Home Blog Page 831

Boards should work on their marking indicators: St Stephen’s

delhi-university After it announced a staggering cut-off at 99 per cent for admissions this year, Delhi University’s (DU) St Stephen’s college has said that the boards should work on their marking indicators to make scores more ‘realistic’. The college says that it decides the cut-offs after evaluating three parameters- board marks, student-seat ratio and number of applications received.

The college received 6,000 applications for English Honours which has just 30 seats. Commerce students wishing to study English at St Stephen’s College must have a score of 99 per cent, one percentage point more than applicants last year. This year, there is no cut off below 96 per cent in the best-of-four (BO4) aggregate.

It may be mentioned that St Stephen’s has received a record 32,100 applications for 400 seats, highest in the college’s history.

Meanwhile, the centralised fitness trials for admission to Delhi University’s undergraduate courses through sports quota will begin tomorrow, with the varsity taking strict measures to avoid any “bias” and “ensure transparency” in the selection procedure.

Soon, ‘Digital India’ for education by govt

ebasta Come July, the Narendra Modi government is planning to launch under ‘Digital India’ a number of ambitious projects like eBasta on which all NCERT text books as well as some State Boards’ textbooks will be available online for downloading from an app free of cost. Another initiative for Aadhaar card holders will be digital locker—DigiLocker—facility which will enable Indians to secure their certificates and access them online at the click of a button. Filling up online forms using the e-sign facility and the DigiLocker will ensure elimination of usage of fake documents.

A media report states that these are the pet projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his office has been personally monitoring the preparation and implementation of the projects.

Recently, Union HRD Minister Smriti Irani had said that students across the country will no longer struggle  to get a copy of a lost college certificate, and digitisation of every certificate of every university in India would help resolve problems faced by many students grappling with loss of paper certificates.

Marathi in all board curricula in State

Marathi Schools Maharashtra State’s education department has decided to incorporate Marathi language in their curriculum. However, the State Education Minister Vinod Tawde clarified that the language will not be compulsory.

The state has also decided to amend the Maharashtra Official Languages Act, 1964, to declare Marathi as the official language of the state. This move is to ensure that students from schools affiliated to CBSE, ICSE, IB, IGCSE and CIE boards in the state know Marathi.
Tawde further informed that a politically-influenced decision in education was not desired, and the government will take advice from educationists on how to incorporate Marathi in the curriculum; whether it should be a 100-mark or 50-mark paper or taught without conducting an exam.

It may be mentioned that according to reports, Marathi schools are losing their sheen, and English medium schools are gaining prominence in most parts of Maharashtra. The state government has now decided to reject the 4000 pending applications for new Marathi-medium schools, saying there is simply no need for them. It has even barred existing schools from expanding.

Soon, ‘Digital India’ for education by govt Come July, the Narendra Modi government is planning to launch under ‘Digital India’ a number of ambitious projects like eBasta on which all NCERT text books as well as some State Boards’ textbooks will be available online for downloading from an app free of cost. Another initiative for Aadhaar card holders will be digital locker—DigiLocker—facility which will enable Indians to secure their certificates and access them online at the click of a button. Filling up online forms using the e-sign facility and the DigiLocker will ensure elimination of usage of fake documents.

A media report states that these are the pet projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his office has been personally monitoring the preparation and implementation of the projects.

Recently, Union HRD Minister Smriti Irani had said that students across the country will no longer struggle to get a copy of a lost college certificate, and digitisation of every certificate of every university in India would help resolve problems faced by many students grappling with loss of paper certificates.

Ricoh launches projector series

ricohRicoh India has launched new series of projectors TS 100, RX 300 and PJ X 4340.The new projectors allow bright and rich visuals further enabling users to operate the device from multiple networks.

The three new projectors come with high-class features of wireless and network connectivity. TS 100 provides eco mode and illuminates crystal clear imaging, RX 300 (Entry level Short Throw Projector) is best in class product weighing less than 2.8 kgs and PJ X 4340, PJ X4241N, and PJWX4241N are short throw projection systems which prevent shadow formation on the board and allow free movement, essentially turning the projection system into a whiteboard.

Manoj Kumar, Managing Director, Ricoh India said, “Our aim is to constantly offer new and innovative products for the Indian market and be among the top three most preferred projector vendors in the country. This new range of projectors will help consumers access best in quality projection along with innovative user-friendly features. Ricoh has always been in the forefront to provide advanced products and services to its customers and is committed to sustaining its offerings in the near future.”

