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The Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IIT-D) has unveiled a groundbreaking certificate program in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) Design. This innovative initiative significantly departs from the traditional IIT admission process, which typically requires clearing the JEE or GATE exams.

A burgeoning crisis is unfolding at Presidency University as students have initiated a determined sit-in to oppose a proposed steep hike in fees for incoming freshmen.

Delhi University has announced a fee increase for all first-year undergraduate, postgraduate, and PhD programmes commencing in the 2024-25 academic year. This decision, approved by Vice Chancellor Yogesh Singh in June 2024, comes as the university prepares for the upcoming admissions cycle.

Schools throughout West Bengal are contending with major disruptions following the state education department's abrupt decision to suspend the rollout of the much-anticipated 'Holistic Progress Report Card' for students in grades 1 to 8. This unforeseen announcement, issued in a notification on July 25, has left many schools in a state of disarray as they scramble to adjust.

Mumbai University has deferred all exams slated for today, July 26, in Raigad and Ratnagiri districts due to severe weather warnings from the India Meteorological Department (IMD). Pooja Roudale, the Director of the Examination and Evaluation Board, confirmed the delay and stated that new exam dates will be announced shortly.

Comedy and satire have always held a special place in the entertainment world. From the antics of court jesters in medieval times to today's sharp-witted stand-up comedians, humour has been a powerful tool for social commentary and entertainment.

Digital forensics is like a detective’s toolkit for the digital age, focusing on recovering, analysing, and presenting data from digital devices. With technology permeating every aspect of our lives, this field has become crucial for solving crimes, investigating corporate misconduct, and even personal disputes.

In today's digital age, cybercrime is a growing threat impacting individuals, businesses, and governments. Investigating these crimes requires unique skills and techniques, as cybercriminals employ sophisticated methods to avoid detection.

Pharmacology is the branch of medicine that focuses on the interaction between drugs and the human body. It’s a critical field for anyone in allied healthcare, providing the foundation for understanding how medications work, how they are used, and their impact on health.

Diagnostic imaging is a cornerstone of modern medicine, allowing healthcare professionals to visualize the body's internal structures non-invasively. This field encompasses various techniques with unique applications, advantages, and limitations.

Graphic design is an art form that blends creativity with technology to communicate ideas visually. Among its many components, three essentials stand out: typography, colour, and layout.

Fashion design is a captivating blend of creativity, skill, and strategy. The journey from a simple sketch to a dazzling runway show involves various stages, each demanding a unique set of talents and meticulous attention to detail.

Forensic science uses many specialized terms. Here are five common forensic words used globally, explained in simple English:

Pursuing a career in the medical field doesn't always require cracking the NEET (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test). While NEET is essential for becoming a doctor in India, several high-paying medical professions offer rewarding careers without this requirement.

Design skills are crucial for various professions, and there are many educational paths to acquire these skills. Design is a broad field with numerous specialisations, each requiring unique expertise and creativity.

Whether you aspire to influence trends, enhance user experiences, or create iconic designs, studying design offers a rewarding journey of exploration and self-expression.

Appearing for the All India Forensic Science Entrance Test (AIFSET) offers numerous compelling reasons for aspiring forensic science students. Here are seven key motivations to consider:

Aspiring allied health professionals need to take a strategic step towards a fulfilling career in allied health, offering academic recognition, career opportunities, and the chance to make a meaningful impact in healthcare.

Reminiscing 2020’s global house-arrest and with campuses being closed and online learning being pursued, edtech push by COVID is now stronger than the fintech push by demonetization. The teacher-student model has ceased to exist for ever now, and we are moving to a qualitatively different mentor-learner model not just in the current digital learning phase, but also in the post pandemic times ahead. Beyond this complete campus lockdown phase, during which time mentoring-learning-assessing has gone online globally, we shall be moving towards blended phygital education ahead, which will be the new normal ahead, and will make the new model of mentor-learner firmly entrenched.

