Tuesday 30 October 2018

Internet Safety Activities

A better internet starts with you...
  1. It starts with staying safe online.

    Keep your personal information safe and check with an adult before you share anything online. Personal information includes your email address, phone number and passwords.
    Never agree to meet up with someone you only know online. No matter how friendly they might seem or how well you think you know them, they are still a stranger. Always tell a trusted adult if someone online asks to meet up.

     
  2. It starts with being a good friend.

    Remember that behind every screen is a real person. Being kind and positive online is just as important as being kind and positive face-to-face.

  3. It starts with saying sorry.

    Even when we’re trying really hard to be a good friend online, things can still go wrong. If you ever upset someone online, even if it wasn’t on purpose, then saying sorry is a really powerful and positive action to take.

  4. It starts with taking a step back.

    Being online is great – there are so many fun and exciting things to do! But being connected all the time can get a little stressful. If being online is making you feel worried, upset or confused, it’s always worth taking a step back and having a break from your online activities. Check out Red and Murphy talking about this in this special SID TV video.

  5. It starts with asking for help.

    It’s okay to feel worried or upset by something you see online – just make sure you speak to someone about it! Always tell an adult you trust if you see anything that worries you online.

Monday 29 October 2018

How about reading a book online, for free - eBook

How about reading a book online, for free - eBook

Did you know that there is an online searchable database of million of the world's books that's completely free to use? For several years now the Internet Archive has been collecting millions of scanned and text versions of fiction, popular books, childrens books, historical texts, and academic books that are searchable in their OpenLibrary.


There have been other efforts along these lines such as 

the Gutenberg Project which currently offers 42,000 free online ebooks and Lit2Go which comes fromFlorida's Educational Technology ClearinghouseLit2Go offers a huge free collection of online audio books that can be downloaded as MP3's and played on just about any digital device including your phone. Many of the books and stories that our students read can be found here.
Perhaps the largest collection of online books has been created by none other than Google. In 1996 the founders of Google, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, were graduate students at Standford University where were working to create a web crawler that could someday index online digital libraries. The webcrawler they created eventually developed into the Google Search engine that we are familiar with today but they did return to their original digital library project in 2002. Today the Google Books project includes millions of scanned books and magazines, many of which can be downloaded for free. You can learn more about this history of this project here.

The Google Books project can be found here:  http://books.google.com

They have already scanned millions of books from major universities all across the nation.  You can search their database and read the books right off the screen like this:

Many more books are available for sale at the Google Play Store where you can download them to a digital device of your choice, for a price of course. Apple is also selling ebooks for it's portable devices (such as the iPad, iPhone and iTouch) as part of it's iTunes Apps Store.

It should also be noted that book publishers and authors are not exactly thrilled with all this digital scanning of their books. For example, there was a multi-year legal battle over the Google Books project which was finally settled in October of 2009. 


Qatar Digital Library - World can now access more than 1.5 million digitised pages, for free

Qatar Digital Library - World can now access more than 1.5 million digitised pages, for free

DOHA: H E Sheikha Hind bint Hamad Al Thani, Vice-Chairperson and CEO of Qatar Foundation, has said that everyone in the world can now access more than 1.5 million digitised pages, for free, through Qatar Digital Library, bringing the Arab and Islamic cultural and intellectual legacy to the forefront of people’s studies and understanding. 

“In the four years since the Qatar Digital Library was launched through a partnership between Qatar Foundation and the British Library, we have already seen how this important resource, managed by Qatar National Library, has added value to the world’s historians and researchers, as a unified platform for collections of material that aid scholars of Qatar and the Gulf, medieval Arab science and medicine, and other spheres of study,” H E Sheikha Hind said yesterday, while addressing a reception to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the Qatar Digital Library at British Library, London. 
“My mother, H H Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, Chairperson of Qatar Foundation, envisaged this partnership as a way of allowing people to look at history through fresh eyes. The Qatar Digital Library is an embodiment of that vision.”

The Qatar Digital Library this week celebrated the fourth anniversary of its launch. The bilingual website, which comprises content in both Arabic and English and provides free public access to an important range of historical collections held by the British Library, has now been visited by more than 1.2 million users, generating more than ten million pages views.

