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eCourse for UP Technical University by IIT

Students studying in undergraduate programmes offered by the UP Technical University (UPTU) can soon access around 500 web-based and video courses on various engineering streams. All these courses have been designed by the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Bangalore and seven Indian Institute of Technology (IITs) under the National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL). This course has been designed for BTech students by IITs and has been compiled into 18 segments. The UP Government was asked by the Central Government to accept these courses in engineering colleges to enhance the quality of teaching. Colleges affiliated by the UPTU have also been asked to implement these courses. The state government has also requested the Centre to develop these courses in Hindi.

'These courses will first be introduced in the university campus. A virtual lab for the same is being developed that is expected to be operational by July,' said J. P. Pandey, additional examination controller UPTU. 'All colleges under UPTU have been directed to introduce these courses for BTech students, because these web and video based courses developed by faculties of the best institutes in country and are extremely useful for engineering students,' added J. P. Pandey.

Wireless Internet at University of Arizona supported by internal loan

A $4.5 million internal loan has helped the University of Arizona to push forward a wireless Internet project.

Students arriving next month in this university will be able to log on from personal laptops from several sites around campus. . The system will be password-protected. The university officials expect that both student unions, UA Main Library, UA Mall, Science and Engineering Library, the Integrated Learning Centre and some classrooms will be wireless hot spots. Professors of the university increasingly rely on the Internet to offer quizzes, examinations and study. University officials are developing a campus policy that will dictate wireless use. An annual $65 student fee will pay for the wireless network and other library and technology initiatives.

ADB loan to modernise Mongolia’s education system

Asian Development Bank (ADB) will help boost job prospects for graduates in Mongolia through a $13 million loan to improve the quality and relevance of education. < ?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

 

The project will improve teaching and learning environments in primary and secondary schools by rehabilitating facilities and providing furniture and educational equipment in about 45 schools. At least 30 schools will also be upgraded with ICT equipment and other teaching facilities to serve as models for effective teaching. Nationwide, about 560,000 students

ICT use lag at Ugandan universities

A new report revealed that universities in Uganda allocate the least amount of money to finance education and training based on information and communication technologies in East Africa. In a study comparing 48 institutions in the region, the E-readiness Survey of East African Universities, 2008 report, released in Kampala on Tuesday shows that universities including Makerere University spend less than Shs24.8 million on every 1,000 students per year to facilitate ICT-enabled learning. The research, which assessed ICT financing as one of the indicators of readiness to implement technology-aided education, was based on 10 universities in Uganda including Kyambogo, Busoga, Gulu, Nkumba, and Uganda Christian University, in addition to responses from 95,550 students.To be competitive, the study suggests that the universities should spend between Shs48 million and Shs70 million ($37,000) per every 1,000 students to purchase Internet bandwidth. The measure of ICT financing in the institutions was based on Internet affordability and the amount of money each university spends on purchasing Internet capacity.

ICT Minister Aggrey Awori (R) addressing participants at Speak Resort Munyonyo during the launch of the e-Readiness and ICT Accession Survey Report of 50 East African Universities. The low expenditure by the universities means that they spend less than one per cent of their annual budgets on buying computers, broadband and associated communication tools, according to Tim Waema, an Associate Professor in the School of Computing and Informatics in the University of Nairobi, one of the study researchers. Despite the general poor ranking, Uganda Christian University stood out as the most committed to ICT financing followed by Makerere University Business School and the Islamic University in Uganda. Universities were urged to increase their ICT financing to three per cent of their annual institutional budgets.

5 ICATT centres to train teachers to be established by IGNOU

There is a considerable need to train and equip teachers with appropriate technology. IGNOU has decided to set up five ICATT (Institute for Competency Advancement for Teachers through Technology) centres across the country, told a top official.'These institutions will be established in five places in North, East, West, South and North-East regions under Private-Public Partnership (PPP) schemes,' IGNOU Vice Chancellor V N Rajasekharan Pillai. There is a need for competency advancement of teachers through appropriate integration of technology and with this objective in mind, IGNOU has decided to establish these ICATT centres, which have been approved, he added.