Ricoh has recently expanded their business portfolio to Visual Communication Devices which includes Projectors, Interactive White Boards, and Portable VC Solutions.

Ricoh’s Ultra Short Throw projectors are a new advancement in the projection category which allows a bright and colorful big screen and are unique as they are the only ‘Vertical’ projectors that do not use an external mirror as many UST projectors do. These projectors are a part of the Ricoh’s Visual communication Solutions which also includes Interactive Whiteboard that allows users to communicate and collaborate remotely sharing drawings, review designs make annotation and share notes in real time.

Mastering the art of Strategic Management

Dr.Sanjiv-MarwahProf. (Dr.) Sanjiv Marwah, Director of JK Business School talks about the career opportunities in Strategic Management which will reap benefits for the economies.

In the coming years, strategy making must be thought of as an innovative process, as rich in impulsiveness and delightful as any other art. Strategy making eventually leads to strategy management. Strategic Management is the process of building capabilities that allow a firm to create the value for customers, shareholders and society while pursuing in competitive markets. It is a tool undertaken by the managers to locate and monitor the activities within their control that will enable an organisation to achieve its desired objective.

SCOPE:

Today, emerging economies are the world’s growth engines and India is playing an increasingly significant role in taking it forward on a larger scale. So, the strategic management process requires competent individuals to ensure its success. Many companies have embraced strategic management. A number of companies have reformulated their mission and objectives. Expanding opportunities and growing competition have been making companies wedded to corporate and competitive strategies. The path to success in a highly competitive and fast-growing global market is filled with barrier. The challenge for leaders is to identify then produce and prolong a competitive advantage in a globally-connected environment. Class leaders are those who can move strategy from concept into reality, develop the management capacities of the top team and beyond, and drive change while remaining cautious about counter measures by the competition. 

GROWTH:

In our increasingly organised world, the need to expand and maintain competitive advantage by pursuing rapid growth has never been more acute. But to attain that growth, senior leaders must make strategic choices along two critical dimensions: “avenues of growth” (such as innovation, consolidation, or diversification) and “modes of growth” (internal development and alliances or acquisitions, for example). Strategic growth platforms are long term initiatives for high scale profits increases. Broad examples of commonly selected strategic-growth platforms include pursuing specific and new product areas or entering new distribution channels. For a business to flourish thrive it needs to incorporate high growth strategies that consistently allow you to expand sales and profit margins. High growth can be an impelling force to encourage future growth and expansion going ahead. Here are the tactical areas to consider like product development enhancing brand reputation, market penetration, strategic diversification followed by goodwill from revenue generated. In the coming years, growth of strategic management will be phenomenal as it will strengthen our ability to think and act strategically and build the organisation to participate, grow and be successful.

SKILLS:

Anticipate – Conduct market research and business simulations to understand competitor’s perspectives, evaluate their likely reactions to new initiatives or products, and predict potential disruptive offerings.

Challenge – They challenge their own and others assumptions and encourage different points of analysis. Only after careful manifestation and assessment of a problem through many angles they take influential action. This requires persistence, nerve, and an open mind.

Interpret – Leaders who challenge in the right way invariably extract complex and contradictory information. That’s why the preeminent ones are also able to interpret. One need to distinguish patterns, push through uncertainty, and seek new insights.

Decide – Strategic thinkers insist on multiple options at the outset and don’t get prematurely locked into simplistic go/no-go choices. They don’t discharge from the trendy but pursue a disciplined process that balances diligence with speed, considers the trade-offs involved, and takes both small and extensive goals into account. In the end, deliberate leaders must have the courage of their convictions informed by a strong decision process.

Align – Strategic leaders must be proficient at finding common ground and achieving buy-in among stakeholders who have unlike views and agendas. This requires active outreach. Success depends on upbeat communication, trust building, and frequent commitment

Learn – Strategic leaders are the focal point for organisational learning. They encourage a culture of investigation, and they search for the training in both successful and unsuccessful outcomes.

JOB OPPURTUNITIES:

Strategy jobs are viewed as some of the most desirable in a large corporation because they provide access to the overall picture, the visualisation and the main issues that establish value in an organisation. We need to be in frequent contact with senior management and will get the opportunity to see how decisions really get made in your association. At the entry stage, one would work as a strategic planning associate or manager or would work on assignments directed by more senior members of your group. Our work would focus on collecting facts, putting together presentations, talking to members of the organisation to understand a problem. With experience one will get more opportunity to direct strategy and to interact with senior management that provides assignments to your group. Strategic planners can often work on specific assignments as internal management consultants. Job designation would be to understand the market carefully, working with confined administration and to propose a strategy to revitalise growth. 

