Monday 28 September 2015

World’s oldest Quran manuscript to go on display

World’s  oldest  Quran  manuscript  to  go on  display
 
LONDON: A Quran manuscript believed to be among the oldest in the world, dating back to at least 1,370 years, ( placing it close to the time of Prophet Muhammad) will be put on display in the UK from from October 2 till October 25.
 
The Quran manuscript, held by the University of Birmingham, has been placed among the oldest in the world thanks to modern scientific methods.
 
Radiocarbon analysis has dated the parchment on which the text is written to the period between AD 568 and 645 with 95.4 per cent accuracy.
 
The test was carried out in a laboratory at the University of Oxford. The result places the parchment close to the time of Prophet Muhammad, who is generally thought to have lived between AD 570 and 632.
 
Researchers conclude that the Quran manuscript is among the earliest written textual evidence of the Islamic holy book known to survive.
 
The Quran manuscript is part of the University's Mingana Collection of Middle Eastern manuscripts, held in the Cadbury Research Library.
 
Consisting of two parchment leaves, the Quran manuscript contains parts of Suras ( chapters) 18 to 20, written with ink in an early form of Arabic script known as Hijazi.
 
Source | Mid Day | 23 September 2015

Impact Revealed: Learner Outcomes in Open Online Courses

The full report, titled "Impact Revealed: Learner Outcomes in Open Online Courses," appears in Harvard Business Review.

This study examined what -- if anything -- learners have gained from completing MOOCs, and whether they serve as a “luxury good for rich people” or as a boon to learners of low socioeconomic status, said Emanuel, who is vice provost for global initiatives at Penn.

Christensen, assistant vice provost for global affairs at the University of Washington, said, “Is there really any benefit to taking massive open online courses? Is it something that people are doing for edification, or are people actually seeing benefits of doing that?”

The results suggest a majority of learners feel they benefit either professionally or educationally from completing a MOOC. When asked to name tangible benefits, such as securing a new job or receiving academic credit, however, those rates dropped.



Paper Victory – For Books, the last chapter hasn’t been written yet

Paper Victory – For Books, the last chapter hasn’t been written yet

Five years ago, the book world was seized by collective panic over the uncertain future of print.

As readers migrated to new digital devices, e-book sales soared, up 1,260 percent between 2008 and 2010, alarming booksellers that watched consumers use their stores to find titles they would later buy online. Print sales dwindled, bookstores struggled to stay open, and publishers and authors feared that cheaper e-books would cannibalize their business.

Then in 2011, the industry’s fears were realized when Borders declared bankruptcy.

“E-books were this rocket ship going straight up,” said Len Vlahos, a former executive director of the Book Industry Study Group, a nonprofit research group that tracks the publishing industry. “Just about everybody you talked to thought we were going the way of digital music.”

But the digital apocalypse never arrived, or at least not on schedule. While analysts once predicted that e-books would overtake print by 2015, digital sales have instead slowed sharply.

Now, there are signs that some e-book adopters are returning to print, or becoming hybrid readers, who juggle devices and paper. E-book sales fell by 10 percent in the first five months of this year, according to the Association of American Publishers, which collects data from nearly 1,200 publishers. Digital books accounted last year for around 20 percent of the market, roughly the same as they did a few years ago.

E-books’ declining popularity may signal that publishing, while not immune to technological upheaval, will weather the tidal wave of digital technology better than other forms of media, like music and television.

E-book subscription services, modeled on companies like Netflix and Pandora, have struggled to convert book lovers into digital binge readers, and some have shut down. Sales of dedicated e-reading devices have plunged as consumers migrated to tablets and smartphones. And according to some surveys, young readers who are digital natives still prefer reading on paper.

The surprising resilience of print has provided a lift to many booksellers. Independent bookstores, which were battered by the recession and competition from Amazon, are showing strong signs of resurgence. The American Booksellers Association counted 1,712 member stores in 2,227 locations in 2015, up from 1,410 in 1,660 locations five years ago.

“The fact that the digital side of the business has leveled off has worked to our advantage,” said Oren Teicher, chief executive of the American Booksellers Association. “It’s resulted in a far healthier independent bookstore market today than we have had in a long time.”
Publishers, seeking to capitalize on the shift, are pouring money into their print infrastructures and distribution. Hachette added 218,000 square feet to its Indiana warehouse late last year, and Simon & Schuster is expanding its New Jersey distribution facility by 200,000 square feet.

