Friday, May 18, 2012
Exercise on the move
Saturday, April 21, 2012
How serial entrepreneur Naveen Jain turned into a billionaire
He shared some thoughts on his latest venture, Moon Express, a lunar transportation and data services company, with Peerzada Abrar and of its relevance at a time when the human race is heading to be a multi-planetary society.
Poverty teaches a lot
I grew up in India and we never had a place we could call home. We never got to live in one city for more than six months to a year. We were very poor - sometimes we had food to eat, sometimes we didn't. This was because my father worked in the public works department and refused to take bribes.
His unwillingness to accept bribes did not go well with his bosses who used to transfer him. This happened at very frequent intervals - sometimes twice a year - and to remote places. My early education was mostly in schools that rarely had any tables or chairs.
Despite this, I joined IIT, did MBA, my sister was able to do her post doctoral studies in mathematics and my brother did his Phd in statistics and computer science. I was hired by Burroughs and went to US for a year for training with just $5 in my pocket.
Trust your instinct
I was able to foresee breakthroughs in technology and build companies around it. I kept thinking about why people carry mobile phones and palm pilots. I dreamt of the day when we could merge them all. You will be able to get your emails, content, calendar on the same device.
I started InfoSpace in 1996, which provided instant information on cellular phones and other mobile devices. People thought it to be a crazy idea at first.
I made the idea public in 1998 and by the end of 1999, the company was worth close to $35 billion. This taught me the crucial lesson that if you believe in something, although there may not be a visible market for it, the effort is worth pursuing.
Entrepreneurs don't retire
After 2002, I wanted to retire - a phase that lasted for seven days. Boredom struck and I wanted to do something creative. I called a couple of my friends and started a company in January 2003 called Intelius, which provides information services. Everybody thought that information on the internet was free.
But we knew that people were willing to pay if we help them solve their problems. We have now over 20 million customers at Intelius and are doing $150 million in revenues. Through Intelius, we opened the doors for millions of Americans in background and criminal records search.
Be futuristic
Thinking must not be limited to the present. A futuristic approach always pays. I believe the human race will become a multi-planetary society. People will live on the moon, Mars and Earth.
At Moon Express we are now actually sending a moon lander in the next two years. It will send stuff such as scientific instruments, your DNA or your pet's DNA, souvenirs, photos and even be able to write wedding proposals on the moon. We also aim to bring stuff such as platinum to Helium-3 back to earth, which can solve our energy problems.
Source: Economic Times
Thursday, February 9, 2012
'Separate' is most commonly misspelt word
'Separate' is the most commonly misspelt word in the English language, according to a new study.
The eight-letter word came top due to the regular placing of an 'E' where the first 'A' sits.
Second in the list was 'definitely', which often falls victim to a string of mistakes including mixing up the second 'I' with an 'A'. Another common error is dropping the final 'E'.
'Manoeuvre', which is problematic due to the unusual combination of OE and U, came third and 'embarrass', in which an R or an S often falls by the wayside, was fourth.
'Occurrence' emerged as the fifth most commonly misspelt word due to confusion over the double C and double R.
A spokesman for market research company www.OnePoll.com, which carried out the study of 3,500 Britons, said: ''There seem to be some words which we always struggle to get down onto paper, and 'separate' is one of those which eludes us.
''A common mistake many make is writing a word the way it sounds which leaves us muddling up one letter with another and getting it wrong.
''Fortunately, computers' spell-check corrects wrongly spelt words for us, but that means we become lazy and never learn the correct spelling.
''There's no excuse not to learn how words are formed - it's drilled into us from such a young age and if the words are frequently used we should make a conscious effort to get it right next time.
''The fact we judge other people's intelligence by their written word, yet don't like to be judged ourselves, means we should all pick up a dictionary once in a while.''
The study also found 'consensus' and 'unnecessary' cause problems for many, coming sixth and seventh.
'Acceptable', which causes issues partly because of the two Cs, was eighth, while 'broccoli' came ninth.
The top ten was completed by the word 'referred'.
Other difficult words to feature include 'bureaucracy' at 11, 'connoisseur' at 14 and 'particularly' at 17.
Confusion over the number of Ns in 'questionnaire' meant it came 13th, with 'entrepreneur' 16th and 'parallel' at 20.
