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Education


Remove asbestos roofs in schools, local bodies told

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The Hindu                    28.02.2013

Remove asbestos roofs in schools, local bodies told

Staff Reporter

Right panel team begins visit in Wayanad.

The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has directed the three-tier local administrative bodies to remove asbestos sheets used as a roofing material in schools and anganwadis in the district.

Commission member Satyabrata Pal, who is leading the team, said after visiting selected schools and anganwadis in Sulthan Bathery taluk on Wednesday that the asbestos roof was cause for many health-related issues such as cancer among children. Hence, the three-tier local administrative bodies should take responsibility for replacing such hazardous materials with human-friendly materials, he said.

The team comprises M.K. Sreevastava, Joint Secretary, and Savita Bakri, Deputy Secretary, of the commission.

The team also visited selected police stations, government hospitals, tribal colonies and sub-jail in the district.

It will hold a meeting of representatives of the three-tier local administrative bodies and non-governmental organisations in the district at the Collectorate conference hall here at 2.30 p.m. on Thursday to assess the progress in the human rights awareness programme being implemented by the commission in the district.

Last Updated on Thursday, 28 February 2013 06:02
 

Civic students will pay 50% less for bus ride to SSC exam centres

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The Times of India                     27.02.2013

Civic students will pay 50% less for bus ride to SSC exam centres

MUMBAI: Students of municipal schools can now travel to their SSC exam centres at concessional bus fares. This was approved at the BEST panel meeting on Tuesday.

BEST general manager Om Prakash Gupta said, "Students of BMC schools can show their hall tickets or ID cards to our bus conductors. They will be issued tickets at concessional rates."

"It is a concession of nearly 50%. We expect the BEST to introduce more student-friendly schemes in future," said Akash Purohit, committee member from the BJP.

Gupta said the scheme will now be valid for BMC students every year during the SSC exams.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 February 2013 12:02
 

Local list for civic bodies mooted

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The Hindu                        15.02.2013

Local list for civic bodies mooted

Special Correspondent

The need for forming an exclusive list for local self-government institutions as well as the problems triggered by the imposition of Centrally sponsored schemes on States came up for discussion at a consultative session on improving local governance in the country. The interactive session with the Expert Committee on Panchayati Raj headed by Mani Shankar Aiyar which reached here on Thursday to elicit opinion on strengthening Panchayati Raj institutions was held under the aegis of the Kerala Institute for Local Administration and the National Institute of Rural Development.

Former State Finance Commission chairman M.A. Oommen said that Schedule 7 of the Constitution should be scrapped and the functional role of the Union and the State governments should be restructured. Owing to the failure in defining activity boundary and responsibility mapping, grama panchayats had become the ‘happy hunting ground’ of the other tiers.

He stressed the need for limiting the number of Centrally sponsored schemes to 50 and said that flagship schemes which mandated a share from the State governments were upsetting their priority. Consent of the States should be sought for introducing such schemes, and it should be used for research and development.

A local government service cadre should be carved out. Kerala had set a model in institutional decentralisation. But bottom-up planning was not happening. Civic bodies had no fiscal space. A local taxation inquiry panel should be constituted. Panchayats should publish a women’s status report. Grama sabha should become the central piece of decentralised planning and operational cost should be identified, he said.

State Election Commissioner K. Sasidharan Nair sought a Constitutional amendment for defining the powers of the Union and the State governments. Panchayats were regional authorities in many States. The functional space of panchayats should be defined. Taking a cue from Kerala, a unified law should be framed for fixing the role and powers of grama sabhas, he said.

Kerala Sashtra Sahithya Parishad (KSSP) representative P.K. Ravindran spelt out the problems in conducting grama sabhas. Now, there were only ward sabhas which represented the needs of the wards. A wholesome development view for a local body could be evolved only by a body with a representation of all wards.

Last Updated on Friday, 15 February 2013 07:04
 

“State must play fundamental role to promote education”

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The Hindu                  13.02.2013

“State must play fundamental role to promote education”  

Johns Hopkins University president Ronald J. Daniels delivering a lecture on
Johns Hopkins University president Ronald J. Daniels delivering a lecture on "Frontiers of higher education" in Jaipur on Tuesday.--Photo: Rohit Jain Paras.
 