The website is the result of a partnership between QF, Qatar National Library, and the British Library to digitise historical collections relating to Gulf history and Arabic scientific manuscripts. Metadata and descriptions of the digitised items are in both Arabic and English, and the Qatar Digital Library transforms access to these collections — previously only accessible via the British Library’s reading rooms — for academics, researchers, students and the wider global community. 

Initially agreed in 2012, the partnership was extended earlier this year so that a further 900,000 images will be added to the 1.5 million already available online. To celebrate the anniversary, H E Sheikha Hind, Chair of the Board of Trustees of Qatar National Library, and Dame Carol Black, Chair of the British Library Board, attended a reception last night at the British Library in London. 

In advance of the reception, H E Sheikha Hind toured the digitisation studio on the sixth floor of the British Library, where Gulf-related material — including music, maps, ships’ logs, reports, letters, private papers and historic publications — is digitised, fully catalogued and uploaded onto the Qatar Digital Library.

In her speech, H E Sheikha Hind said that Qatar Digital Library is a vital resource for historians and history students writing about the Gulf — such as the University of Oxford doctoral student whose research into 19th Century British perceptions of Islam has been advanced by Qatar Digital Library documents.

“And we are just getting started. The third phase of our partnership with the British Library, which begins next year, will add almost one million further pages to the Qatar Digital Library, while material from partners in Turkey, France, the Netherlands, India, and the United Kingdom will also significantly expand its collection,” she added.

Source | https://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/25/10/2018/Over-1.5-million-pages-available-on-Qatar-Digital-Library

HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar launches web portals for research-oriented schemes

Javadekar launches web portals for research-oriented schemes


Javadekar launches web portals for research-oriented schemes

Union HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar on Thursday launched web portals of two schemes — IMPRESS and SPARC — with an aim to build a research ecosystem in educational institutions.

"A country achieves prosperity on a sustainable basis only through innovation which can happen only by good research and which is currently a major focus area of the Government," Javadekar said while addressing a press conference.

The objective of Impactful Policy Research in Social Sciences (IMPRESS) is to identify and fund research proposals in social sciences with maximum impact on the governance and society. "It will provide an opportunity for social science researchers in any institution in the country which includes all universities (central and state) and also a few private institutions meeting the requirement," he said.

The scheme will be implemented at a total cost of Rs 414 crore till March, 2021. Under IMPRESS, 1,500 research projects will be awarded for two years to support social science research in the higher educational institutions.

The Indian Council of Social Science and Research (ICSSR) will be the project implementing agency. Meanwhile, the Scheme for Promotion of Academic and Research Collaboration (SPARC) aims at building the research ecosystem of India's higher educational institutions by facilitating academic and research collaborations between Indian and foreign institutions.

"It is a scheme for promotion of academic and research collaboration. Under the scheme we are giving Rs 418 crore for 600 joint research proposals. The idea is to stop brain drain and provide facility so that they can do research in India which is of international level," said Javadekar.

IIT-Khargapur is the national coordinating institute to implement the SPARC programme. The research work under both the schemes would start from January next year, the minister said.

Source | The Daily Pioneer | 26th October 2018

Monday 22 October 2018

WRITE YOUR BOOK REVIEW HERE

Please copy following link and paste it in new window
Source:https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfCNV5Ui2rfPE5Xkz1DKoP2McmD8XW_UmlOC8_6CjYUeDdYiw/viewform?usp=sf_link

Saturday 20 October 2018

Reading between the eras - Mughal libraries

Reading between the eras Mughal libraries

“Contrary to popular opinion, the grandeur of the Mughal Empire consisted not only of fabulous wealth and worldly riches but also great libraries and seats of learning,” notes Smith in the book. The Sultans of Delhi and their nobles, who preceded the Mughals, had rich literary tastes and established a large number of public and private libraries, Jalauddin Khilji founded the Imperial Library in Delhi and appointed the famous scholar and poet, Amir Khusrau, its librarian. But it was Babar, the founder of the Mughal dynasty in India, who really did augment the Delhi library. “Soldier of fortune as he was,” writes H.C. Rawlinson. “Babar was nonetheless a man of fine literary taste and fastidious critical perception.” He was an accomplished poet and musician, and master of a pure style in prose and verse.

