Category Archives: Education

College develops kit for detecting chlorpyrifos residue in fish

‘It has been developed after a three-year research and will take a year for field trial’

College of Fisheries here has developed a kit for detecting residues of a particular pesticide in fish and shell fish.

It could detect residues of chlorpyrifos in fish and shell fish, according to K.M. Shankar, Dean (Fisheries) of the college.

Speaking to media following demonstration of the kit at the college on Thursday he said chlorpyrifos was extensively used in agriculture.

Its residues could join water sources such as ponds and rivers at any time, due to human activity. With this, fish cultured in ponds came into contact with this pesticide.

Those engaged in in-land fisheries, exporters, and fish consumers could use this kit for detecting the pesticide content.

He said the kit has been developed following a three-year research. It would take one more year for field trial. Using the kit, a sample could be tested with in 10 minutes.

Field trial

Mr. Shankar said that if the technology was to reach consumers it would have to be transferred to a company for developing the kits. The company would have to conduct the field trial. The college would have to take steps for technology transfer.

The kit, which is yet to be named, was developed with funding from the Department of Biotechnology, Delhi and European Union, Brussels.

Earlier, the college had developed a kit called RapidDot for field level detection of white spot virus in shrimp. It has been commercialised through M/s. Virbac Animal Health Care Ltd., Mumbai.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Mangaluru / by Raviprasad Kamila / Mangaluru – December 04th, 2015

Homemade bicycle generator chosen for national expo

Disha Karigar demonstrating her bicycle generator.— Photo: VAIDYA
Disha Karigar demonstrating her bicycle generator.— Photo: VAIDYA

Event is an initiative of Ministry of Science and Technology

The project to generate electricity from a stationary bicycle developed by Disha Karigar, a class VII student of Mythri Higher Primary School at Shikaripur, has been selected for a national-level science exhibition, being conducted as part of Innovation in Science Pursuit for Inspired Research (INSPIRE) launched by the Ministry of Science and Technology.

The State-level exhibition (INSPIRE) was held at B.K. School at Belagavi, recently.

The model displayed by Ms. Karigar won the first place and thereby, she was chosen for the national-level event scheduled to be held at New Delhi on December 5.

The title of the project is Homemade bicycle generator. K.R. Dayanand, administrative officer of the school, said in a press release that the generator worked on Faraday’s law of electro-magnetic induction. The rim of the bicycle wheel is attached to the shaft of the DC motor of 12-volt capacity with a driving belt. When the bicycle is peddled, the belt and the shaft revolve concurrently, creating an electromagnetic field. With the effect of the electromagnetic field, electricity is generated. In this project, 150 Watts of power can be generated with 1,500 revolutions a minute (RPM).The electricity generated here could be used for domestic lighting and recharging of mobile sets. The stand and the rim of the bicycle has been fabricated to suit the purpose. Peddling of this bicycle is good for health, besides generating power through environment-friendly method, he said.

Ms. Karigar hails from Gagri, a village in Shikaripur taluk. Her father Nagaraj Karigar is a lecturer in a private Industrial Training Institute here and her mother is a homemaker.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / Veerendra P M / Shivamogga – November 26th, 2015

First Annual Convocation of Music Varsity on Nov. 30

• Dr. Vyjayanthimala Bali to deliver convocation address

• Hon. Doctorates to be conferred on Prof. Ra. Visweswaran, Pt. Indudhar Nirodi and Natyacharya C. Radhakrishna

 Dr. Vyjayanthimala, Prof. Ra. Visweswaran, Pt. Indudhar Nirodi and C. Radhakrishna.
Dr. Vyjayanthimala, Prof. Ra. Visweswaran, Pt. Indudhar Nirodi and C. Radhakrishna.

Mysuru :

The First Annual Convocation of Karnataka State Dr. Gangubai Hangal Music and Performing Arts University, Mysuru, will be held on Nov. 30 at the Crawford Hall of Mysore University here from 4 pm.

Governor Vajubhai R. Vala, who is also the Chancellor of Universities, will preside over the event. Minister for Higher Education T.B. Jayachandra, who is also the Pro-Chancellor of the Universities, will grace the occasion.

Actress and Bharatanatyam exponent Padma Shri Dr. Vyjayanthimala Bali will deliver the Convocation address.