Penguin Random House has invested nearly $100 million in expanding and updating its warehouses and speeding up distribution of its books. It added 365,000 square feet last year to its warehouse in Crawfordsville, Ind., more than doubling the size of the warehouse.
 “People talked about the demise of physical books as if it was only a matter of time, but even 50 to 100 years from now, print will be a big chunk of our business,” said Markus Dohle, the chief executive of Penguin Random House, which has nearly 250 imprints globally. Print books account for more than 70 percent of the company’s sales in the United States.

The company began offering independent booksellers in 2011 two-day guaranteed delivery from November to January, the peak book buying months.

Other big publishers, including HarperCollins, have followed suit. The faster deliveries have allowed bookstores to place smaller initial orders and restock as needed, which has reduced returns of unsold books by about 10 percent.

Penguin Random House has also developed a data-driven approach to managing print inventory for some of its largest customers, a strategy modeled on the way manufacturers like Procter & Gamble automatically restock soap and other household goods. The company now tracks more than 10 million sales records a day, and sifts through them in order to make recommendations for how many copies of a given title a vendor should order based on previous sales.

“It’s a very simple thing; only books that are on the shelves can be sold,” Mr. Dohle said.

At BookPeople, a bookstore founded in 1970 in Austin, Tex., sales are up nearly 11 percent this year over last, making 2015 the store’s most profitable year ever, said Steve Bercu, the co-owner. He credits the growth of his business, in part, to the stabilization of print and new practices in the publishing industry, such as Penguin Random House’s so-called rapid replenishment program to restock books quickly.

“The e-book terror has kind of subsided,” he said.

Other independent booksellers agree that they are witnessing a reverse migration to print.

“We’ve seen people coming back,” said Arsen Kashkashian, a book buyer at Boulder Book Store in Boulder, Colo. “They were reading more on their Kindle and now they’re not, or they’re reading both ways.”

Being able to set my own text size is much easier on my eyes and less weight is easier on my wrists. I imagine this will only become true as...

If you read this article carefully, you will see that their reporting on sales of ebooks includes ONLY ebooks being sold by the traditional...
Digital books have been around for decades, ever since publishers began experimenting with CD-ROMs, but they did not catch on with consumers until 2008, shortly after Amazon released the Kindle.

The Kindle, which was joined by other devices like Kobo’s e-reader, the Nook from Barnes & Noble and the iPad, drew millions of book buyers to e-readers, which offered seamless, instant purchases. Publishers saw huge spikes in digital sales during and after the holidays, after people received e-readers as gifts.

But those double- and triple-digit growth rates plummeted as e-reading devices fell out of fashion with consumers, replaced by smartphones and tablets. Some 12 million e-readers were sold last year, a steep drop from the nearly 20 million sold in 2011, according to Forrester Research. The portion of people who read books primarily on e-readers fell to 32 percent in the first quarter of 2015, from 50 percent in 2012, a Nielsen survey showed.

Higher e-book prices may also be driving readers back to paper.

As publishers renegotiated new terms with Amazon in the past year and demanded the ability to set their own e-book prices, many have started charging more. With little difference in price between a $13 e-book and a paperback, some consumers may be opting for the print version.

On Amazon, the paperback editions of some popular titles, like “The Goldfinch” by Donna Tartt, are several dollars cheaper than their digital counterparts. Paperback sales rose by 8.4 percent in the first five months of this year, the Association of American Publishers reported.

The tug of war between pixels and print almost certainly isn’t over. Industry analysts and publishing executives say it is too soon to declare the death of the digital publishing revolution. An appealing new device might come along. Already, a growing number of people are reading e-books on their cellphones. Amazon recently unveiled a new tablet for $50, which could draw a new wave of customers to e-books (the first-generation Kindle cost $400).

It is also possible that a growing number of people are still buying and reading e-books, just not from traditional publishers. The declining e-book sales reported by publishers do not account for the millions of readers who have migrated to cheap and plentiful self-published e-books, which often cost less than a dollar.

At Amazon, digital book sales have maintained their upward trajectory, according to Russell Grandinetti, senior vice president of Kindle. Last year, Amazon, which controls some 65 percent of the e-book market, introduced an e-book subscription service that allows readers to pay a flat monthly fee of $10 for unlimited digital reading. It offers more than a million titles, many of them from self-published authors.

Some publishing executives say the world is changing too quickly to declare that the digital tide is waning.