Words which just failed to make the top 20 include 'calendar', 'pigeon' and 'changeable'.
It also emerged one in six people often spell words so incorrectly while typing their PC doesn't recognise the word they are attempting.
Two out of three admitted using spell-check on computers had made them lazy when writing letters or notes by hand.
One in five blamed predictive text messaging for their bad spelling.
But despite the frequency of errors, most of us (77 per cent) believe our spelling is either 'good' or 'very good'.
The study also found 46 per cent judge other people on their spelling, with 27 per cent admitting they believe people who cannot spell are 'thick'.
Three out of ten said they were embarrassed by their poor spelling skills and one in ten corrected others when they spell something incorrectly.
One in five said it was their belief the art of spelling was something 'you just learn in school'.
Top 20 misspelt words:
1. Separate
2. Definitely
3. Manoeuvre
4. Embarrass
5. Occurrence
6. Consensus
7. Unnecessary
8. Acceptable
9. Broccoli
10. Referred
11. Bureaucracy
12. Supersede
13. Questionnaire
14. Connoisseur
15. A lot
16. Entrepreneur
17. Particularly
18. Liquify
19. Conscience
20. Parallel
Courtesy: The Telegraph, UK
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Towards Quality Education TOI Edit 180112
Three reports in three months paint a grim picture of school education in India.First,a leading corporate published the Quality Education Survey on high-end schools in metropolitan cities,which found them lacking on quality parameters and indicted them for excessive reliance on rote learning.Second,the OECDs Programme for International Student Assessment ranked Indian higher secondary students only better than those from Kyrgyzstan among 74 participating countries.And third,Prathams Annual Status of Education Report (ASER),2011,assessing schools in rural India,found declining attendance,over-reliance on private tuitions and declining reading and mathematical abilities of children in the six to 14 years age category.
Taken together,the three reports make it amply clear that despite a welcome high enrolment rate around 96.7% at the primary and upper primary levels,the quality of school learning is simply not up to the mark.Most government schools lack basic infrastructure such as blackboards and textbooks.Teaching standards are poor,with high teacher absenteeism.It is little wonder then that only 48.2% of class V students surveyed under ASER were able to read class IIlevel texts,among other depressing statistics.
Unless school education is rescued from this quagmire of mediocrity,all talk about developing a skilled human resource pool and realising the countrys demographic dividend will be without substance.In this regard,the Right To Education (RTE) Act,with its objective of providing free and compulsory education to all primary schoolchildren,misses the quality issue.Two years after the RTEs introduction,government schools have continued to wallow in pathetic conditions.Meanwhile,by imposing strict parameters on private schools,the RTE has squeezed the few entrepreneurs engaged in this field,disincentivising further investment.
There is no denying that in the quest for universal education the public sector must take the lead.Private schools can only play a supporting role,and that too needs to be incentivised.Issues of quality can only be addressed by raising the standards of public schools.This can be done by ensuring they have enough resources and introducing better pedagogy as well as oversight of teaching staff,so that pay and promotions are linked to performance.Its an administrative rather than legislative issue.The human resources ministry as well as education departments of states cant duck their responsibility.
http://www1.lite.epaper.timesofindia.com/mobile.aspx?article=yes&pageid=20&edlabel=CAP&mydateHid=18-01-2012&pubname=&edname=&articleid=Ar02004&format=&publabel=TOI&max=true
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
No lesson learnt, 50% Class 5 students can't read Class 2 books
India's school education success story has a flip-side - more than half of the students in class V in rural India cannot read the text taught in class II in 2011, - even though around 97 % of children in 6 to 14 age group are now enrolled in schools.
The startling fact is finding of NGO Pratham's annual education survey of 6.3 lakh children across India in over 16,000 villages, who under the Right To Education Act are supposed to get quality education. A non-government report, an annual feature since 2005, evaluates the learning ability of students through a simple test based on what students are taught in their classrooms.
A survey conducted 18 months after watershed RTE law was implemented found that there is a decline of 5% in learning ability of students in schools even though the parents are employing more private tutors than ever before.
Around 52% in Bihar had age appropriate learning level in Pratham's first survey in 2006. Five years down the drain, the number has fallen to 29.9 %. Those in class V student, who can read a class II textbook, have the basic ability to learn.
