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10 digital skills students need for today’s education (Educational Notes)

10 digital skills students need for today’s education (Educational Notes)

digital skills studentsBy Beas Dev Ralhan & Divya Jain,

Technology today has become a new way of living and is entrenched in every facet of modern human life. The internet, mobile phones, computers and various other tools of information management have completely changed the way how people live, learn, interact and work.

Youngsters today are already exposed to various digital tools and are driving innovation in the technology sector. This has resulted in a mindshift of sorts in the education sector, with more and more institutions around the world realising the importance of adopting technology in the classroom. In the last five years digital literacy has risen beyond just being a buzzword, emerging as one of most important concepts in modern education.

Here’s a checklist of what’s essential:

* Terminology

Without the ability to understand the relevant terminology, digital literacy can be a daunting endeavor. When students understand the various terms related to technology, using it becomes far more easier. It will also help them understand how various apps, websites and information tools work

* Using the internet

The staggering vastness of the World Wide Web can be both confusing and stifling for some students. So, it is important to teach students how to navigate the enormous landscape of the Internet efficiently and find the information they seek. The right set of digital skills will help students to use of technology responsibly

* Coding

The ability to apply computational thinking to solve problems forms the basic premise of coding. It encompasses functions like understanding structures, variables, sequential planning, learning the functions of various objects and harnessing different methods to complete tasks. Learning coding also helps develop a deeper understanding of concepts of science, maths and linguistics

* Creating multimedia projects

The main objective of using multimedia is to communicate ideas more creatively. Understanding and learning skills like graphic designing, and audio and video editing . help students become creators, instead of just being passive receivers of information. Teaching and learning is slowly shifting to digital platforms since the last few years. So, multimedia skills are of crucial importance for students

* Content creation and curation

Using technological skills like creating documents, spreadsheets, PPTs and infographics; and video and audio editing, have become an important feature of modern classrooms. Students should be able to analyse, collect, collate and assess various types of content using technology as it is one of the most important elements of digital literacy

* Social media readiness

It is an undisputed fact that social media has thoroughly transformed how we communicate and interact with the world. The emergence of various social media platforms has contributed to a seamless flow of information between content creators and consumers. It is helping students to connect with peers from across the world and share knowledge

* Collaborative skills

The digital environment requires a collaborative approach for tasks like project management. Skills like collaboration and communication across multiple platforms, are key to thrive in this scenario. Learning to utilise various technology tools allows students to experiment and collaborate

* Blogging

The advantages of learning to blog are manifold. Blogging doesn’t just help in improving articulation and writing skills but also helps in developing creative thinking. In the context of education, it helps in creative expression of academic concepts

* Understanding hardware

In view of the our growing dependence on gadgets and various other technology tools, it is important for every student to understand the basics of hardware and troubleshooting related to these gadgets and tools. This requires an in-depth understanding of the components of WiFi networks, computers, processors and the like

* Understanding copyright

Students are often encouraged these days by their educators to use the internet for doing their background research for projects and other tasks that are part of their curriculum. This exposes young learners to a vast pool of online resources from where they can borrow information and ideas. So educators need to guide students to prevent f plagiarism, educating them on copyright and the implication of its violation.

(Beas Dev Ralhan is Co-founder and CEO Next Education India Pvt Ltd; Divya Jain is Founder & CEO, Safeducate. The views expressed are personal. They can be contacted at prathisthaj@nexteducation.in & divya.jain@safeducate.com)

—IANS

HP India to give education a big push in 2019: MD Sumeer Chandra

HP India to give education a big push in 2019: MD Sumeer Chandra

Sumeer Chandra

Sumeer Chandra

By Nishant Arora,

New Delhi : PC and printing major HP Inc is witnessing tremendous growth in the Indian market across product lines and, in 2019, the education sector will be the key pillar for the company, says Sumeer Chandra, Managing Director, HP Inc India.

For fiscal 2018, HP reported net revenue of $58.5 billion – up 12 per cent from the prior-year period. The net revenue for the fourth quarter was $15.4 billion – up 10 per cent – and the Asia-Pacific and Japan (APJ) region grew 17 per cent.

“In APJ, India grew faster than expected in fiscal 2018. HP’s India performance is in line with the global and regional growth. We strengthened our presence in the A3 printer space, introduced 3D printing and bet big on PC gaming in the country,” Chandra told IANS in a free-wheeling interview.

The Indian economy, he added, is going through interesting dynamics at the moment — especially on the exchange rate front — amid some uncertainties such as the general elections due next year.

“However, we have our strategy areas ready for next year and providing digital education to the masses will be a key growth engine. Technology, I believe, can truly transform fundamental education in India,” Chandra emphasised.

For him, education intersects what is good for business as well as for society.

“Education meets both the objectives. To empower students, we are driving new price points in our products. We recently launched an affordable mini desktop to help students learn and collaborate in schools and educational institutions across the country,” Chandra said.