“Maybe it’s just a pause here,” said Carolyn Reidy, the president and chief executive of Simon & Schuster. “Will the next generation want to read books on their smartphones, and will we see another burst come?”

Source | Business Line | 24 September 2015

The Rise and Impact of Digital Amnesia

The Rise and Impact of Digital Amnesia 
Why we need to protect what we no longer remember 

The internet and internet-enabled devices have transformed our everyday lives and relationships. We entrust them with our precious personal information including contacts and images and rely on them to connect us to a vast repository of knowledge, anytime, anywhere. 

As part of its commitment to help people protect what matters most in their online-enabled world, Kaspersky Lab wanted to better understand how digital devices and the internet affect the way consumers recall and use information today – and what, if anything, they are doing to protect it.
 
The results suggest a direct link between data available at the click of a button and a failure to commit that data to memory.
 

 

The beauty of the concept of mathematics

The beauty of the concept of mathematics

We heard them say, “Nothing is perfect.” Well, there are two things in this world that are perfect. One is Mother Nature, the other is mathematics. When I say perfect, I mean it cannot get better than this. 

How do I make this conclusion? Mother Nature is a complex web of life and the lifeless. The very state of it being so perfect is the reason for life and also for death. Mathematics, on the other hand, is man-made, to understand nature and beyond. Now, there is a debate over whether mathematics was invented or discovered, but either way it is still perfect. 

Every day there are new discoveries that are made in nature, and in maths as well. We are just getting more aware of the truth, which exists independently of our acknowledgement. 

Maths is founded on simple yet powerful elements — numbers. Numbers, just like the elements of nature, share a complex relationship with every other element in that set. 

This relationship is universally valid. The equation, (a+b)2 = a2+b2+2ab, stands true on Earth, on Jupiter and even if the sun goes down. Because, math doesn’t exist in this physical dimension. It exists entirely in the human mind, it’s a mental concept, and I think this is the most beautiful concept ever made by the human mind. Maths and human beings are co-dependent to aid each other’s growth. 

When we get to the bottom of it, we see that math is an abstract representation of nature — element to element, shape to shape and relation to relation. This fundamental reason suggests that maths is no different from nature. Hence, any real-world problem can be solved in maths and any maths solution is effective in the real world. Of course this statement doesn’t hold true in love and war. Those topics are out of the scope of this discussion. 

What is the largest number your mind can conceive? What is the size of the universe? The answer to both these questions is one and the same. The answer is not infinity, it is zero. Yes! The size of the universe is zero, and so is the largest number! 

Let me explain. For every positive number there exists a negative number in maths. For every matter there exists anti-matter in nature. This is the big picture. Therefore when you put everything together, the size of the universe is zero. Zero is thus simultaneously everything as well as nothing. That’s why it’s called a whole number. You add or remove anything from this whole, it still remains a whole.
This beautiful conception was made in ancient India at a time when the rest of the world was busy figuring out whether the earth is flat or round. 

It’s really astonishing and makes me proud of the intellectual wisdom of ancient India, making such a ground-breaking revelation that changed the human thought process once and for all! 

Source | The Hindu | 21 September 2015

How It Works: Selecting Books for the Libraries

How It Works: Selecting Books for the Libraries
 
Maintaining the collection in the St. Thomas libraries could be described as a balancing act:
·         What should be added?
·         In what format?
·         What should be kept?
“We always say selecting material for the collection and deciding what to keep is much more an art than a science,” said Meg Manahan, associate director for collection and management services.
Three primary goals guide many decisions:
·         supporting the curriculum,
·         maintaining a vibrant and well-rounded collection,
·         and supporting faculty research
To achieve those goals, departments are assigned a library liaison whose job is to communicate with faculty members on what classes they will teach and what their research interests are. The liaisons strive to maintain balance within their own subjects, making sure one area isn’t lean while another is excessive.
While that might sound like a simple task, it involves staying up to date in a liaison’s given area and sometimes foreseeing a need before the request even arrives.
Ann Kenne, the liaison for Catholic Studies, History and Irish Studies, said she paid attention to books that were coming out on World War I a few years ago because she knew the 100th anniversary was near. When the anniversary arrived and a class did materialize, Kenne already had a core set of materials ready.
 
“I’m cognizant of the trends that are going on in the field, the big anniversaries and things that are coming up,” Kenne said.
She said she also considers if a resource is something that could be used in other departments.
Print or digital?
 