Bihar is not alone. Similar decline in reading and mathematics was also reported from Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Rajasthan and Haryana even though many of the students surveyed were taking private tuitions.
"The tutor is a complementary factor and if the school functioning declines, the effectiveness of the tutor is lower too," the survey report of 6.3 lakh children released by HRD minister Kapil Sibal said.
The survey found that falling attendance in rural government schools in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan was a clear reason for declining learning levels. Average attendance of students in Bihar has declined from 59% classes in 2007 to 50 % whereas in Uttar Pradesh it fell from 67 % to 57 %. Another reason was increase in multi-grade classrooms in these states, which Prathan chairperson Madhav Chavan termed as a "quiet disaster"
The drop in learning levels among children in government schools despite the government pumping thousands of crore of rupees for implementation of the Right To Education Act, is a reason for parents opting for private schools even in rural India, the report said.
Enrolment of number of children in 6-14 age group in private schools has increased from 18.7% in 2006 to 25.6% in 2011. The learning level in private schools in most states has either remained same or has improved.
Sibal, however, blamed the state governments for poor showing of the government schools. "Central government can bring a law, facilitate the process but implementation is with the state governments. In Hindi speaking states there is not involvement of the state governments," he said.
On the positive, the report said the learning levels in Punjab and Tamil Nadu witnessed maximum improvement, where the state governments ran special programme to improve reading ability and numeracy under the government's Sarva Siksha Abhiyan (SSA).
To measure student abilities, Chavan suggested a learning evaluation test at class VIII level which Sibal termed unviable unless entire education system is changed. He also ruled out accepting another suggestion of giving money under SSA for three years and termed school education problem as "political" rather than administrative.
Other findings:
* Private schools enrolment increased from 18.7% in 2006 to 25.6% in 2011.
* Between 30-50% of children in rural areas of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttarakhand, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Meghalaya and Nagaland are enrolled in private schools.
* About 44% of students in schools take private tuitions.
Attendance decline:
* All India level 73.4% in 2007 to 70.9% in 2011.
* Bihar attendance fell from 59% to 50%. In Madhya Pradesh, 67 % to 54.5 % and in Uttar Pradesh from 64.4% to 57.3%.
Learning levels:
* 48.2% of students in class V can read text taught in class II, a fall of about 5% since 2010.
* In Bihar, it dropped from 51.7% in 2006 to 29.9%. In UP, from 23.5% to 18%, in Rajasthan 31.6% to 22.6%.
* In Gujarat, Punjab and Tamil Nadu, the learning level in 2011 was better than 2010 with not much change observed in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh.
* Over 96.7% of children in 6-14 age group enrolled in primary schools.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/Print/798081.aspx
© Copyright © 2011 HT Media Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Tracking Hunger (GK Backgrounder; HT Report
By re-imagining the corroded plumbing of government-where a substantial part of India's multi-billion-dollar spending on social-security programmes leaks away-Ramani has shown how the nation's dismal malnutrition statistics can be improved without great cost.
Thanks to Ramani's work, Maharashtra reported a 60% drop between 2005 and 2010 in the number of severely malnourished children. Thousands more now have a chance at a healthy life in a country with the world's largest number of malnourished people.
Ramani, 54, an Indian Administrative Service officer who set up and headed Maharastra's nutrition mission until he left the government in 2010, had a seemingly boring formula: Commitment, strategy and a refusal to let his officials blame colleagues in another department. He developed protocols and innovations for treating acutely malnourished children covered under the Rajmata Jijau Mother-Child Health and Nutrition Mission.
As with other state-run programmes, there was no independent assessment of the mission's performance, but non-governmental organizations (NGOs), usually critical of the state's lackadaisical approach, commend Ramani's work.
"The nutrition mission in Maharashtra was a first-of-its-kind initiative that actually delivered results," said Ashish Satav, a physician and founder of the NGO Mahan, which works among malnourished children in tribal-dominated Melghat in Amravati district. Mahan and Khoj, another NGO in the area, are fighting a case against the state government over the issue of malnutrition-related child deaths in Melghat.