ELIGIBILITY:

The course is aimed at post graduates who are interested in pursuing a career in the area of business analysis and development, including industry consulting, as well as candidates who seek out a pathway to a research degree in the field of international management and comparative studies. The course focuses on real business issues and how to solve them with a thorough understanding of business analysis and development and the key skills of business consulting. Shape your career with the best possible start followed by latest knowledge in comparative strategic management and put your learning into practice with our unique client facing project. 

REMUNERATION: 

Strategic Management is an immensely rewarding profession and competent individuals will rise in terms of skills and expertise can earn around Rs. 25,000 – Rs 30,000 in the beginning and with few years of experience down the line they will earn even more than Rs 50,000- Rs 1, 00,000 per month.

Karnataka wants yoga to be made mandatory in all undergraduate courses

yoga in Karnataka After Prime Minister Narendra Modi got the United Nations to declare June 21 as International Yoga Day, Karnataka is taking measures to popularise yoga in the state. The State Higher Education Council has set up a five-member committee on yoga. The body has recommended that yoga be made a mandatory subject in all undergraduate courses across the state. The committee has also suggested that the subject must not measure the academic performance of students or have a bearing on their marks.

The committee was of the view that yoga will provide a lot of job opportunities in the future.

It may be mentioned that Celebrating International Yoga Day on June 21 in schools is not mandatory in Karnataka. However, the Department of Higher Education in the State has issued a circular directing all colleges and universities to celebrate Yoga Day. Unlike CBSE directive to schools, the State Government would not issue a circular or directive to schools or pre-university colleges to celebrate International Day of Yoga on June 21, following a declaration by the United Nations.

Links of medical exam scam traced to Nagpur, Nashik and Gondia

pre medical tests The links of the scam regarding cases of cheating in the All India Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Entrance Test have been found in Nagpur, Nashik and Gondia. Recently, the country’s apex court scrapped the All India Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Entrance Test following the cases of cheating.

An estimated six lakh students had appeared for the examination at 1,050 centres. After it was confirmed that a section of students had smuggled electronic devices into exam centres across the country to get answers, the Supreme Court (SC) cancelled the entrance test and asked the CBSE to hold a fresh examination within four weeks. The SC has taken serious note of a confidential report submitted by the Rohtak superintendent of police in its verdict.

Media reports state that the police on June 7 arrested a Nagpur-based student, who runs a consultancy firm. He admitted that he had solved the question paper with the help of another student, Abid Ali, and later made it available to Gondia-based Nand kishore Gedam. Ali is a student of a Nashik-based private medical college. Following a tip-off, the investigating agency booked 44 students at different centres for using the electronic devices. It was found that the solved paper was transmitted to 358 cellphones. Shockingly, it was observed that by using the same modus operandi, a section of students had fraudulently secured admission in a few medical colleges in Uttar Pradesh last year.

It may be mentioned that over 630,000 students will have to take the All-India Pre-Medical Test afresh in four weeks after the test was scrapped. Experts fear protracted admission delays after the CBSE indicated the time-frame was not enough.

The bench said that although the re-conduct of the examination would consume time and cause inconvenience but to maintain the “impeccable and irrefutable” credibility of examination “this is the price, the stakeholders would have to suffer”.

St. Stephens English cutoff reaches new high

St.stephen Cut-offs have reached a new high at Delhi University’s (DU) St Stephen’s College. Commerce students wishing to study English at St Stephen’s College must have a score of 99 per cent, one percentage point more than applicants last year. This year, there is no cut off below 96 per cent in the best-of-four (BO4) aggregate.  The increase ranging from 0.33 percentage points to 1.75 percentage points from 2014. The only dip recorded is in philosophy honours where the cut off for commerce stream came down by 0.25 percentage points.

The cut offs are high even in the arena of additional criteria. An aspirant for English honours needs not only 99 per cent (commerce), 97.75 per cent (science) and 97.50 per cent (humanities) in BO4 but must also have scored a minimum of 90 per cent in English Core or 85 per cent in Elective English at Class XII Boards. In case of economics, students must have scored a minimum of 90 per cent in math.