The percentage of teachers using technology is much less than the percentage of students using technology. It is the real fact and therefore we have to look at distribute mechanism by which teachers are to be trained, Pillai said. Even for existing teachers after every five years the knowledge for concerned field becomes irrelevant, he said. Overall, purpose of ICT integration is to enhance quality of teaching learning process in the classroom as well as to enhance quantity of education delivery and that is where ICT for teacher education and competency advancement for teachers has to be utilised, told Pillai.

Practicing e-content:Bringing Excellence in English Language Training : Vivek Agarwal, Chief Executive Officer, LIQVID, India

‘LIQVID’, the e-learning company, which by definition means to take the shape of the mould, is built upon the idea of learning that takes the shape of the learner. To create effective and enjoyable learning experiences for people everywhere, through the use of technology is the objective that Liqvid carries forward. Vivek Agarwal, the Chief Executive Officer of Liqvid, comes up-front in this space sharing the role, the vision and the contribution of the company to the entire gamut of e-learning. Speaks to Manjushree Reddy of Digital Learning on how he uses his brain today to create a scalable model of education and learning for hundred of million of student in India

You are one of the founders of eGurucool. Will you please detail some of your contribution to e-learning world through eGurucool?

eGurucool was lunched in 1999. It is an e-learning company, designed to help students preparing different exams, board exams as well as test preparations like IIT, Medical, etc and all predominantly happening online. We had a few portals where students can do study, we had a massive infrastructure of technology and processes, which allowed us to create very large content, and also we had a very high power editorial board in conjunction with the technology team who created a very sound pedagogy for online learning. We raised a lot of venture capitals through it.

What is the core vision of Liqvid and how do you see e-learning customers benefiting from that?

We are not a technology company engaged in e-learning, rather we are a learning company which leverages technology. There is also the fundamental belief that pedagogy precedes technology. If we use technology for the sake of using, it doesn’t work. That is one of the prime reason for which e-learning has not worked yet the way it should work. The use should be in a framework of ‘what is your objective, what is your programme, then create a programme according to that’.

Please elaborate on the products or services Liqvid has in its stock for the e-learners. We offer a versatile range of development services and products to meet varying needs of customers. We provide content services like courseware design, content integration, blended learning, content conversion, SCORM and localisation services. We provide content assessment, learning management and other technology services and other learning support services like e-tutoring. Coming to the products, we want to be specialist in English language training provider in India market. English Edge is the product, which is a combination of technology and content. We have an association with BBC for this. For the first time BBC has done a blended learning programme. We use BBC’s contents, its methodology and pedagogical approach too. The product is focused to a group who know some English. We want to go in a different level, want to go to a different market size, and want to go to different geographies. Our product is sort listed by British Council’s worldwide competition. Last year, the product was in top 10 worldwide.

How are you associated with British Council for English Edge?

British Council incubated the product. So there is an association, there is learning that is happening and there is credibility with British Council.

Tell us about the target and reach of English Edge. Is it something that can be used by people from rural India also?

Everyone is our target, right from the guy who goes to the kiosk to access his land records to the persons in the educational institutions. Right now we focus to India only and in the next step we will go to the other parts of the world. Coming to its reach, we have sold this to many engineering colleges around the country and we have been in talks with many others too. We have around 25 franchise centers all around India. We are working with several call centers, and engineering colleges. We expect at the end of the year there will be some 15000 learners who would have gone for using this programme. But we have not reached to the schools yet. In fact, we are not targeting schools in this way. Schools in India need a different solution. We need to work more on our product before we launch it in schools.

Is there any plan or strategy to scale up the product?


We have plans to make the programme available to everyone in the country. The strategy is to work with people who have existing distributing channels. We are specialist in technology, in content. So we are certainly interested to work with people for example, who are having Internet kiosks or that sort of existing infrastructure, who run programmes and need English language support.