In an implicit recognition of the nutrition mission's work, a two-judge bench of the Bombay high court recently asked the state government to launch more child development centres, introduced by it in 2007, in Melghat. Ramani's work has also inspired similar missions in other states and set the stage for the second phase of the programme in Maharashtra in the next five years. Madhya Pradesh and Bihar, two of India's most malnourished states, have started similar missions. So has Karnataka.
The Marathwada initiative Ramani's fight against child malnutrition began when he was the divisional commissioner of Aurangabad division, comprising eight districts of the arid, poverty-stricken Marathwada region of Maharashtra.
"After I took charge as the divisional commissioner here, I identified health and education as the two areas where one could make a key difference and in this I was influenced by Amartya Sen's book, Development as Freedom," Ramani said in an interview.
Ramani's extraordinary success formed the basis of the Rajmata Jijau mission's strategy. The Marathwada initiative, as it came to be known, brought down rates of severe malnutrition in the state by 62% in just two years and by 90% in three years after it was launched in 2002. The key to its success was administrative will. The Marathwada initiative showed how the existing machinery can deliver without any additional funding or recruitment when the government shows commitment to change and the staff are trained and motivated, Sujata Kelkar Shetty, a former post-doctoral fellow at the National Institutes of Health in the US, wrote in a 2009 Mint opinion piece.
There is little attempt to understand the problem of malnutrition systematically before trying to solve it, a key reason for the stasis in India's nutritional indicators, said Ramani.
As many as 48% of Indian children are stunted or chronically under-nourished, the number having fallen only by 5 percentage points since 1992. This is despite the country having the world's largest nutrition programme for children, the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS). Started in 1975, ICDS is the nation's oldest nutrition programme run through day-care centres across India, but does not offer special care for the severely malnourished.
The Marathwada initiative was prompted by the deaths of 14 children in the Vaijapur block, 70 km from Aurangabad, in 2001.
"The focus on nutrition came... when the 14 child deaths occurred and it forced us to think on how to approach the problem of malnutrition," Ramani said. "The knee-jerk reaction in such cases is to provide food and food supplements but the problems often lie elsewhere."
Ramani, an economist by training, identified three key problems with the state system:
- Under-reporting of malnutrition by ICDS;
- The nearly exclusive focus on food-support by ICDS at the cost of other objectives such as growth monitoring; and
- A lack of coordination between the ICDS and health departments.
"We made it clear that if anything goes wrong, both departments will be held jointly responsible," said Ramani.
The intensive focus on these children involving regular check-ups, counseling of mothers and nutrition supplements saw the proportion of severely malnourished fall five times faster in Marathwada than in the rest of the state between 2002 and 2005.
Impressed, then chief minister Vilasrao Deshmukh asked Ramani to head a state-level nutrition mission named after the mother of Chhatrapati Shivaji, founder of the Maratha emprire. It began work in April 2005 in Aurangabad and completed its first phase in 2010. Ramani currently works as an independent consultant and plans to start an NGO.
Saving children
Parveen Sheikh of Ellora village in Aurangabad, about 400 km north-east of Mumbai, is among the thousands of mothers grateful to the mission for saving the lives of children.
Sheikh's son Rehan had a low birth weight and was often ill. After the local Anganwadi worker Sangeeta Vaidya reported Rehan's case to health officials, the baby was admitted to a child development centre in April 2010, where was put on a three-week treatment regime and a proper diet. That helped him gain weight and today he's a healthy child. Vaidya continued to monitor the growth of the child and counseled his mother on what to feed him.
Child development centres, re-christened child treatment centres (CTCs), are among the pioneering initiatives launched by the mission. As a good-health incentive, mothers who have to stay at the centres with children being treated there are compensated for loss of wages.
The mission uses funds from existing schemes such as the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) to run both CTCs and village-level child development centres (VCDCs).
Started in 2009 to treat children who were malnourished but did not require hospitalization, VCDCs are month-long camps at the local ICDS centre where children are de-wormed, given micronutrient supplements, and fed six times a day. Mothers are counseled on ways to modify the child's diet and make it more nutritious.
In ordinary circumstances, a child such as Rehan would be merely entitled to extra take-home rations (THR) from ICDS-which very few families use-and added to the long list of severely malnourished children.
"We had almost given up on the child and were it not for the help from Vaidya and at the child development centre, I don't think he would have survived," Sheikh said.