Starting at Rs 19,990, the HP 260 G3 desktop is enabling schools and institutes set up or upgrade computers at their science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) labs at a minimal cost.

When paired with HP Integrated Work Centre and HP EliteDisplay, teachers can read and present files effortlessly. With the wide range of input display connectors, documents can also be shared across multiple monitors.

“The idea is to help schools either refresh or create digital labs for students. We also have back-to-campus programmes where we organise discounted sales for our products so more schools can afford PCs,” the HP India executive noted.

Another key HP initiative is in the form of self-contained, Internet-enabled digital inclusion and learning labs on wheels, to take digital literacy to every nook and corner of the country.

Called “HP World on Wheels” (WoW), the buses are already driving digital literacy in rural India.

“There are 20-odd PCs in one solar-powered, Internet-enabled bus with a TV at the back, helping students augment their education, driving youth to learn New-Age digital skills and providing digital literacy to rural women,” said a beaming Chandra.

People in rural India are also using the facility for Aadhaar and to access other citizen-related services.

“We have 19 such buses that have reached over 50,000 people so far. We plan to launch another 12 buses by March and will have a total of 48 buses soon. In the next six years, we plan to reach 6,500 villages and empower close to 15 million lives,” Chandra told IANS.

Next on his agenda is to reach many more students via HP’s wide network.

“Affordability and accessibility are on top of my mind. Via HP’s widest network, 600 HP World stores and tens of thousands of retailers selling HP products, we can reach many more students,” emphasised Chandra.

The company also has “Smart Learning Hubs”, in collaboration with Microsoft, at 600 HP World stores that are engaging customers and non-customers with edutainment.

HP has organised 160 programmes covering 5,000 school-going children at these stores where they take coding lessons, learn how to make a YouTube video or create a blog, etc.

“Parents and children are excited and so are we. We will take this initiative to smaller cities as well to impart digital literacy to many more children,” said Chandra.

(Nishant Arora can be contacted at nishant.a@ians.in)

—IANS

India’s education crisis: Time for India, Australia to forge knowledge partnership

India’s education crisis: Time for India, Australia to forge knowledge partnership

School children, EducationBy Amit Dasgupta,

India faces a critical challenge in the education sector that has, tragically, been of its own making. In each area, whether primary, secondary or tertiary, supply and resource constraints, infrastructural inadequacies, lack of qualified personnel, including faculty, are a common complaint. This is a result of seven decades of neglect and a lack of forward-planning.

Over the years, this led to a proliferation of private initiatives, several of which are sub-standard and solely aimed at taking advantage of the supply-demand mismatch. While private sector participation in education is to be welcomed, without proper regulatory mechanisms in place, a mushrooming of dodgy institutions and informal parallel service-centres will only churn out graduates who are not employable. This kind of factory-approach to education is particularly worrying, not only for policy makers but also the corporate sector. Indeed,India’s demographic dividend could potentially become a demographic calamity.

With almost half its population under 25 years of age, India needs to dramatically increase access to quality education, so as to sustain high economic growth and emerge as a regional and global economic power. Unfortunately, uneven development and huge disparities, whether in terms of a rural-urban divide or gender, income levels or social status make the equitable availability of high-quality education one of the grand challenges that confronts the government.

Sadly, over the past seven decades and more, education has received only passing attention. Even today, the allocation in the fiscal budget is only 1.2 per cent. Unless this anomalous situation is addressed and urgently, India faces a significant and crippling crisis that has dangerous consequences for its future.

This neglect has impacted educational institutions pan-India. Future-thinking, for instance, is not part of our pedagogy. We use a 19th century pedagogy to create a 21st century mindset. We educate our children but never encourage them to learn. We insist that they memorise, but never to understand. We shun curiosity because it challenges the status quo. We uphold “jugaad” (improvisation) and extol its virtues but do not invest in research and, thus, in innovation. We hesitate to train our teachers to embrace technology or “new” thinking because we feel threatened. We disseminate information but not how it might be processed and used to advantage.

The government has recognised the compulsions of urgently addressing the education crisis. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his party would, naturally, look for a second term. For this, they would focus on economic and social well-being as their principal electoral plank. This, in fact, is a collective aspiration shared by all political parties. It is also a collective aspiration of all Indians.

At the same time, it is well-established that such an end objective would be elusive unless India recognises the power of human capital. This explains the current and significant interest the government has shown in education reforms and investment, including in the higher education space and, especially, in research and foreign collaborations. What is also noteworthy is that India’s corporate sector has started taking greater interest in the quality of education provided. Analysts, however, suggest that India would not be in a position to achieve its objective on its own in the short or medium term.

