by admin | May 25, 2021 | Entrepreneurship, News, Success Stories
By Nikhil M. Babu,
Khoda (Uttar Pradesh) : Ten years ago, when three women walked into Shabnam’s one-roomed home here one afternoon, her six- and seven-year-old daughters, Sana and Shaima, were school dropouts. They were attending a nearby madrassa as the family could not afford their school uniforms.
Back then, Shabnam did not know that the visit by the three women would change the lives of her daughters.
They were teachers of Rasta, a newly-opened girls’ school in the neighbourhood. They had only one request: “Please send your daughters to our school.”
It is a request that has since brought hundreds of young Muslim girls into the fold of education.
In this “disease and crime-infested village” on the edge of Delhi — as the local media once described it — with a large Muslim population and no girls-only school, Rasta’s teachers went from door to door convincing parents to send their daughters to the school – which then charged only Rs 40 a month and provided free books and uniforms.
For Sana and Shaima, who joined in the same class despite the difference in their ages, it was a decision that has paid off. “Now they can read names of buses, government documents; my daughters are cleverer than us,” a beaming Shabnam told IANS outside her shanty.
From a modest beginning, the school now boasts of around 600 students (of whom 70 per cent are Muslims), online classes, and a pass percentage of 85 per cent for Class X.
On a recent winter morning, 17 girls sat on wooden benches and a chorus of “Yes, ma’am”, “No ma’am” could be heard in the Grade X classroom, painted a bright yellow and orange.
A decade after she joined the school, the roadside biryani-seller’s daughter Sana – now 16 and her teacher’s “best student” – will write her Class X exam in a couple of months and she dreams of becoming a teacher one day. And she is clear that education has helped her “become independent”.
Her sister, Shaima, who earned a “double promotion”, has moved on to another school nearby and is in Class XI today.
Seated next to Sana in her class are Saima, 18, and Rukaiyya, 17 – both confident enough to articulate their dreams.
“I can talk to anyone now. I’m not afraid to go anywhere,” said Saima, while Rukaiyya believes that, because she is now educated, her children will be better off.
All three girls had dropped out of school and, like many others, were brought back to school by Rasta.
Though well-established now, Rasta had an accidental beginning — a challenge between two old friends over cups of hot tea on a cold Delhi afternoon in January 2007.
“A friend asked me, as a challenge, whether I could teach Muslim girls — and I said yes,” recalled K.C. Pant, 58, founder of the school, sitting in a crammed office room at Rasta School.
Pant, who has about three decades of experience in the field of education, said that Khoda was an obvious choice and he worked fast to set up the school. By mid-February that year, Rasta started by providing informal education to about 250 students in four different locations in Khoda, each with two to three classrooms.
In 2015, the school was recognised by the Uttar Pradesh government and now it operates out of a single building.
But Pant recalled that things were not easy in those early days.
He and others had to go to madrassas and mosques, convincing religious leaders to send girls to school. “They were not used to sending their daughters to school. Maybe their sons, but not daughters.”
There has, however, been a major shift in the attitude of locals, he said. And the girls know that they have benefitted immensely.
Manju Joshi, 41, a Hindi teacher at the school, said that some of the students go on to get a degree. “Some of them return to visit the school — and they come and hug us,” she said with a smile.
“Two years back, a girl delayed her marriage as she wanted to study more. For a Muslim girl from a poor background, it is a big achievement,” said Vinita Singh, the school’s principal.
Another Shabnam – Shabnam Ansari, 45 – also has two daughters studying at Rasta. But her reason for sending them to school was different. “These days even the groom asks ‘How much did the girl study?'” she noted.
“Father also puts thumb impression on paper, mother also puts thumb impression on paper — will the children also do that?” she asked. “What happened to us shouldn’t happen to them.”
Pant, however, believes that there is still a long way to go.
And that is evident at Sana’s house, where her father Arif, the biriyani-seller, said: “What will she do after studying? Anyway we won’t let her do a job. Class X is enough. Now let her do household work. The fee has also increased to Rs 300 and I don’t have money.”
“What will people say if we send her for a job?” asked her mother Shabana. She also complained that Sana only does school activities and not religious ones.
Their education has, however, had its impact on the girls.
“Even if it’s through open school, I want to continue my studies,” Sana said, adding: “I want to go to college.”
“Now she’ll also say that she wants to go for a job” Shabnam said with a laugh. “We are not going to allow her.”
But even with her parents around, Sana said with quiet determination, without looking at them: “I WANT to get a job.”
(The weekly feature series is part of a positive-journalism project of IANS and the Frank Islam Foundation. Nikhil M. Babu can be contacted at nikhil.b@ians.in)
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | World
Moscow : Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he will focus on improving infrastructure, healthcare, education, advanced technologies, labour productivity and incomes of citizens if he wins the Russian presidential election next year.
“The most important issues on which the authorities and the entire society need to focus their attention on are the development of infrastructure, healthcare, education, high technology, as well as efforts to boost workforce productivity… All of these efforts should be aimed at raising citizens’ income,” Putin said at his annual press conference on Thursday, Xinhua reported.
He added that the authorities will have to focus on the above-mentioned aspects if he wins the election.
According to Putin, his election program was practically ready, but he refused to reveal any detail because “the press conference was not the right place to present it.”
Putin said he intended to run for presidency as a self-nominated candidate.
As an independent candidate, he would have to collect at least 300,000 voters’ signatures in his support, while a candidate from a political party would have to collect 100,000 signatures in his support.
Last Wednesday, Putin announced that he would seek a new term in the upcoming presidential election, which he is largely expected to win by a landslide.