Learning or academics or education broadly has three functions: creation of learning content through research, writing, packaging with visuals; dissemination of learning through classes, lectures, notes, self-study, discussions; & assessment and evaluation of the education of the learner by various methods. All these three have been majorly impacted by the self-isolation imposed to ensure social distancing so that the learners and the mentors may first be protected from the spread of the infection of COVID19. The lockdown across the world is simultaneously a boon and a bane for the teaching-learning community today.

Teacher to Mentor:

The teacher was a sage on the stage, introducing every new topic, speaking the last word on it, sticking to a structured syllabus as prescribed, interpreting it as s/he deems right, finishing the syllabus and focusing on examination and evaluation to complete the cycle of delivery of education. He often demands respect, and relies on the power to punish to set things right (not always, though). Teacher teaches and often sermonizes.

Each premise noted above is changing now.

Mentor today is a co-learner, may be the first stimulus for a topic but never the last word, starts from a structured syllabus but is expected to move towards organic learning depending upon the variegated interest areas of groups of learners, aggregates learning resources from multiple sources and shares with the learners, is more a guide, second parent and agony shelter of sorts for the learners. Examination also is diverse and evaluation is just one more function and not the ultimate yardstick of learning and brilliance of the learner. Mentor may often be less informed about an issue, but with a better perspective to guide. Mentor engages and inspires.

Learning Resources Aggregation & Delivery:

To begin with being the new age mentor, a massive train the trainer and capacity building is needed today. For this, first the mentor has to be a digital personality with smartphone and net connection, and with laptop and wifi connection. Next, one has to learn how to create, deliver and engage in content across multiple online platforms, and how to take matter learnt online to matter practiced offline face to face. Third, one has to now learn assessment with open book through analysis and application, through quiz, through applied projects, through phygital presentation and actual work in labs and studios after using virtual labs and studios.

Creating the learning resources was quite easy earlier. There were the books, often called text and reference books, then the power-point presentation of the teacher, and then chalk and talk. And the topic was first introduced in a class, post which notes were given, books were mentioned, and later examination was conducted to check memory and a bit of understanding.

The game is changed now. And totally so.

The concept of proprietary content (the mentor’s own videos, audio or podcast content, power-points, cases, info-graphics etc), aggregated content (books, monographs, videos, podcasts, URLs, pdfs, cases, etc taken from the internet, YouTube and Vimeo, etc), and also massive open/closed online learning resources (free ones like Swayam or NAPTEL, paid ones like those of Coursera or LinkedIn, and the university’s own online courses): these three are the learning resources today.

The mentor is expected to make a mix of proprietary, aggregated and online learning resources, suitably arranging them from the easies one to the toughest one and offer to the learners digitally (using Google Class, emails, or better, Learning Management Systems like Canvas or TCSion, Blackboard or Collaborate, etc,) at least a week or more before they meet digitally or physically to discuss the content. This is called Flipped Classroom where the learners get learning content much in advance, read, watch or listen to the same asynchronously at their own time, place or pace, note down things they have not understood or have questions on, and come to the digital/physical classroom synchronously, to clarify doubts, discuss cases, debate on conclusions drawn and participate in quiz or analytical or applied assignments. Delivery of the online session can be on any platform: MS Teams, Zoom, Webex, Google Meet and can move from the synchronous digital classroom to asynchronous digital chatroom debates and discussions for further clarification.

This makes the task for Content Creation and Content Delivery for the mentors much more diverse, tech-savvy, and tougher than the traditional teacher’s job.

Learners’ Engagement & Evaluation:

Further, education will now move from a system imposed disciplined endeavour to voluntarily participated and internalized process. It will be truly a learner-centric education now in the new normal, and shall be far more participative than the past. The learner in the digital or blended mode is learning voluntarily and not on the basis of an imposed discipline on campus through a web of rules and power dynamics. While voluntary learning will throw many non-interested or apathetic learners out of the learning circle, it will also make many focused learners internalize education better and apply it in a more focused manner at his or her individual level.