Cut-offs for courses such as philosophy have risen from 95.5 to 96.75 per cent for science students. Even Sanskrit, which usually sees lower cut-offs compared to other subjects, has witnessed an increase of 10 points – from 65 to 75 per cent across all streams. In comparison, courses such as chemistry and physics have seen only a marginal rise. While for chemistry it is 96.66 per cent, for physics an applicant needs to have scored 97 per cent, up 0.33 point compared to last year.

It may be mentioned that a total of 29,672 applications were received by the college for 410 seats with a ratio of 72.4 applications per seat. The largest number of applications have been received for English at 5,662 for 30 seats (188.7 applicants per seats), followed by economics at 5,659 for 50 seats (113.2 applicants per seat).

Furthermore, there has been a marginal increase in the number of applications for DU’s undergraduate seats. The University made a new record when by 5 pm on June 15, the last date for registrations, it received a total of 2,84,642 applications. The numbers increased after online registrations started.

This announcement marks the start of the admission process at the elite college, which will interview candidates between June 22 and July 8 before coming out with the final list.

Astronomy & Astrophysics institutes to set up in India

charusat1The Indian Planetary Society (IPS), the science research organisation has announced the launch of India’s first world-class institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics. The institute has been set up in collaboration with Charotar University of Science and Technology (CHARUSAT) in Gujarat. The institute will be a first-of-its-kind with observatories for solar and stellar studies and will commence from August 2015.

Having built within the campus of CHARUSAT, the institute is named Dr. Mohanbhai I. Patel (D. Sc.) Institute of Excellence in Astronomy and Astrophysics.A group of world-renowned astrophysicists and scientists will be on board as visiting faculties in addition to a brilliant core group of the in-house teaching faculty. Also, each year the institute will invite Nobel Laureates and scientists of international repute to interact and share knowledge and experiences with students, for a week.

“This will be India’s first Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics with state-of-the-art facilities and observatories. The centre will offer courses for M. Phil, Ph. D. and M. Sc., physics with specialization in Astronomy and Astrophysics. The education imparted to students here will also incorporate courses in Science of ancient India and its relevance with modern science. We also plan to educate students in Sanskrit and music. The aim of the management is to make this institute a centre of excellence in higher learning and strive to become the Taxasheela or Nalanda or Vikramasheela of modern India,” said Dr. J J Rawal, President, IPS.

The campus houses a world-class library, laboratories, audio-visual unit, photographic unit, conference hall and an auditorium. The campus will also have its own hostel and recreation facilities for students as well as the faculty. Most importantly, the institute will offer a scholarship to students securing merit as they progress each year and also will provide financially disadvantaged but deserving students full scholarships for their entire academic career at the institute.

3000 students set to participate in 2015 Enactus India National Competition

enactusEnactus India, a subsidiary of Enactus Worldwide, an international non-profit organization of students with a focus on community empowerment and entrepreneurship action will host the Enactus India National Competition on July 21st- 22nd 2015 in Delhi NCR where upcoming student community outreach projects will compete before a jury of top corporate leaders.

Each country within the Enactus Worldwide network of 36 countries with over 70,000 active student members spread across 1700 universities will be hosting National Competitions. The winning teams will present their projects at the prestigious Enactus World Cup 2015 to be held at Johannesburg, South Africa between October 14 – 16, 2015.

Enactus India has more than 3000 student participants on 88 college campuses across the country. Leading colleges of Mumbai and Pune are members of Enactus India. Enactus’ corporate partners include global names like Walmart, KPMG, Unilever, Coca-Cola, Cargill, Ford, Hershey, HSBC and others.

Guided by faculty advisors and business experts, participating students form teams on their campuses to create and implement community projects that empower people in need. The experience not only transforms lives, it helps students develop the skills and perspective necessary to become effective, values-driven leaders.

Farhan Pettiwala, President, Enactus India said, “As one of the largest Enactus country operations, Enactus India is a priority country for the future growth of the organization. We work with leaders in business and higher education to mobilize university students to make a difference in their communities while developing their skills to become socially responsible business leaders. The National competition provides a forum for teams to showcase the impact of their outreach efforts and to be evaluated by senior corporate executives and business leaders serving as judges.”

In the India National Competition 2014, the Enactus team of Shaheed Sukhdev College of Business Studies emerged as the national champion and went on to represent India at the 2014 Enactus World Cup in Beijing, China. The Champion team presented their three projects: Sanitation Solutions, Project Akshar and Project Grammodhar during the World Cup.

LATEST NEWS