The latest public opinion poll of government-owned research center VTSIOM has shown that Russia’s public approval rating of President Vladimir Putin stood at 53.5 per cent as of December 10, up from 53 per cent a week before.
The Russian Federation Council, upper house of parliament, is expected to announce officially on Friday the date of the 2018 presidential election in Russia, previously set at March 18.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News
New York : The Sikh Human Development Foundation (SHDF) has raised over $210,000 for underprivileged students pursuing higher education in Punjab during its latest fund drive, according to the organisation’s chairman, Gajinder Singh Ahuja.
The Washington-based foundation has since 2011 given over $2 million in scholarships based on merit and need to about 5,000 students in Punjab and neighbouring areas, Ahuja said on Friday.
About 2,700 scholarship recipients have already graduated and they include doctors, engineers and scientists, he added.A Some of them now work in the United States. Jasdeep Singh Juneja, who is an information technology professional in Dallas, Texas, said, “If there was no SHDF then I will not be in USA and I would have been lost in life.”
The SHDF programme is run in partnership with the New Delhi-based Nishkam Sikh Welfare Council, Ahuja said.
Chairman of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education, Rajwant Singh said: “The supporters of this cause can be proud of the fact that they are holding the hands of the students who are dreaming to stand on their own feet.”
The lastest fundraising drive was launched last month at an event featuring Bollywood actor and Punjabi comedian, Gurpreet Ghuggi.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics

NCTE website (for representational purpose only)
Kolkata : The National Council for Teachers Education (NCTE) has issued showcause notices to 1,000 BEd and DEd colleges for failing to submit requisite data through affidavits, a senior Union Human Resource Development Ministry official said here on Saturday.
“NCTE has already issued 1,000 showcause notices to stop affiliation with NCTE and thereafter, these colleges will not be able to admit students for BEd and DEd courses. 3,000 more showcause notices will be issued soon,” said Anil Swarup, Secretary, School Education and Literacy, in the ministry.
The NCTE has asked 16,000 BEd and D Ed colleges in India to submit affidavit in respect to all the data and only, 12,000 institutes of them filed affidavit, he said.
“I think the biggest mafia in the education sector are some BEd and DEd colleges and some of them do not exist bust exist in names. We took them on,” he said at an interactive session organised by Merchants’ Chamber of Commerce.
He said NCTE engaged Quality Council of India for quality assessment of these colleges.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Markets, Technology
By Sahana Ghosh,
Moscow : Cooperation with India is one of the “priorities” for the Russian Federation, which is keen to explore potential collaboration opportunities, including in “developing joint education programmes” using modern digital technology, according to the country’s Ministry of Education and Science.
“I think modern technologies are one of the visible areas where we may envisage further development of higher education cooperation. In India, there is a growing interest in such technologies and it appears that modern digital technologies are what India is going to base its economy on,” Alexander Sobolev, Director of the Department of State Policy in Higher Education of the Ministry, told IANS in an interview at the ministry’s office here.
Reflecting that “cooperation with India is one of the obvious priorities for Russia”, Sobolev highlighted that his country has a number of universities that specialise in IT and digital technologies which could be partners or are currently developing partnerships with Indian universities and institutions.
Sobolev said the Higher School of Economics is one such university where they are embracing and adapting digital technology to economics and life sciences while the Moscow State University has a very serious school of mathematics and IT.
“ITMO University (in St. Petersburg) is the Russian leader in IT, providing training and research in advanced science, humanities, engineering and modern information technology, developing translational IT, which means applying the university’s expertise in computer technologies, for example, to health care, urban and social studies, blending the culture of innovation in IT and discovery with world-class education,” he said.
In 2016-2017, ITMO University was assigned by Bengaluru’s Indian Institute of Science to design a system that helps provide security at global mass gatherings using multi-agent modelling technologies.
The mathematical model that can predict crowd behaviour was designed on the basis of the data collected at Kumbh Mela (this was the so-called Kumbh-Mela experiment), a study with the largest number of participants.
Sobolev informed that the Russian government has drawn up a list of priority projects that are being implemented by the Ministry of Education and Science: Universities as innovation centres, modern digital educational environment in the Russian Federation and developing the export potential of the Russian education system.
“We have 243,000 international students altogether attending universities in Russia. This figure has approximately doubled since 2010. The target for 2025 is an increase in the number of international students to 750,000,” he said.
In this context, the Russian Academic Excellence Project 5-100 (5 in top 100), launched in 2013, has an essential role to play.
The project targets at least five Russian universities featuring in the top 100 universities worldwide 2020.
There are 21 universities participating in the project.
Since the launch of the project, the share of foreign professors, teachers, and researchers among the staff of the Project 5-100 universities has increased 4.5 times, and the number of international students has doubled.
Since 2013, Project 5-100 participants have implemented more than 2,250 research projects headed by leading foreign and Russian scientists and/or jointly with promising university research organisations and centres.
Showcasing Russia as a top destination for foreign students, Sobolev explained that every year, the government provides “state-funded spots” at universities to international applicants.
“There are 9,300 students from India. In 2017, 15,000 such spots were granted in Russian higher education institutions. For India, there were 102,” he said.
The quota allocated by the Ministry of Education applies not only to undergraduates but also to post-graduate students.
“Russia is one of the few countries in the world that provide foreign applicants with the right to study free of charge in universities on par with Russian students,” he added.
(Sahana Ghosh was in Moscow at the invitation of MEPhI, the National Research Nuclear University. She can be contacted at sahana.g@ians.in)
—IANS