Besides subject matter, the library staff also examines what format may best serve readers. Manahan said that often varies by department, although many journals now appear in electronic format. E-books are an entirely different matter.
“That’s something we talk a lot about,” Manahan said. “How much our St. Thomas users really want e-books or will use them, how much they prefer print and what the balance should be. Right now, we’re buying both. … We leave it up to the liaison to know their department.”
Kenne said for her departments she considers how the texts – and what parts – will be used. If a reader might only be reading a chapter or two, or popping in and out of an article, she might lean toward electronic. She said, overall, humanities at St. Thomas still tend toward print.
“If you’re dealing with a book you want to have some reflective time, and it’s hard to do reflective reading with a screen,” Kenne said.
Manahan said that, increasingly, they’re also starting to regard the collection more broadly: by what can be accessed through other libraries.
“We really try to utilize every resource available to us (and) try to get materials from any library, anywhere, to really support what (faculty is) doing,” Manahan said.
Of course, with a finite amount of physical space, sometimes books must be removed from the collection. Manahan emphasized that they’re “really, really thoughtful about removing material.”
“We consider ourselves to have some role in preserving the scholarly record,” Manahan said.
She said they examine how often a text is used and how current it is. Books with some wear and tear can either be rebound or repurchased, depending on what is most cost effective. Books that are removed from the collection are first put up for sale at the annual book sale and then donated to Better World Books, which either donates them, sells them and donates the funds to literacy efforts, or recycles them.
Manahan and Kenne both emphasized that all members of the St. Thomas community, and particularly students, should feel comfortable to make requests through the Book Purchase Request Form.

“Our overall message is that we try to have a collection that is vibrant, active, well-rounded and well-used,” Manahan said. “The collection is unique to our institution, so we want to make sure it’s appropriate.”
 

Twist in the tale: E-book sales dip, print is back Alexandra Alter

Twist in the tale: E-book sales dip, print is back
Alexandra Alter


Many Digital Subscription Services Shut, Few Buying E-Reading Devices; Publishers Invest In Paper Again
Five years ago, the book world was seized by col lective panic over the uncertain future of print. As readers migrated to new digital devices, e-book sales soared, up 1,260% between 2008 and 2010. Print sales dwindled, bookstores struggled to stay open and publishers and authors feared that cheaper e-books would cannibalize their business.“E-books were this rocket ship going straight up,“ said Len Vlahos, former executive director of the Book Industry Study Group, a research group that tracks the publishing industry .
While analysts once predicted e-books would overtake print by 2015, digital sales have instead slowed sharply, with signs that some e-book adopters are returning to print, or becoming hybrid readers, who juggle devices and paper. E-book sales fell by 10% in the first five months of this year, accor ding to Association of American Publishers. Digital books accounted last year for around 20% of the market, roughly the same as they did a few years ago.
Many e-book subscription services have shut down, while sales of e-reading devices have plunged as consumers migrated to tablets and smartphones. And according to some surveys, young readers still prefer reading on paper.
The surprising resilience of print has provided a lift to many booksellers. The American Booksellers Association counted 1,712 member stores in 2,227 locations in 2015, up from 1,410 in 1,660 locations five years ago.
“It's resulted in a far healthier independent bookstore market today than we have had in a long time,“ said Oren Teicher, chief executive of the American Booksellers Association Publishers, seeking to capitalize on the shift, are pouring money into their print infrastructures and distribution. Hachette added 218,000 square feet to its Indiana warehouse, while Penguin Random House has invested nearly $100 million in expanding and updating its warehouses and speeding up distribution of its books.
Digital books have been around for decades, ever since publishers began experimenting with CD-ROMs, but they did not catch on until 2008, after Amazon released the Kindle, which drew millions of book buyers to e-readers, which offered seamless, instant purchases. But those doubleand triple-digit growth rates plummeted as e-reading devices fell out of fashion. Some 12 million e-readers were sold last year, a steep drop from the nearly 20 million sold in 2011, according to Forrester Research.

Source::: Sep 24 2015 : The Times of India (Mumbai). p.23.