The Music Varsity, as part of its first Convocation, will confer Hon. Doctorates on renowned Veena artiste Prof. Ra. Visweswaran, Hindustani vocalist Pt. Indudhar Nirodi and Bharatanatyam artiste C. Radhakrishna.

Music University Vice-Chancellor Dr. Sarvamangala Shankar, Registrar Dr. A. Rangaswamy and Registrar (Evaluation) Dr. M.S. Shekar will be present on the occasion.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / Thursday – November 26th, 2015

Prof. Usha Rani to United Nations

Mysuru :

Dr. N. Usha Rani, Professor, Department of Communication and Journalism, University of Mysore, has been awarded with ICSSR fellowship to do research work in United Nations, Geneva, Switzerland.

She will leave for Geneva today, for four weeks to study international perspective on Media and Social Development.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Brief / November 16th, 2015

City students top international exam

Four students from Bengaluru have excelled in the Cambridge International Examinations emerging as world toppers in individual subjects.

According to an official release from Cambridge International Examinations, these are the results of the exams conducted in November 2014 and June 2015 for Cambridge IGCSE, Cambridge International AS Level and Cambridge International A Level exams.

This apart, as many as 23 students from the City have emerged as national toppers. The world toppers are: Srirama Prakhya from Primus Public School (IGCSE, Chemistry, Physics), Umika Sinha Paul, The International School Bangalore (IGCSE, Additional Mathematics), Papineni Nikhil, Vidyashilp Academy, (AS Level Mathematics) and Aarushi Mohan, Vidyashilp Academy, (AS Level, Psychology).

There are 22 world toppers from India and majority of the students have topped in Mathematics and Physics. Indian students have also excelled in subjects such as travel and tourism and psychology, according to the release.

There has been a substantial increase in the number of Cambridge qualifications in India. There are now over 350 Cambridge schools in India.

Entries
There were over 70,000 exam entries for Cambridge qualifications in June in for both 10th and 12th standard students. This year, there has been a 12 per cent increase in entries compared to 2014. In India there has been a 10 per cent increase in entries for Cambridge IGCSE (10 board exam), with more than 40,000 entries, the release stated.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> City / DHNS, Bengaluru – November 10th, 2015

Kiran Shaw gets honorary fellowship

Bengaluru :

The Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), a central government-funded interdisciplinary research institute founded by noted scientist CNR Rao, on Monday announced that it has conferred an honorary fellowship to Biocon CMD Kiran Mazumdar Shaw.

Stating that the centre has a tradition of honouring distinguished people with fellowships, an official note said it had earlier awarded the same to scientists C Subramaniam, Raja Ramanna and others like former prime minister Manmohan Singh and Infosys founder NR Narayana Murthy.

Kiran said she will fund a bioscience laboratory focused on proteins at JNCASR.

“I have promised to fund a biosciences lab that will house an ultra microscope and also sponsor two post-doctoral fellowships at the institute. A lot of research is happening at the institute from which the industry can benefit,” Kiran told TOI.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Bengaluru / TNN / November 10th, 2015

MITE engineering students design all-terrain vehicle for auto show

Mangaluru :

Mangalore Institute of Technology & Engineering (MITE) students have designed and developed an all-terrain vehicle (ATV) for BAJA SAE, a prestigious national-level sporting vehicle building event organized by Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE).

SAE is an engineering and scientific society dedicated to the advancement of the automobile sector. The ATV will be participating in BAJA SAE India-2016, a national-level competition to be held in Indore in February 2016. Also, the developed ATV will be participating in BAJA Student India-2016 in January 2016 at Buddh International Circuit, Utter Pradesh.
Chairman of Rajalaxmi Education Trust Rajesh Chouta unveiled the ATV on November 2. Successful field testing was done by the Team Mite Racing (TMR) comprising of 30 students of MITE.

“The TMR comprising students of the mechanical engineering department have designed and fabricated a lightweight ATV as per the rules and specifications of BAJA SAE India-2016 in the MITE campus. TMR is one among the three colleges in the zone along with NITK Surathkal and MIT, Manipal to qualify for the event in which every team asked to design and build an all-terrain sports vehicle. The institution has encouraged the students to work independently in the campus after their regular academic work,” said Ashwin Balaram, one of the team leaders.

“The team has innovatively applied the new concepts for its suspension and load-bearing capacity in the vehicle. The team investigated and applied new methodology of continuously variable transmission (CVT) for improved acceleration and to reduce driver fatigue,” said another team leader Ashrith S. Ashwin and Ashrith are seventh semester mechanical engineering students of MITE.