We are already witnessing a strong push-factor, where increasing numbers of Indian students emigrate for higher studies. Indian students have generally opted for the US and the UK. There were good reasons for this. However, the situation has dramatically changed, thanks to policies that governments in those countries have adopted and, more critically, the manner in which the Indian rupee has devalued vis-à-vis the US dollar.

This is the new sweet-spot for Australian higher education providers and might well emerge as a win-win situation that dramatically and positively impacts bilateral relations. As we have seen in the case of the US and of the Colombo Plan and Commonwealth Fellowship students who had studied abroad, those studying in Australia could become lifetime advocates and brand ambassadors for India-Oz relations.

However, Australian higher education facilities are not yet a well-known brand in India, essentially because of the traditional and strong pull of the US and the UK. Few know, for instance, that out of 33 universities in Australia, seven are in the top 100 QS rankings in 2019 of which five are in the top 50.

Several Australian universities have now started setting up offices in India and expanding staff in existing offices. All are investing in outreach activities, such as the recently-concluded stellar India Open Days that the University of New South Wales held in the four cities of New Delhi, Chennai, Pune and Mumbai which showcased the unique manner in which pedagogy embraced technology.

It is also worth mentioning that in a number of areas of development interest for India, leading-edge Australian research can provide compatible design solutions. These include energy efficiency, photovoltaics, HIV/AIDS, optometry, smart transport, sustainable housing, cyber security, artificial intelligence, rooftop cooling, waste management, water resources, quantum computing and many others.

The robust manner in which the inflow of high-achieving Indian students to Australian universities has increased in a short span of time is testimony to the increasing awareness of the quality of learning and living that Australia offers.

During President Ram Nath Kovind’s historic visit to Australia, he emphasised how knowledge partnership could contribute towards crafting the new architecture in the bilateral relationship between the two countries.

Only time will tell if Canberra is willing to see India as the new go-to destination and emerge as a strong development partner for India’s rapidly spiraling aspiration. And,equally, whether India is able to think outside its blinkers, in the short and medium term, and seize a knowledge partnership with Australian universities to address the aspirations of its young demography and its corporate sector.

A great opportunity awaits if the two countries can seize the moment. Indeed,a new and dynamic chapter in bilateral relations could be written. It is time to lift the game and to see with new eyes.

(The author, a former Indian diplomat, is Inaugural Director of the UNSW India Centre. The article is in special arrangement with South Asia Monitor)

—IANS

Gujarat HC notice to govt on ‘religious profiling’ of Muslim students

Gujarat HC notice to govt on ‘religious profiling’ of Muslim students

Representational Image

Representational Image

Ahmedabad : The Gujarat High Court on Wednesday issued a show-cause notice to the state government seeking an explanation for using an online examination form for the Class X and XII board examinations, taken by the Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board (GSHSEB), to collect data and segregate students of Muslim community.

The notice was issued following a PIL filed by K.R. Koshty, who alleged that the BJP-ruled Gujarat government was resorting to religious-profiling of students from Muslim community appearing for the board exams.

Koshty also challenged Gujarat government’s mandatory online forms for the board exams, arguing that Internet connectivity in many parts of the state was poor. According to the PIL, the forms also seek Aadhaar details which is against the Supreme Court’s recent judgement.

The state government has been collecting data for the last five years of Muslim students appearing for the board exams, the state Education Minister had said on Tuesday.

A division bench of acting Chief Justice Anant Dave and Justice Biren Vaishnav sought replies from the state government, Gujarat Secondary and Higher Secondary Education Board (GSHSEB) and the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) by December 6.

—IANS

Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18

Nearly 2 lakh Indians studied in US in 2017-18

Education, Indian Students, YouthsBy Arul Louis,

New York : India is the second largest international reservoir for the US higher education institutions having sent 196,271 students here in the last academic year, according to latest data.

Their numbers continued to grow, with a 5.4 per cent increase in 2017-18 over the previous academic year, according to the Open Doors report from the State Department and the Institute of International Education.

In the other direction, 4,704 students went to study in India during 2016-17, latest period for which data is available. It was an increase of 12.5 per cent from the previous year.

The report said that there was a steep fall in the number of Indian students at the post-graduate level in the US. Their numbers came down by 8.8 per cent to 95,651 in 2017-18 compared to the previous year, while the number of students in practical training programmes after graduation shot up by 32 per cent to 75,390, according to the report.

The number of undergraduate students also went up by 6.2 per cent to 23,346.

Indians made up 17.9 per cent of total of 1,094,792 international students in the US last academic year.

China sent 363,341 students, the most of any country.

In 2016-17, there were 186,267 students from India in the US, a 24.9 per cent increase over the 165,918 the previous year.

During 2016-17, there were 21,977 students in undergraduate programmes, 104,899 in graduate courses and 57,132 in practical training programmes.

The State Department said international students contributed $42 billion to the US economy and supported 450,000 jobs.

(Arul Louis can be reached at arul.l@ians.in and followed on Twitter @arulouis)

—IANS