“His son, Humayun, inherited the legacy and added to the library, seven halls, each named after a planet. He was so fond of books that he carried them to the battlefields. On one such occasion in fact he lost several rare ones. At Agra, he raised a set of magnificent buildings called Khana-i-Tilism (house of magic), the first floor of which housed the library. There is, unfortunately, no trace of the complex now, although some of his other buildings are intact. Towards the end of his adventurous life, he converted the pleasure house of Sher Shah in Delhi’s Purana Qila into a library and spent a good part of the day there. It was from the staircase of his library that he tripped and died after a short time in 1556.”

Humayun’s son, Akbar, although illiterate, turned out to be the greatest patron of arts, especially writing, painting, and illustration and translation of books, for each of which he maintained a separate cell.

The largest of the several libraries was the Imperial Library in Agra Fort, compared to which no rival is said to have then existed in the world. According to Abul Fazal, the library was divided into several parts: some of the books were even kept inside the harem. “Experienced people bring them daily and read them before His Majesty who hears (sic) every book from beginning to end,” Smith observed.

Akbar personal interest greatly enriched the library. He had books brought from distant places and also encouraged scholars to write treatises, calligraphists to copy them and painters to illustrate them; books were also presented to nobles and distinguished courtiers. He bought a richly-illustrated version of the manuscript of Razm-Nama (the Mahabharat translated into Persian) for £ 40,000. There were more than 24,000 books in the Imperial Library alone and they kept increasing. Faizi’s collection of 4,300 manuscripts was added to the library and the library of Itimad Khan was acquired after the conquest of Gujarat.

But even if many of these libraries and their possessions were intact today, how many people, with the decline in the love for learning for its own sake, would cherish them? However, the ASI library is the proverbial silver lining in the dark clouds as it continues to perpetuate the Mughal legacy.

New by-laws for affiliation to CBSE schools promote transparency

New by-laws for affiliation to CBSE schools promote transparency

Human Resource Department Union Minister Prakash Javadekar announced the ministry's decision to revamp the norms for granting affiliation to CBSE schools yesterday. The revised by-laws give emphasis to learning outcomes, and aim to make the process of affiliating with the board more simple and transparent.

Javadekar said that the by-laws have been revised for the sake of higher transparency, speed and hassle-free procedures, with the emphasis being on learning outcomes. He highlighted the main changes and transition of the affiliation of the system from a complex one to a simpler system.

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) is affiliated to over 20,000 schools nationwide, and receives applications from 2,000-2,500 schools who wish to affiliate with the board. To increase the level of transparency, all the applications for affiliation to the board will now be done online, as per the new by-laws.


Friday 19 October 2018

Encyclopedias

BIBLIOGRAPHIES / AUTOBIOGRAPHIES

Top 15 Educational Search engine

e- NEWS PAPERS links

Important Links for Students: Dictionaries

Competitive Exam Useful websites

India’s deep digital literacy divide

India’s deep digital literacy divide

A look at India’s deep digital literacy divide and why it needs to be bridged

We need to start by understanding digital literacy rates for the public and private sector, and also education sector. We need data for the status, the progress and the proliferation of digitisation across regions, gender and social strata.

 

Always on, always available, always enabled—this is the world of Generation C (“connected”) who will have grown up in a primarily digital world by 2020, according to a recent report by PwC. Computers, internet, mobile phones, texting, social networking are an integral part of their world. Their familiarity with technology and reliance on mobile communications will transform the way this generation works, entertains, collaborates, consumes and creates. Experts predict that 26 billion or more sensors and devices will be connected to the internet by 2020, bringing in an era of machine intelligence that is already re-framing the world of humans. While technologists and researchers prepare for the future of digitisation, it is imperative to develop a framework that will build a solid foundation for countries, governments, organisations and individuals to navigate this change.

sP+a constructs brick vaulted library for a school in india




mumbai-based architecture firm sP+a has designed a brick vaulted library for a school in india.located in kopargaon, a town in the state of maharashtra, the structure’s narrow footprint is a result of the site, which sits between the school’s existing buildings. conceived as a formal extension of the ground plane, the scheme responds to children’s preference of landscape over man-made structures with an accessible roof.

project info:
name: maya somaiya (sharda) library
client: somaiya vidyavihar

location: kopargaon, maharashtra, india
area: 5,750 sqf / 534 sqm
architects: sameep padora & associates
 (sP+a)
design team: vami sheth, aparna dhareshwar, manasi punde, archita banerjee
year of completion: 2018



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