The ATV is developed by the TMR under the sponsorship of the management of the institution led by the chairman of Rajalaxmi Education Trust Rajesh Chouta. G L Easwara Prasad, principal and C R Rajashekar, head of the department of the mechanical engineering department supported the team for the project, students said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> Cities> Mangaluru / by Shobha K T, TNN / November 05th, 2015

Padma Shri Samuel Paul: He worked for clean public governance

By KRS Murthy

In the passing away of Padma Shri Samuel Paul, India has lost a quiet and unassuming leader and builder of institutions. Throughout his professional career as a teacher, researcher and institution builder, he searched for ways to make the world socially and economically more just, and worked actively for a better and cleaner public life.

My wife Nirmala and I first met Paul, then director of IIM-Ahmedabad, in 1973, when he was visiting Harvard Business School in Harvard University , where we were both doing our doctoral studies. Paul had come to recruit faculty . After we joined IIMA, we had an opportunity to see Paul in action.Although some considered him quiet and reserved, we could see beneath the exterior a caring and affectionate person. His style was one of informing and involving all stakeholders -students, faculty, industry, board and society.

Paul later went to the US where he worked with Kennedy School of Government in Harvard University and the World Bank. He continued to focus on disparities in social and economic development and the role of public policy and governance in bridging them. It might have been during that period that he began to recognize the need for active involvement of citizens in governance and delivery of public services.

I moved to Bengaluru as director, IIMBangalore, in 1991. Paul’s decision, around that time, to settle in Bengaluru, gave us another opportunity to work closely with him. Paul, I think, felt as sured involving colleagues and alumni of IIMA in his missionary work. I think he expected IIMA competence and profes sional and decent behavior in any role. In addition to others, he involved me, and PP Madappa, another distinguished alumnus of IIMA, in his early experiment with the idea of a Citizen’s Report Card (CRC) on public services. The idea was to get a sys tematic feedback of citizens on the quality of public services such as water and electricity , into policy-making and imple mentation of decisions at higher levels.

The experiment was a great success and senior civil ser vants involved Paul in finding out how CRC could help. The ex periment brought national and international attention to Ben galuru, with the Indian govern ment, World Bank and the Asian Development Bank tak ing note of it as a useful innovation in pub lic governance. Paul proceeded to set up the Public Affairs Centre, a non-profit society committed to improving public account ability and good governance. One of the earliest to recognize the impact that the cancer of corruption would have on public life, he held a seminar with leading think ers to find ways in which it can be curbed.

He published several books on corruption and on holding the state to account.

Paul continued his professional com mitment till the very end of his life. He is no more with us, but his concern for better public governance, which he lived through his quiet and exemplary profes sional life, will continue to inspire us.

(The writer was a close associate of Samuel Paul and also former chairman of ISEC, Bengaluru)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Bengaluru / TNN / October 29th, 2015

In a real world

AmmaBF09oct2015

When this eight-year-old boy was brought to us by his parents, he didn’t speak or play. All he would do was play with his saliva, and roll on the ground. Over days and months, positive changes became visible in him. He started sitting down and playing with a variety of toys. What’s more, he now calls his parents ‘Appa’ and ‘Amma’ ,” Vaishali Pai says with pride.

The Founder and Director of ‘Tamahar’, a centre for children with special needs, points out that in spite of all the efforts, the challenges are many in this field, and the task an uphill one.

Children with special abilities and their parents still  face stigma. Their only fault — these children are unable to live life the conventional way. More often than not, their special needs never get addressed. They continue to be ostracised. For those who are entrusted in teaching and caring for them, it’s a tough task, sometimes a thankless one.

An occupational therapist with two decades of experience, Vaishali came to Bengaluru for paediatric work more than 20 years ago. She used to travel to work for two hours or so. “I remember seeing parents travelling with children with special needs. There were only two or three centres then. This picture remained with me, After about 20 years, I started ‘Tamahar’,” she recollects.

“Children who come here are basically those with brain damage — with conditions like cerebral palsy, Down Syndrome, autism etc. We give a complete development assesment according to their mental age and  intervention — cognitive, occupational, physical and speech therapies and try to make the brain function as a whole. We have also functional academics to make them independent and self-reliant. We are also doing pre-vocational programmes, parent training, both in theory and practicals of developmental therapy. The parents too are learning,” she says.