How will you analyse the e-learning market in India in comparison to the global market, in terms of its size and growth?

E-learning market in India is of 2/3 different types. The pocket size is where the software companies who use e-learning fair extensively. Companies like Infosys, Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services, BPOs are looking at it very progressively. Those are India’s cutting edge companies who are looking at e-learning in a big way. Increasingly there is the other segment of some manufacturing companies who are having a range of options and we are discussing with several of them who do a lot of customer service and sales training. There is a fair amount of it going on, although it’s definitely very small in comparison to US market. US market is huge and we are all in the race to tap that market.

What are the challenges you face while imparting the services?

Infrastructure is one challenge. We have the product, but getting the right distributing channel is the challenge. There is some problem at policy level also. There are so many plans and announcements like rolling out of community service centres, but implementation should follow immediately. The other big challenge is, the e-learning companies like us need to be more open to experimentation and innovation. We have set up a dedicated R&D team. We are making investments, we are doing innovations, we are taking risks, which is why I think we are far ahead of the curve than most people are. We have done satellite-based training, computer based training, pod casting, m-learning, simulations; you name the technology and we definitely are into that. So now the biggest challenge is to reach out with all those to the people and stay ahead.

Would you like to make any remark or demand on the policy front?

There are two things to say here. First, people need to recognise that private sector has a huge role to play. And second is, it cannot be done otherwise. For me, the government should prescribe the standards and make people do things according to those standards. We will be benefited if the market is large, if everybody including school students given access to the services. Today government has 90% of schools. Without it becoming proact

Barriers are many, but conquering follows : Shyam Sankar Prasad, State Project Director, Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, Jharkhand

 Can we get an idea about the major interventions made so far under SSA programme in the state of Jharkhand?

The first effort SSA programme made in this line is to bring the out of school children back in to school. The number of such children was 13 lakhs in 2001 and we have brought it down to 3,88,000 at present. We still try to bring this left out part to different schools such as Kendriya schools, Kasturba Gandhi Avasiya Vidyalaya, Bridge schools etc. Besides this we have taken up fall out cases among girls, specially scheduled castes (SCs) and scheduled tribes (STs) who due to abject poverty leave studying and are compelled to remain inside the doors. This problem is being tackled by Kasturba Gandhi Avasiya Vidyalaya. As of now 74 such schools are situated in the state and owing to its success factor 81 more such schools are coming up with the grant by the government of India. Accommodating some 100 girl students each, these schools conduct classes for them from 6-8 am. Today about 6000 girls study in the Kasturba Gandhi Schools. Another plan is drawn for children who are working in hotels or engaged in garbage picking and are in the age group of 14-16. The back to schools intervention for them provides 2-3 hours

HCL Digischool to enhance learning in Indian Schools

HCL Infosystems Ltd, India’s premier information enabling, ICT System Integration company announced the launch of ‘HCL DigiSchool‘, its state-of-the-art solutions designed for Indian schools that offer modern multimedia classroom with world class content. HCL announced this new initiative at ‘eIndia’, a three day international conference on ICT applications being held at Hyderabad.

The event brings together Industry, media and education analysts from across the globe. HCL Digischool solutions are designed & customized as per Indian school curriculum including all K12 boards. Over the years, classroom has evolved for both teachers and students.

HCL’s latest learning solution HCL DigiSchool will offer students an opportunity to not just learn according to the curriculum but also give a chance to improve their IT competency. The key features that this solution offers are digital multimedia asset library covering all major aspects in K-12 category.

Build on the latest eLearning standards, the state of the art module effectively integrates Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM) which is a collection of standards and specifications for web-based e-learning. SCROM compliant Learning Management Systems (LMS) helps in effective lesson planning and content management and seamless integration of various features like interactive white board, student response system and online examination module.