Frequent breaks, not exercise, best to cut long sitting hours

Frequent breaks, not exercise, best to cut long sitting hours

 
London : If you want to remain fit and healthy, try to go for frequent breaks from prolonged sitting at workplace or home as daily morning exercise alone may not help you ward off the ill-effects of sitting for long hours, reports IANS.
For the first time, researchers from King’s College London have shown that increasing the levels of physical activity is likely to be much less effective at reducing prolonged sitting than directly attempting to decrease sitting time. “These findings will be of interest to researchers and practitioners designing new ways to reduce prolonged sitting,” said lead researcher Dr Benjamin Gardner from King’s College London.
The team searched the existing literature on trials of interventions that sought to reduce sitting time. The team then categorised these studies according to their effectiveness and examined the strategies that had been used in each trial to try to reduce sitting.
Some of the promising interventions included the provision of sit-stand desks at work. Even when used in isolation, other techniques such as encouraging people to keep records of their own sitting time, setting individual goals for limiting sitting time, and using prompts and cues to remind people to stop them sitting were also found to help reduce sitting time.
In view of their study,
the researchers now recommend that sitting time should be viewed as a separate behaviour change target to physical activity. “The ill-effects of high
levels of sitting may prove to be especially damaging given that so many people sit for long periods,”
added professor Stuart Biddle from Victoria University in Australia and co-author of the study.
Previous studies and reviews have shown that higher levels of sitting are linked with cancer, diabetes, heart disease and even an early death, independently of whether a person takes regular exercise.
Source | Free Press | 23 September 2015
 

How to Remove Shortcut Virus from PC or USB in One Minute

What is Shortcut Virus ?


Shortcut Virus is an modern virus which automatically comes in your USB, Computer and SD Cards and it’s start creating shortcut.exe files and replace that file with your files and folders. it’s also Hide visible Content for users.
Inline image 1
There will two type of shortcut virus :-
1) Flash Drive Short Virus
2) File and Folder Shortcut Virus
how it’s comes to your PC or USB Device??
The shortcut virus comes from third party software’s , internet, USB storage and many more sources . for example if you will connect your USB or Pen Drive to another computer for transfer data and you don’t know is that PC already infected by shortcut virus then that is the way to shortcut virus comes.

How to Remove Shortcut Virus from USB/PC

whenever you try to remove any virus first step will for all is full scan your device either it will be Internal or external. So here you need to scan your PC and USB device before applying any techniques to remove shortcut virus.
Method 1 : How to Remove Shortcut Virus Using CMD/ Command Prompt ?
you already try to remove shortcut virus through antivirus but the files are not removed . if you want to solve this problem in 1 Minuit then follow below step and remove shortcut virus from your Laptop or USB.
  1. first all open CMD (command prompt) – go to start menu, “run” and “type cmd”
  2. now write below command in cmd terminal :
     attrib -h -r -s /s /d Name_Drive:*.*
                or
     attrib Name_Drive:*.* /d /s -h -r -s
here Replace the Name_Drive with actual drive letter, for ex : if you want to remove shortcut virus from f drive then type 
attrib f:*.* /d /s -h -r -s
remove Shortcut Virus using cmd
3. after type the above command hit enter button
4. now you can check that specific drive file folder is normal now because all shortcut file folder delete .
Method 2 :  Using USB Fix Software
This is the best software to remove shortcut virus from USB or HDD or form PC very Quickly. this is just 4 MB software and it’s easy trick and most trusted software. you have to follow 5 step and you are done.
Reference: 
How to Remove Shortcut Virus from PC or USB in One Minute. (2015, September 23). Retrieved September 26, 2015, fromhttp://www.techlessions.com/remove-shortcut-virus-from-pc-usb/ 

Libraries and the abiding love for printed books

Libraries and the abiding love for printed books

The advent of technology has affected the reading habit of people. It has also hit libraries in the Tricity. But there are people who still mark their presence at libraries to study in peace. 

THE SMELL of a book, the scope for scribbling in the margins, underlining interesting sentences and quotes, folding a corner of the page, keeping colourful bookmarks within and then the pleasure of sleeping by keeping the book beside a pillow are some of the things that still compel city residents to continue their love affair with printed books rather than the eBooks available on Kindles and mobile phones these days.

Enter any of the libraries, and you will find almost every reader carrying a smart phone or a laptop. But then keeping all the digital aids aside, they are glued to their books with pencils and highlighters in hand.

Parveen Khurana, librarian incharge, State Divisional Library, Sector 34, says, “You may carry 300 books with you in your Kindle or in your tablet while travelling. But the battery will always be an issue while there is never a problem with printed books. Also, we can never claim eBooks in our Kindles as our property as they vanish after a year; sometimes due to the battery back-up problems, readers are likely to lose the downloaded material but the hard copies of books are always our property.”