Also, with Artificial Intelligence, robotics, automation, Machine Learning and internet of things being the other emerging realities, the skills for mass production or education to do the same work repeatedly will be totally irrelevant ahead when machines will take over almost all such work (more than three fourths of all human work today). Hence, new age skills, apart from technology use, have to be in areas like creativity, innovation, incubation, problem-solving, teamwork, leadership, critical thinking, design thinking, empathy, emotional intelligence and risk management. Each of these can be qualitatively and quantitatively mentored to any youth from an early age of say 15 years till 25 years of age, and will become his or her second nature.

To deliver such a learning, the learners’ engagement techniques have to be more tech-savvy (google forms, polls, surveys, quiz, virtual lab and studio, AI tools, etc) and also with higher emotional quotient (use of humour, videos, info-graphics, empathy in the class, allowing diversity of opinion, wellness conscious, etc).

Even the evaluation or assessment has to be diverse. Assessment refers to learner performance; it helps us decide if students are learning and where improvement in that learning is needed. Evaluation refers to a systematic process of determining the merit value or worth of the instruction or programme; it helps us determine if a course is effective (course goals) and informs our design efforts. Assessment and evaluation can be both formative (carried out during the course) and summative (carried out following the course). There can be many ways for the same. Mentors can make learners aware of expectations in advance (e.g. one week for feedback from deadline) and keep them posted (announcement: all projects have been marked). For example, one can create tests that are multiple choice, true/false, or short answer essays and one can set the assessments to automatically provide feedback.

When online, evaluation can be on the basis of proctored digital examination or open-book analytical and applied evaluation with non-google-able questions. And this is surely not an easy task for the mentors as teachers of the past were used to repeat past questions, had set patterns of questions, examinations were ‘suggestions’ and memory based, and not application based in general. Online quiz, open book examination with time-managed and proctored question paper delivered online, applied questions not based on memory but comprehension, telephonic interview etc have been the usual ways of digital assessment and evaluation of learning.

There will be offline evaluation also. Here, the assessment can be based on offline written examinations, field-survey based presentation or report writing, debates, lab/studio-based practical, or a peer-group work, or a submission of a long-term real life or live project.

Digital Learning Tools Today:

The pandemic requires universities to rapidly offer online learning to their students. Fortunately, technology and content are available to help universities transition online quickly and with high quality, especially on the digital plank, though at a cost and with the risk of several teachers and administrators being forced to go out of the system.

Digital learning on the go or from distance calls for tech-led holistic solutions. It requires several content pieces to be transmitted digitally. These content pieces can be in the form of pdfs, ppts, URLs, YouTube links, podcast links, case-studies, etc. There can also be e-books, audio-books, kindle based content, magzter sourced magazines, etc. Then this can involve learning without being face to face through boxes, as in Google Class, or learning face to face as in Zoom live audio-visual discussions. People may also use GoToMeetings or MicrosoftMeet sessions also. Attendance can be taken on Google Spreadsheet and through WhatsApp Group chat of a batch of students too.

Then there are MOOCs, collaborative distance learning, wikis, blogs etc. Individual resource-rich institutes develop their customized secured and IPR protected Learning Management Systems, through the use of BlackBoard or TCSion LMS. Other LMS options like Kaltura or Impartus allowing video recording of talks also ar in use in many places. There are CourseEra courses, Swayam online lessons from UGC and similar other avenues to learn online.

Learning digitally can be further assisted with Virtual Reality (VR), Augmented Reality (AR) and Mixed Reality (MR) which can take the viewer to an enhanced experience even integrating scenarios which are yet to happen creatively bringing them within the learning experience. These are immersive and contextual experiences, and artificial intelligence driven chatbots can further enhance the digital interface of the learner and the mentor.

Digital Learning Value-adds:

Incorporating big data analytics and content management, educators can develop an individualized curriculum that enhances how each student learns (e.g. playlist of learning content in WiseWire changing for each student). Many in the West have started the use of the millennials' language and style: Khan Academy video lessons, YouTube use, distinct style and language for young learners. Twitter, Tumblr, Snapchat, Imessage, Instagram, Facebook & Whatsapp are being creatively integrated with school education. There is a case of a management school in India, where the professor sends a 3 minutes interesting video on the subject he is taking up next through group whatsapp to increase interest in the batch towards the topic being taught.