A robust role by the State, establishment of governance bodies which can resist political interference, first-rate colleges and universities, regulations offering incentives rather than directions and targeted investments in innovation and competition will go a long way towards promoting quality education for millions, said Prof. Ronald J. Daniels, President of the prestigious Johns Hopkins University of the U.S., on Tuesday. He was delivering a lecture on “Frontiers of higher education: Access, quality and innovation in India and the United States” here.

He said the disparities in access to high-quality post-secondary education were evident in both the U.S. and India. The socio-economic dividing line, depicted through 70% of the population not having a college degree, is closely related to the decline and eventual halt in the growth of educational attainment and the withdrawal of State investment in colleges and universities, pointed out Prof. Daniels.

In the U.S., he said, student debt is roughly one trillion dollars, or one-sixteenth of the total debt of the country. “One can see the same trends in India, where funding to support students from poor backgrounds in accessing higher education is nearly absent. There are disparities in access for students from rural areas, for women, for the poor, for students from Scheduled Castes and Tribes,” he added.

According to 2008 data, only 11.1% of individuals in India’s rural areas attend college or university, compared to 30% in urban areas. The gross attendance ratio for Scheduled Tribes was 7.7%, compared to a national average of 17.2%. By one estimate, India will need to add 90 lakh new post-secondary seats by 2016 to merely keep pace with growth in demand, even as there is already a dearth of roughly 4 lakh faculty members, said the Professor.

The Bhoruka Charitable Trust and the Institute of Health Management Research (IIHMR) jointly organised the lecture to commemorate the late P. D. Agarwal who had established the trust. IIHMR trustee-secretary and former Rajasthan Chief Secretary M. L. Mehta presided over the lecture.Prof. Daniels noted that government support for research in both the U.S. and India had declined in real terms over the past decade. There has been a 26% reduction in funding for higher education in the U.S. and additional serious budget cuts loom on the horizon. At the very least, public funding is unlikely to return to previous levels, particularly as other costs such as health care continue to rise.

In India, the Yash Pal Committee has characterised funding as “unpredictable, inadequate and inflexible”. Just last month, New Delhi slashed the budget for higher education by 13%. Spending on all education in India as a percentage of GDP is lower than in Brazil, Mexico, Iran, China, Botswana or Uganda, said Prof. Daniels while emphasising that educationists, scholars and citizens must act briskly and effectively to meet these challenges.

John Hopkins University is the largest university recipient of Federal research funds in U.S. and is home to a host of pre-eminent schools and programmes. As the University's 14th president, Prof. Daniels has focused his leadership on the overarching themes of interdisciplinary collaboration, student accessibility and community engagement.

The State must play a fundamental role in promoting education and make a sustained investment in colleges and universities. The institutions of governance must be able to deflect and manage politics that can distort policy formulation in the area linked to the core goals of social transformation, equity and economic growth, he added.

Last Updated on Thursday, 14 February 2013 09:56
 

5k civic schools to get computer labs

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The Times of India      05.09.2012

5k civic schools to get computer labs

Nashik: In the next five years, all the government and aided schools in the state will have computer laboratories with Internet access. This year, The state education department aims at providing thye facility in 5,000 schools this year, including 129 schools run by the Nashik Municipal Corporation (NMC).

The state education department will be setting up the laboratories labs along with Internet connection and other facilities for all the government and aided schools in the city within five years. The move is being made as part of the Implementation of the Computer Education Programme (ICT) scheme. Last year, computer laboratories were set up at 3,000 government and aided schools at a cost of Rs 3 crore.

"This year we will be spending Rs 6.25 crore for five thousand schools. Next year we are aiming to cover six thousand schools, for which tenders are yet to be floated," said director of education for secondary and higher secondary education, Shridhar Salunkhe, during his recent visit to the city.

Salunkhe added that the expenses would be borne by the state and central governments. Trained personnel would also be available to provide ed be providing computer education to the schools' students. The drive is aimed to enable computer-aided learning at all government and aided schools, said Salunkhe.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 05 September 2012 06:30
 


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