“Once you buy a book, you own it. The distinct smell of its pages, and each and every engraved letter is something so very personal,” says Vikram Chopra, a resident of Chandigarh and a regular visitor at The Browser Library and Bookstore, Sector 8.

A first-year student of SD College, Sector 32, Vikramjeet says, “I believe reading books in the library is the only old tradition we are still following; we will continue to follow it for the simple reason that flipping through pages gives an inner satisfaction which no eBook can ever provide.”

The libraries also see a large number of aspirants preparing for various competitive exams who prefer to come here to study. A variety of options for children are another reason that parents prefer to bring them to the libraries.

The T S Central Library, Sector 17, and State Divisional Library, Sector 34, cater to around 3,000 students daily. The library incharges here maintain the lack of adequate space is a common and long-pending problem. Two more floors are yet to be made functional at the Sector 34 library.

“We already have a space crunch and still three departments are occupying our space: the civil defence, census and the portraits. Since the footfall of readers had increased, we had to convert our magazine room into a reading room,” says Anju Gupta, incharge of the TS Central Library, Sector 17. She adds, “There were days when people of all age groups used to come here to spend time with books but now one of the reasons which holds back most of the readers is the lack of parking space. There is no parking space even for our own staff. So how can we expect general public or senior citizens to waste one hour finding a proper space for parking before coming to the library? Another thing is that this area becomes deserted after office hours.”

With more than 30,000 books available for buying and reading, The Browser Library and Bookstore still sees about 30-40 visitors every day. The library offers a silent environment to its visitors, which allows them to sit and read for hours. “Over the years, we have retained our old readers. But there is a decline in the number of youngsters who visit the library nowadays,” says Ghanshyam Mohanto, an executive who has been working at the library since 1998. However, for avid readers like Abhinav and Shelley who visit the library on a daily basis, nothing can replace printed books. “Yes, we are from that so-called Internet-savvy age, but at the end of the day, I still turn to the hard copy of a book, instead of a Kindle, though it is more economical to download a book on Kindle and it is also very easy to carry it around,” says Shelley.

The British Council Library, which was shifted to Elante Mall in 2013, has about 14,000 books in its physical library, and continues to see around 50-60 visitors daily. The library also has an extensive online collection, and organises regular poet-reading and book-signing workshops. “A lot of people do actually prefer just reading online, which is why we have a vast online repository. We also provide our readers with Wi-Fi facility at the library,” says Namrata, an employee at the British Council Library.

At these libraries, the children’s section continues to attract the majority of readers, closely followed by fiction books. Working professionals can also be seen turning up at the libraries after work, and reading their favourite authors.

“Imagine yourself on a rainy day, when you are cosying up with a warm cup of coffee. You wouldn’t want to turn to a Kindle to read stories of far and beyond; you would most certainly turn to the hard copy of a book. Books have a character; books make you enjoy the art of reading,” adds Vikram.

Smart ideas

Sharing their ideas for the smart city project being initiated by the UT Administration, the incharges of T S Central Library, Sector 17, and State Divisional Library, Sector 34, assert that the administration should make a provision for connecting these libraries through a common smart card which could be used for issuing or returning the book at any of the libraries. The librarians also suggest having a drop box at the nearest e-sampark centre where the readers could drop the book whenever they have to return it, in case they are not able to come to the library.

“Also, we are pushing the administration to allow us to keep the library open for 24 hours instead of the restricted timing of 8 am to 8 pm. Although we already have a provision for converting the books into an audio-visual format here at the library, we plan to introduce a smart device in the library which will help the visually impaired readers to reach the right shelf, once they speak the name of the required book,” says Parveen Khurana, incharge librarian, State Divisional Library, Sector 34. Khurana, who joined the library a few months ago, keeps updating his blog http://divisionallibrary34.blogspot.in/ as well which comprises an online membership form of the library, the list of new books added to the library every month, seven e-papers, e-libraries having 22 lakh books from across the world, and the current affairs.

Source | Indian Express | Chandigarh | 28 September 2015
 

Tuesday 22 September 2015

Google, Tata Trusts to offer 1000 Android Nanodegree scholarships

Google, Tata Trusts to offer 1000 Android Nanodegree scholarships

Google says the curriculum will be updated regularly with new releases and will host a career summit for top thirty graduates from the program in Bangalore by end of this year. In India, Google and Tata Trust together are looking to give 1000 scholarships for students across the country to cover the cost of the program that is priced at Rs, 9,800 a month.