In the US, the smart-phone applications like Socrative and Plickers are helping teachers interact and assess students’ progress, collaborate via cloud-based applications to work and solve a common goal. Teachers can publish real-time quizzes and polls for students via mobile devices to keep them engaged.

Further, using anything from iMovie to WeVideo, learners can create video as a learning resource. YouTube (with privacy settings) and SeeSaw or Flipgrid are also alternatives learners can make use of. The benefits of SeeSaw and Flipgrid are that students can add voice recordings or text sharing feedback with peers. Students became the co-creators of content and as a result, more engaged, including their parents. Useful apps like Book CreatorExplain Everything and EduCreations can be utilised towards this end. 

There are various software used to create digital content, like Camtasia, Raptivity, Captivate, Articulate Online, etc.

Yes alongside, social media use extensively will support learning online. Facebook Page can broadcast updates and alerts. Facebook Group or Google Hangout with advanced features in G-suite can stream live lectures and host discussions. Twitter can act as a class message board. The 256 characters help to keep messages succinct. Instagram can be used for photo essays. One can create a class blog for discussions. There are many different platforms available, such as WordPress, SquareSpace, Wix, Blogger for that. And, one can create a class-specific Pinterest board as well.

Students to Learners:

With mentors replacing teachers, the students cannot be the pre COVID typical students any more going ahead.

Students study in classroom, are taught by teachers, limited to given syllabus, and study for marks, grades, degrees. Students give exams in written and on the basis of suggestions or set patters of evaluation.

Learners study within and beyond the classroom, from mentors, peers, personal experience, books, digitally aggregated content, through projects and through assignments. Learners learn for lifetime application, and hence learn to learn further as things learnt today are obsolete soon. Self-learning or learning to learn is hence a major cultivated skill for the present day learners, especially in higher education, as techniques and technologies are changing in the work-place in less than five years now. Learners also learn organically. While structured syllabus must be completed for foundation and examination, organic learning is about self-driven learning in few chosen areas out of interest, assisted by the mentors.

Yes, for this, doubling public education expenditure, digital access to the hinterland, considering digital connectivity as a human right, digital literacy as a fundamental pre-requisite in any work, providing cell phones and laptops or tabs en masse, announcing cheaper data packages for students, CSR in the field of domain of digital connectivity by corporate houses, etc and more would be needed soonest to bridge the yawning digital divide in the otherwise class divided society. It must be noted that even UNESCO has noted that only 48% of Indian learners’ community of 283 million is receiving some sort of online education today, the rest 52% going bereft of any form of formal learning whatsoever for more than a year now! And among these 48%, the girl-students are having a worse fate in the poorer families due to limited digital devices to which the sons have a higher access than the daughters.

Conclusion:

India has been speaking of digital education for long but it has stayed on as a possibility and not a reality for more than a decade now. Even IITs and IIMs have used digital platforms on the side for sharing of content and debating on issues sporadically. The larger mass of 1300 plus universities and some 44,000 colleges have actually not digitized their content, not made access to online learning mainstay of their teaching-learning process, except the distance learning universities. In fact, the old school educationists looked at online and distance education with some disdain all across South Asia. They are in for a major shock now. The digital divide needs fast bridging through the promise of 6% of the GDP for public education, through 2% of profits for CSR given here, and through civil society initiatives like getting smart-phones, laptops and tabs for the less privileged.

It is clear that going ahead digital access will be a human right, and those in governance must wake up to the reality that youngsters need in expensive tablets and easy data access. A nation that spends less than 3% of national budget for public education (lower than Tanzania, Angola and Ghana, et al), with the states putting in 2.5 (Bihar) to 26% (Delhi), with Delhi being the only state in double digits, cannot ensure digital education for the masses, unless allocation of funds and their transparent spending happen.