Chandrika Sheshadri started ‘Take a Break Respite Care’ in Malleswaram when she found that the City was not equipped to provide care for the child and parents. She says. “I have a child with special needs. Before relocating to Bengaluru, we were in the US. When we moved here seven years back, I thought we would get the same kind of caregiving that we got there on a regular basis. But we were disappointed. Soon, with the help of family and friends, we decided to open this place.”  ‘Take a Break Respite Care’ gives a break to families that have individuals with special needs.”

Giving the primary caregiver a break is essential, she says. “We usually provide this care during weekends. Parents can drop the child here and they are here from three to six hours.”

The voices to bring these kids into the mainstream are getting louder. The sympathies can wait. “You can help the kids with something productive, rather than sympathy. I take my daughter wherever I go. Also, the parent has to take care of himself or herself first. Only then they can take care of the child. You need to let go of the child,” adds Chandrika.

The children with special needs are two to three percent of the population and Vaishali feels there should be a centre every five km. “I have a dream to get these children into art, music etc once a month. We also need volunteers for various activities like storytelling,” she points out.

Akila Vaidyanathan’s story is no different. She has a son with autism. Now, the founder-director of Amaze Charitable Trust, and joint secretary of Autism Society of India, says, “My son is now 19 years old. In 1999, when he was first diagnosed with it, I decided to train myself  on how to work with him. Initially, we did speech therapy and vocational  therapy. I was also looking at schools where we could enrol him, but the schools would say that they had no expertise to handle these children. So I did a diploma in social education and worked with the teachers on how to handle him,” she says.

Her son now loves to cook , trek and cycle. He uses alternate modes of communication including a VOCA. He is also a national-level bronze medalist for cycling (Special Olympics Bharat -2010).

On the larger picture, she says, “Very often, teachers are not equipped. Classrooms are crowded. Autistic children have sensory issues, they are sensitive to loud sounds and don’t like people touching them. These are the challenges, ” Akila adds,
“Having dedicated manpower is a challenge,” adds Vaishali. “To work in this section, you need to love children unconditionally. You have to create manpower and we do that too. There are two other challenges — finance and space. The children tend to make a lot of sound and there are certain points of the society where people can’t withstand the sound. So it’s difficult to find space.”

“If each one of us can give half our time for an organisation such as this, it would be such a support,” she says.

Four to five children from Tamahar goto  Prakash Padukone Badminton Academy, Canara Union regularly to play badminton. They have cognitive losses — of which one is autistic and the other has a psychiatric disorder,” informs Vaishali. Yet they are all out there, smashing it on a regular wooden court! They are no way hanging up their racquets.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> Metrolife / by Anupama Ramakrishnan, Bengaluru / DHNS – October 09th, 2015

125-year-old school’s new building to be inaugurated today

It is the second oldest educational institution in Udupi

The new building of the Board High School, now known as the Government PU College, which is celebrating its 125th year celebrations this year, will be inaugurated here on Friday.

The Board High School, located on 3.2 acres in the heart of the city near the Service Bus Stand, was established in 1890. It is the second oldest school in Udupi. It was called the Board Middle School when it first started functioning.

It has produced many illustrious students including the former Union Minister late T.A. Pai, the former Union Minister Oscar Fernandes, the former Minister late V.S. Acharya, and veteran journalist late M.V. Kamath.

Mr. Oscar Fernandes’s father late Roque Fernandes was the headmaster of this school from 1940 to 1948.

The institution now has both Kannada and English mediums from class 8 to 10, while its PU wing has courses in Arts, Commerce and Science streams.

It presently has about 150 students in the high school section and about 400 students in the PU college.

The existing building of the Board School used to serve as Magistrate’s Court and a jail during the British times. It got converted into the Board School in 1890.

The auditorium of the school, known as ‘People’s Hall’, was constructed in the mid-1940s.

The Board Middle School was upgraded into a high school in 1918, and as a Multipurpose High School in 1955. The PU college section was started in 1972. The institution is popularly known as Board High School because the Taluk Board and District Board administered it for a long time.

Most of the students coming to this institution now are from economically weaker sections.

The new building of the Government PU College is built at a cost of Rs. 2.5 crore due to the efforts of Mr. Oscar Fernandes, Pramod Madhwaraj, MLA, and the former Minister late V.S. Acharya.

source: http://thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National>  Karnataka / by Ganesh Prabhu / Udupi – October 02nd, 2015