Apart from these, features such as HCL language lab not only help students to learn English language but also helps in improving pronunciation, communication skills, fluency and accent. HCL’s DigiSchool also offers the school management software that fits the unique needs of the department in the school thus improving the overall functioning and efficiency of the system.

The best fit of the school management software are student management information systems, parent management information system, teacher management information system, administration management information system and school bus tracking solutions that help schools to keep a track on their large fleet of buses thus improving the safety of the students.

Coming 10 years to see Degree College for every block, says Punjab CM

For improving the reach of higher education in rural areas of the state, the Punjab Government has announced that a degree college will be opened in all rural development blocks in the next 10 years. This was announced by Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal at a meeting held here to evaluate the functioning of the Higher Education Department. The meeting also decided the outlay on the rural colleges, which would be charged from the Rural Development Fund. In this series of meetings, the Chief Minister will review of the working of various departments; focus on the problems facing the colleges and universities and give suggestions to sort out the problems as well.

Badal also ordered senior officers to visit at least two colleges in a month for the evaluation and solving of the problems of the colleges. He directed to fill the post of lecturers and principals before the next academic session. Instructions were also issued to clear the all dues and arrears in the next quarter.

Kapil Sibal and US Secretary of State Launch the Expanded US- India Higher Education Dialouge

Recalling the considerable progress achieved in bilateral educational relations, Union Human Resource Development Minister Shri Kapil Sibal and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton today reaffirmed the strategic partnership between India and the United States.

 

The partnership reflects meaningful dialogue, cooperation, and engagement in the field of higher education, and launched a new phase in this partnership. The two leaders acknowledged the immense possibilities for further collaboration between the two countries given the inherent dynamism, emerging challenges, and numerous exciting opportunities available for sharing and growing together.

 

Expressing their commitment to that vision, Shri Sibal and Secretary Clinton launched the expanded U.S.-India Higher Education Dialogue as an annual bilateral event to map out strategies for partnership in the field of education between the two countries. The Dialogue should identify areas for mutually beneficial exchanges and provide a platform for intense and meaningful collaboration among academia, the private sector, and government on both sides. The plan is for the Dialogue to be held alternately in the United States and India.

Shri Sibal and Secretary Clinton emphasized that access to and the development of technology and skills are cross-cutting requirements to meet the challenges that their two countries face. They acknowledged the fruitful collaboration between India and the United States in the areas of education, research, and innovation and noted its contribution to the development of technologies, skills, and knowledge-based societies in both countries. Both leaders emphasized the need to enhance this collaboration.

                                                                            

The two leaders expressed satisfaction with the progress achieved in the Obama-Singh 21st Century Knowledge Initiative, launched in 2009, under which proposals have been invited by both sides by November 1, 2011, to be reviewed by a joint working group for academic awards in support of university partnerships. The two leaders reiterated their strong commitment to the Fulbright-Nehru Program and its contribution to leadership development and scholarly achievement. They also highlighted and encouraged the full array of collaborations directly between higher education communities, such as the Yale-India program, for academic leadership and faculty development. The two leaders underscored the need to enhance the scope of collaboration and identify new ways to encourage linkages and exchange programs.

 

The two leaders also expressed their support for the Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum, which provides fresh impetus to academic collaboration in the cutting-edge areas of scientific research and technology development.

 

The two leaders lauded the continuing efforts by both sides to explore new avenues for collaboration such as the Indo-U.S. Engineering Education Conclave, held in January 2011 in New Delhi, for strengthening higher educational institutions in the fields of engineering and technology and expressed the hope that more such opportunities for engagement would emerge in the future in other fields.

 

The two sides endorsed the resolve of the stakeholders from academia, government, and industry to take forward the following areas of consensus arrived at during the Summit:

 

1.    A continued expanded U.S.-India Higher Education Dialogue with representatives from government, academia, and business that would interact on a periodic basis to inform and underpin the Dialogue.

 

2.     Support for the following goals:

 

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