Google said India being the second largest developer population in the world with three million software developers, has the potential to become the #1 (number one) developer population by 2018, with four million developers.

The Udacity Android Nanodegree program will comprise of courses developed and taught by instructors from the Google Developers Relations team.

According to Indian Express, with around 3 million software developers in India, the search giant is taking steps to transform India into a global leaders in mobile app development.

“With over 381 million internet enabled mobile phone subscriptions in India, there is a growing demand for the internet as a multi-purpose solution provider”. Udacity said it is seeking to increase partnerships with more companies based in India. Udacity is an online education portal which was founded by renowned robotics engineer and computer scientist Sebastian Thrun.

Udacity’s free and nanodegree services are available worldwide, but withMonday’s announcement, the company will begin offering the service in rupees and expanding its staff in the country.

“We are excited to be launching Udacity in India today and honoured to be partnering with Google and Tata Trusts as we bring our Nanodegrees to millions of people in India”. Google is also hosting a job fair in India early next year, and will invite Android nanodegree graduates to attend. Over 10,000 students across the world have enrolled in a Nanodegree program since it was first announced in June 2014.

Source | Free Press | 22 September 2015
 

Indian-American’s app offers ‘books for Snapchat generation’

Indian-American’s app offers ‘books for Snapchat generation’

New York :  With more and more teenagers giving up books for Facebook and Twitter, an Indian-American businesswoman cum author has recently launched an app that features short fiction for young readers or what she calls the “Snapchat generation”.

Each book on the app called Hooked will be roughly 1,000 words and is designed to be read in about five minutes reported IANS.

The stories will be told entirely through dialogue and read like texts. Messages show up on screen when readers click “Next,” CNN Money reported.

While initially, the app, developed by Prerna Gupta, will only feature content from screened contributors, eventually users will be able to submit content of their own.

The app is free to download and features one free story a day. Readers can unlock more stories with the subscription service. A week of unlimited stories costs $2.99. A month is $7.99 and a year is $39.99, the report said.

Telepathic, the company Gupta founded with her husband, Parag Chordia, has raised $1.9 million and closed its first round of funding.

Gupta was co-founder and CEO of Khush, the leading developer of intelligent music apps like Songify, an app that turns speech into music.

Source | Free Press | 22 September 2015
 
Regards
 

757 technical education courses shut down in 2015

757 technical education courses shut down in 2015

Overall in India, 556 engineering courses or departments have closed down this year alone, according to AICTE 

New Delhi: Colleges across the country are shutting down courses in technical subjects such as engineering even as India’s apex technical education regulator, the All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE), looks to stem a decline in the quality of such education.

Tamil Nadu and Telangana lead the pack of states that are shutting professional and technical courses, including those in management.

Educational institutions have sought the AICTE’s permission to close down around 1,973 courses in technical subjects, citing a poor employment scenario and flagging student interest in 2015. The regulator has allowed the discontinuation of 757 such courses this year.

“The overall technical education space is awaiting an overhaul to improve the quality of education and address the employability issue of such graduates,” said Anil Shahasrabudhe, chairman of AICTE.

Of the 757 technical and professional courses or departments that have been allowed to shut, the overwhelming majority of 556 were engineering courses, followed by 89 in pharmacy, 57 in computer application and 54 management, according to the regulator. In addition, some 83 colleges, including 46 management and 31 engineering colleges, have closed down so far this year.

As much as 45% or 345 of the technical education courses closed so far this year are in Telangana and Tamil Nadu alone, according to AICTE. And even this is less than half the 788 applications the regulator received from these two states for permission to shut down. Technical education consists of programmes like engineering, management, architecture, pharmacy and management in computer application.

In engineering, Telangana-based colleges have sought permission from AICTE to shut 396 courses. Of these, 143 departments were allowed to close down due to various reasons such as vacant seats and lack of interest from students. Similarly, the technical education regulator has received 168 applications to close down courses or engineering departments in 2015-16 from Tamil Nadu, and has approved the closure of 103 courses.

Besides, 52 engineering courses have closed down so far this year in Maharashtra. Engineering colleges in Maharashtra were looking to close some 86 such courses. Similarly, Rajasthan (46), Madhya Pradesh (35), Andhra Pradesh (32) and Gujarat (31) have got AICTE’s approval to shut down non-viable engineering departments.