Rehan is one of 27,000 children who have benefited from CTCs in the last three years. Nearly 100,000 children were admitted to VCDCs in the last financial year alone, according to health department data. A majority of children admitted to CTCs and VCDCs have seen an improvement in their nutritional status.
Ramani led a committed team of six who worked tirelessly to train and motivate field officers and introduce innovations. According to ICDS data, the proportion of severely malnourished children in the state fell from 0.31% to 0.12% and the proportion of normal children increased by 15 percentage points to 64% between April 2005 and April 2010.
Unequal progress across the state and a lack of focus on preventing malnutrition are the main chinks in the nutrition mission's story so far.
The mission started work in five tribal districts--Amravati, Gadchiroli, Thane, Nashik and Nandurbar--that accounted for 34% of the severely malnourished children of the state. Later, it spread to other areas of the state.
Six years later, these districts account for over 30% of the state's severely underweight children though they account for fewer than 20% of the children covered by ICDS.
Ramani said the mission has not been able to make as much of a dent in tribal malnutrition in the first five years as he would have liked. The Rajmata Jijau mission, unlike the Marathwada initiative, is heavily reliant on the drive of district officers. Monitoring is a weak link, leading to leakages in poorly administered tribal areas.
Ramani, who has authored a strategy note for Unicef on malnutrition, argued that the issues of livelihood security and women's empowerment are critical to tackling malnutrition.
The gist of his recommendations for a nutrition mission include a focus on preventing malnutrition, monitoring pregnant mothers and increased home visits, especially in the first few months after a child is born, and universalising immunisation.
The second phase of the mission intends to prevent malnutrition by focusing on the first 1,000 days of life: from the mother's womb till the child is two years old, said Nand Kumar, the new director general of the mission. Two members of Ramani's crack team--Gopal Pandge and Ulhas Khalegoankar--are aiding Kumar in redrawing strategies for the second phase.
"The biggest gain from the first phase of the mission is that now we know we can make a difference," Pandge said.
Malnutrition status: don't blame the politicians only
Action to take report
India's shame: 42% children malnourished
SLS VOCAB IN NEWS L-1/2 12-01-12
Ratan Tata calls on Narendra Modi along with Cyrus Mistry
Ratan Tata, the outgoing chairman of over USD 80 billion conglomerate, on Thursday introduced his successor Cyrus P. Mistry to the Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi during a courtesy visit at his residence in Gandhinagar, a top state official said.
"Mistry has evinced interest in strengthening business ties with Gujarat," official sources said.
The 43-year-old Mistry, the son of Pallonji Mistry, Chairman of the Shapoorji Pallonji Group that holds 18 per cent stake in Tata Sons, holding company of Tata Group, will take over the reins from Tata after he retires in December, 2012.
On invitation of Gujarat government, Tata Motors had relocated the mother plant of Nano to Sanand from Singur in West Bengal in 2008, after it faced stiff opposition there.
The Tata group companies like Tata Chemicals Limited and Tata Consultancy Services already have operations in Gujarat, while Tata Power Limited is setting up an ultra-mega power plant at Mundra in Kutch district.
http://www.thehindu.com/business/companies/article2758039.ece?css=print
Wordrobe
Call on somebody: to make a short visit to a person or place Let's call on John
Conglomerate: a large company formed by joining together different firms a media conglomerate
Successor (to somebody/something)a person or thing that comes after somebody/something else and takes their/its place Who's the likely successor to him as party leader?
Courtesy visit or courtesy call: a formal or official visit, usually by one important person to another, just to be polite, not to discuss important business
Evince: to show clearly that you have a feeling or quality
He evinced a strong desire to be reconciled with his family.
She evinced little enthusiasm for the outdoor life.
Business ties: business relations
Stake: share in the company
Take over the reins: to assume the main decision making and control position in the company.
Relocate; change location of the unit
Stiff opposition: great opposition
Setting up: to establish
Vineet Ramananda
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Education is the ability to listen to almost anything Rama Baan 120112
"Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence", said Robert Frost. An educated person respects the diversity of opinion. He enters into an argument with an open mind not to prove his point but to add a new perspective to his understanding of the issue. He has the ability to integrate seemingly contradictory ideas to form a holistic picture. This provides better insights into the nature of the problem and its complexities.
Vineet 'Ramananda'