Thursday, 28 June 2018

Mobile Tech Gets @ Parents reading to children, improves home literacy environment


The report contributes to growing evidence on how parents can support their children's early learning using technology.
Other findings include:
•         Digital reading is scalable and affordable.
•         Reading a book a day for thirty days cost the equivalent of two cups of street chai, or about $0.16 per month.
•         Local language books are preferred. Parents prefer books in the mother tongue (Hindi) but English is also frequently read and reflects parental aspirations for early exposure to English.


New search tools open up access to medical information @ KConnect – Medical Library Resource


The EU-funded KConnect project has developed innovative online medical search and analysis tools, enabling researchers to achieve clearer insights into the effectiveness of specific medical interventions and ultimately leading to more optimised treatments.

“The key success of the KConnect project has been to make effective online medical search tools accessible to medical researchers and the public,” says KConnect (Khresmoi Multilingual Medical Text Analysis, Search and Machine Translation Connected in a Thriving Data-Value Chain) project coordinator Allan Hanbury from the Vienna University of Technology in Austria. “The project results will now be further developed and should allow better insight into the effectiveness of medical interventions, as well as providing more reliable access for citizens to online medical information.” Project partners are currently working with commercial clients to create specific search solutions.

Automated text analysis

The amount of written information that exists in the medical domain is phenomenal. This includes patient-specific information such as medical records, as well as non-patient-specific information including peer-reviewed articles in journals that describe the results of clinical trials of interventions. To evaluate the effectiveness of specific treatments and procedures, all this text needs to be taken into account.

“There is a clear need for computer-supported tools capable of analysing all this information, which can then lead to firm conclusions on the effectiveness of specific medical interventions,” says Hanbury. “Computer analysis of text remains a challenge though, and this is even more the case in the medical domain. This is because different styles of writing can be found across scientific papers and medical records, and there is extensive use of abbreviations and of course different languages in medical records.”

Accessible, reliable information

KConnect focused on two main challenges: improving medical text analysis, search and machine translation services; and demonstrating the effectiveness of using these tools in medical record analysis and online searches of medical publications and websites. The project was built, to a large extent, on the results of the EU-funded Khresmoi project, which developed tools to search for and analyse medical text and images. Khresmoi’s main focus was on visual searches for radiology images, as well as text analysis of medical publications.
Starting from this basis, new search tools were developed and tested, and are now being applied in real life situations. The medical record analysis and search algorithms have been included in the Clinical Record Interactive Search (CRIS) system at the NHS Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre in the UK. CRIS provides authorised researchers with secure access to anonymised information extracted from the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust electronic clinical records system. This enables them to look at real life situations on a large scale, making it easier to see patterns and trends and to see which treatments work for some but not others.

KConnect tools are also being used by the Health on the Net Foundation, which promotes the dissemination of useful and reliable health information online. The Foundation’s new search system gives users an estimation of the readability and reliability of medical websites. A KConnect plug-in for the Chrome Browser has been released and provides users with estimates of the reliability of medical websites sourced using common search engines.

Hanbury notes that training the medical text-specific machine translation algorithms proved to be a challenge for certain languages where few relevant resources were available, such as Hungarian. Nonetheless, KConnect services now allow multilingual queries in the search engine of the Trip medical database, a tool that enables researchers to find high-quality clinical research evidence. A soon-to-be-released Trip tool using KConnect technology will allow for the rapid analysis of multiple medical publications related to a specific disease, giving researchers an immediate overview of the effectiveness of various medications and interventions.

Source | https://cordis.europa.eu/result/rcn/231839_en.html

Wednesday, 27 June 2018

Remembering Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, the face of Bengal renaissance, on his birth anniversary

Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay — the legend who gave India its national song Vande Mataram — was a gifted story-teller too.

In the 19th century India — when the country was still under the British reign after having been ruled by the Mughals for a few centuries — a strong voice had emerged championing the cause of Hindu nationalism — the voice that believed answers to many of the inconvenient questions the country was asking then lay in India’s Hindu heritage.

