider Stone Group has recently completed a market research study into the use of IT within education. The results of the research by the education sector IT specialist will be presented as a white paper at BETT 2010, the world's largest educational technology event which runs from 13 – 16 January 2010 at Olympia, London.

The research included sample of the opinions of IT decision-makers in UK schools, academies and colleges, and examines the education sector's concerns surrounding issues such as IT budgeting and strategy, purchase decision influencers and the barriers to delivery of satisfactory levels of IT uptake within education. The former is to, also, include the industry's current position regarding the discussions on IT outsourcing, managed services, IT security and the importance of IT recycling. The Stone Group is also to launch a a series of new hardware and software products at BETT 2010 – full details will be available on stand H39 on 13 January 2010.

Include the excluded to higher education, urges Prof Devy

The country has progressed to create over 350 universities and over 16,000 colleges after the end of its colonial suppression, yet it continues to fail to stem the loss of languages and dialects, said Professor G.N. Devy, eminent literary scholar and a cultural ambassador of India, who was honoured by innumerable national and international awards for his dedicated work for the tribals in the country.  “It is a phonocide, with far more damaging effects than genocide”, he said. This loss of language or 'Aphasia' has led to exclusion of the majority of people from higher education and only the 5% are enjoying it today, he added. He was delivering today the first of the IGNOU Silver Jubilee Lecture Series on 'Aphasia, Amnesia and Inequalities : Narratives of Marginalisation', There will be at least one lecture every month in the series slated for the year, at Indira Gandhi National Open University auditorium. 

 The lecture offered a comment on construction of “knowledge” during the colonial period leading to a loss of correspondence between “production of knowledge” and the cultural context within which the knowledge thus produced came to be situated.  Prof Devy was relating to his decades-long experience for developing the tribal cultures and ethnicity to point out how several inappropriate descriptive categories came to be employed for the social narratives. He added that this inappropriate influences are at work to institute new processes of fragmentation in terms of 'tribal' and 'notified' communities. It is an onslaught onto an already fragmented society of the ethnic dialects and liguistic expressions.  Delving into the dialectical diversity of the country, its complex “spectrum” and lack of easy access to higher education, he said all are the results of the three colonial legacies, Aphasia, Amnesia and Inequalities. “Loss is not for the minor tongues, some major languages also lost identity, particularly in the younger generation who have lost all connections with the written language of their origin”, he stressed. He defined Amnesia as the loss of the medium from the content of learning.

Referring to Macaulay's 1935 minutes pronounced at the British Parliament in 1832, Prof Devy said the higher education was made accessible to three universities of the country, and not everywhere. That was an effective way to deny access to higher education. The colonial masters were there to decide who should go for the Higher Education and who should not. To stem this attempt was first made at Jadavpur University by setting up a cell for study scopes of Higher Education for majority Indians. The institutes of learning worked to induce cultural amnesia, he said.  Touching upon inequalities he said that the issue of inequalities rises from locations of a person. Denial of Higher Education is the real weapon to ensure inequality. Marginalisation far outnumber the dominant members of the dominants, who formed the 5% at best. That dominant status is still continuing in the country. Even as we find Muslims, who according to the 2001 census form 16.4% of the entire population totaling about 17.5 crore do not get enough access to higher education.

The Denotified Adivasis and Nomadic Tribals (DANTs) are also denied access to any of the over 350 universities or 16,000 colleges that the country is boasting of. We only hope this figure grows better towards improvement when the country will have about 1,000 more universities in about ten years time, and IGNOU is a strong step forward to that direction, he said. Prof Devy charted a number of challenges. Opening of more colleges in rural India is a solution to stem the marginalization of disadvantaged. It is a challenge. He mentioned that of over 16,000 colleges in the country only 10 are in rural India.  Another challenge is to close the gap of the rural and urban students. “We have to grapple with a multiple layers of denials to tribal people and other  disadvantaged groups, and “this is a complex challenge”, he said.  Lauding Prof Devy's contribution to help the inclusion of the excluded in Indian society, IGNOU Vice Chancellor Professor VN Rajasekharan Pillai said in his presidential address: “Purpose of the universities is to include the excluded. We at IGNOU have started a move towards that direction. We are working to ensure inclusive growth through inclusive education. Deprivation of any kind leads to conflicts and inequalities in that society. We are firm at our conviction to remove that at our level.”




Special Hub, New Industrial Policy by Delhi Govt

On Monday, the Delhi Cabinet approved the new industrial policy, the first one in last 27 years. With identification of education, fashion designing, financial services and IT as industries, the policy promises to revolutionise Delhi's industrial scene. Additionally, separate hi-tech hubs for these service industries are being planned and the government's role will include allotting land and providing infrastructure.

It was reported that the current manufacturing-based industrial set-up in Delhi, encourages migration of labour, while skilled workers look for work in service industries in Noida and Gurgaon. The new industrial policy is to entail a fashion hub, education hub, IT hub, and Gems & Jewellery SEZ. The industry will have links to the fashion, technology and design park. Legal services, accounting, auditing, architecture, engineering, advertising and educational services like technical diploma institutes, engineering universities or institutes, and management institutes and universities will also be classified as industries.

‘e-Learning Ghana’ Launched

'e-Learning Ghana' to offer a wide variety of high quality affordable e-learning courses has been launched in Ghana by 2Ti Solutions and BusyInternet.

'e-learning Ghana' will cover a wide range of technical IT and business Skills topics. It will over 1200 courses and an additional forty to fifty new courses will be added every quarter. The primary objective is to provide customers with extremely affordable pricing combined with world-class quality, resulting in outstanding value. 'e-Learning Ghana' will be available from BusyInternet throughout the day and all the days. It will ensure that its users are able to maximise benefits that on-line learning materials offer. More information about the programme are available at www.elearningghana.com

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