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Prof. Ujjwal Anu Chowdhury

The author is Vice President, Washington University of Science and Technology and Editorial Mentor, edInbox.com

 

The last two years have clearly shown that technology-aided remote schooling is neither fully possible nor completely desirable. 

Lest we forget that India is a nation of more than one-third of the population in the 15 to 25 years age-bracket, the most promising period of life when one decides career path, subjects for learning, types of work to do, and becomes self-dependent in the process.

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India remains a Behemoth of culture. With wealthy, diversified tribes and distinct traditions, the country entices glances from all across the globe. But are we able to give these tribes their very "worth" in terms of their basic fundamental rights? While we feed on their "rawness" and "naivety" with unbreakable pride, we have failed to uplift them. The educational crisis that the tribal children face in India is a profound indictment of systemic failures and societal neglect. 

Researchers from Monash University and the GunaiKurnai Land and Waters Aboriginal Corporation have uncovered evidence of a 12,000-year-old ritual that First Nations people in Australia practised. As per reports of India Education Diary, this finding, dating back to the end of the last Ice Age, offers significant insights into the spiritual practices of the region's indigenous communities.

Bluelearn, a two-year-old edtech startup, has announced its closure and will return approximately $2.8 million, 70% of the capital raised, to its investors. The startup had successfully raised $4 million in funding from notable venture capital firms, including 100x VC, Titan Capital, Elevation Capital, and Lightspeed.

Books and movies—two worlds that, when they collide, can create pure magic. Adapting a beloved novel into a film isn’t just about translating text into visuals; it's a creative alchemy that transforms written words into a living, breathing experience. Picture this: your favorite novel is now a film, and suddenly, those characters you’ve cherished for years are speaking and moving before your eyes. It’s a cinematic thrill ride that brings new dimensions to the story, but it’s also a labyrinth of decisions that can make or break the adaptation.

When filmmakers tackle a book, they’re diving into a rich tapestry of characters, settings, and plotlines. The first challenge is deciding what to keep, what to tweak, and what to toss. Imagine trying to fit a sprawling epic into a two-hour movie—it's like squeezing an elephant into a Mini Cooper. Filmmakers often have to distill complex narratives into core elements that can be effectively conveyed through visuals and dialogue. This can mean simplifying subplots, reimagining characters, or even shifting the story’s perspective.

Take “The Lord of the Rings” for example. J.R.R. Tolkien’s masterpiece is a treasure trove of lore and detail. Peter Jackson’s film adaptation had to make some creative decisions to keep the story coherent and engaging for a film audience. Certain characters and subplots were minimized or altered to focus on the central narrative, while the visual grandeur of Middle-earth was brought to life with groundbreaking special effects. Fans of the books might notice the changes, but the essence of the story and its epic scope are preserved.

Then there's the question of casting. Choosing actors who can embody the spirit of the characters is a delicate art. The challenge lies in finding performers who not only fit the physical description but also capture the essence of the characters’ personalities. When the casting is spot-on, it’s like magic. Think of Robert Pattinson as Edward Cullen or Cate Blanchett as Galadriel—these actors brought something special to their roles that fans of the books could appreciate.

Dialogue is another area where adaptation requires finesse. Books often provide extensive inner monologues and detailed descriptions, which don’t always translate well into dialogue-heavy scripts. Screenwriters must be skilled at capturing the voice of the book while making the dialogue snappy and engaging. This might mean adding a bit of flair or humor to make the interactions feel natural and dynamic.

Ultimately, adapting a book into a movie is about finding a balance between fidelity to the source material and creative interpretation. It's an art form that respects the original while exploring new ways to bring the story to life on screen. While not every adaptation is perfect, each one is a testament to the imagination and dedication of the creators involved. So next time you see a film adaptation of your favorite novel, remember that it’s not just a retelling; it’s a new chapter in the story’s journey—a thrilling collaboration of literature and film that keeps the magic alive.

Embark on an educational travel story that traces the fascinating journey of a beloved fruit: tamarind. This tale enriches our culinary knowledge and connects us with the vibrant history of ancient trade and cultural exchanges.

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