For the first time in several years, the number of engineering seats in the country has declined by about 30,000 in 2015. Student intake at undergraduate engineering courses started picking up from 2006-07. From 659,717 engineering seats in 2006, it jumped to more than 1.67 million in 2015. India has more than 3,470 engineering colleges. The technical education regulator is looking to cut some 600,000 engineering seats over a period of time, Mintreported on 20 September.

In management education, Maharashtra B-schools applied for closing some 32 departments but have been granted permission to shut 12. In Rajasthan, of the 14 applications to shut management education departments, eight have got the approval.

Professional schools have strong market linkages and unless their graduates live up to the expectations of employers, it will be difficult for them to survive for long, said Harivansh Chaturvedi, director at the Birla Institute of Management and Technology in Greater Noida. There is an awareness now on the need for checking quality and the AICTE may have woken up following questions being raised on its passive role.

The regulator will fast-track the closure of unviable technical education departments, Shahasrabudhe said. To stem an increase in the number of such schools, it may insist on accreditation of courses by the National Board of Accreditation. Education providers and the regulator now have to think of the job-worthiness of graduates.

The overall quality of management graduates is also poor, said Neeti Sharma, senior vice president with hiring firm Teamlease Services Pvt Ltd. “Only the top 25-30 schools pass out good quality students. For the others, the situation is not bright; quality has been an area of concern,” she said.

Source | Mint – The Wall Street Journal | 22 September 2015
 

Is India preparing her students for the rapidly changing world?

Is India preparing her students for the rapidly changing world?

We are living in an era of high-stakes testing and global comparisons, and the need for re-examining the world’s educational systems is critical.

We are living in an era of high-stakes testing and global comparisons, and the need for re-examining the world’s educational systems is critical. The real challenge for schools is threefold: to prepare students to thrive in a competitive global labour market after completing their education; to achieve community harmony on a global scale; and to promote cultural diversity and the value of universal citizenship in a global community.

It is evident that schools in India (in fact, in most countries) have not kept up with the pace of change in the global society, and are therefore not preparing students well enough for real-world life and the working environment they will face after they have finished their education.

Students today need to learn valuable 21st century skills. For children to be competitive in the future, is it essential that India transitions to an educational system that cultivates relevant skills which will contribute to global citizenship. Currently, schools in India prepare students to be effective task takers, but that alone will not prepare them to thrive in this rapidly changing world. Emphasising test scores above all else not only puts great pressure on children, it also fails to teach them critical skills like collaboration, communication and multi-level critical thinking. 

Doing well on a mathematical test does not adequately prepare a student for the challenges of real-life; rather to excel in the future, students must know how to apply mathematical concepts, not simply answer them.
Further, students need to develop skills. For instance, many of us who work in an office constantly work in teams. To be effective in a team, we all need to have strong collaboration and communication skills. But simply sitting in a classroom, listening to a teacher, memorising facts, and then taking an exam does not help students develop these essential skills. Education need to change and needs to cater to the changing world. Students must practice what they need to learn. Essential skills can not be learned by reading or talking about them—they must be practised.

Some schools in India are talking about developing 21st century skills in children, but these schools are definitely not advanced enough in my opinion. For instance, all the schools I visited in India still have closed classrooms where children are sitting and are listening to a teacher. But in work and career experiences, nobody sits in a closed room and listens to one person standing in front of the room. To really change education, India needs to build new schools from the ground up, where differentiated learning spaces replace these closed classrooms; where students work in groups on projects with the teacher acting as a guide rather than a content expert; and where school life and the life after school is bridged.

I believe every child is unique and that a school has the great responsibility in discovering this uniqueness. Sadly, most of India’s schools don’t even look at the child. Instead of starting with the child’s passions and interests, schools start with the curriculum as the main point of view and hire teachers around that. The uniqueness of the child is completely forgotten. A child’s learning goes so much deeper when s/he is challenged on his/her own passions and interest.

The picture is not all bleak, however. There are great schools in the world which are rewriting history by changing the way teaching and learning occur. Some of these forward-thinking schools have formed an international alliance, the “Global Schools’ Alliance”, to further the cause of changing schools and to share ideas, best practices, and data on effective teaching and learning.

To prepare India’s future workforce, one that can compete with the world, the focus should not just be on educating people. The quality and kind of school education offered will make all the difference. India must build new schools from the ground up, led by people who have the right mindset, knowledge and skill-set, and who are passionate about changing education and are willing to learn from around the world. The change needs to start now, lest we deprive an entire generation of children great opportunities that await them.

Source | Financial Express | 20 September 2015

Regards

 

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