His epic Anandamath — set in the background of the Sanyasi Rebellion (late 18th century), when Bengal was facing a famine too — made Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay an influential figure on the Bengali renaissance who kept the people of Bengal intellectually stimulated through his literary campaign. The novel became synonymous with India’s struggle for freedom from the British — who banned it.

India got its national song, Vande Mataram, from Anandamath.

Scholar Partha Chatterjee once wrote about him in an essay, “There were three kinds of knowledge, Bankim argued: knowledge of the world, of the self and of God. Knowledge of world consisted of Mathematics, Astronomy, Physics, and Chemistry. These, one would have to learn from the West. Knowledge of the self meant biology and sociology. These, too, one would have to learn from the West. Finally, knowledge of God. In this field, the Hindu sastra contained the greatest human achievements — the Upanishads, the darsana, the Puranas, and, principally, the Gita.”

Born on June 27, 1838, to a Brahmin family in a North 24 Parganas village, Bankim was a bright student. He went to Hooghly Mohsin College and later graduated in Arts from the Presidency College in Calcutta. He later studied law too. Son of a government official, Chandra Chattopadhyaya who served as the deputy collector of Midnapur, Bankim too joined the British government after completing his studies. He became the deputy collector of Jessore and later a deputy magistrate.

Bankim got married at the age of 11 to a 5-year-old girl. He was 22 when his wife died. He got married again — to Rajlakshmi Devi — and had three daughters with her.

Though Bankim remained in government service for long, he found his calling in writing — much like his elder brother Sanjeebchandra. He had studied Sanskrit and was very interested in the subject, but later took on the responsibility to make Bengali the language of the masses. Interestingly, however, his first published work — a novel — was in English.

“A Bengali magistrate who worked for the British wrote the first Indian novel in English, Rajmohan’s Wife, an economical exploration of the Bengali family and domesticity. Partly from a feeling of nationalism, (he) crossed over to Bengali and embarked on the project of creating the first modern corpus of Bengali, indeed Indian, fiction,” writer and critic Amit Chaudhuri wrote about Bankim in an essay.

Despite being a government servant, Bankim could see how British colonialism was adversely affecting India’s rich civilisation. His Anandamath was the story of a group of monks (sanyasis) who fought the British. “The problem of culture was the main preoccupation of (Bankim Chandra); for he believed that the proper cultivation of all the faculties resulting in action and knowledge was the natural function of man,” wrote Nirad C Chaudhuri in The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian.

Anandamath was later published in English as The Abbey of Bliss.

Bankim Chandra died on April 8, 1894. In his lifetime, he wrote numerous novels, stories and essays and his works were translated into several languages.

He also founded a monthly literary magazine, Bangadarshan, in 1872, through which Bankim is credited with influencing the emergence of a Bengali identity and nationalism. Many of his novels were published in this magazine in the form of serials. Besides, it had works by scholars, literary critics and other intellectuals. There were articles on the Puranas and the Vedas — exhorting the intellectual community to stay rooted while embracing the ideas of modernity.

Bankim Chandra wanted the magazine to work as the “medium of communication between the educated and the uneducated classes” at a time English had become the language of communication between the educated class, widening the gulf between the higher and lower ranks of society. The magazine carried fiction too, and his serialized novels were a hit with the readers — especially the literate women. Almost all of Bankim’s novels were published in it.

The legendary Rabindranath Tagore was an 11-year-old bright boy when Bangadarshan was launched. He would read the magazine with great enthusiasm, as the Nobel laureate later wrote in his recollections of childhood, “It was bad enough to have to wait till the next monthly number was out, but to be kept waiting further till my elders had done with it was simply intolerable.” The magazine stopped publication in the late 1880s, but was resurrected in 1901 with Tagore as its editor. While it carried Tagore’s writings — including his first full-length novel Chokher Bali — the ‘new’ Bangadarshan retained its original philosophy, nurturing the nationalistic spirit. During the Partition of Bengal (1905), the magazine played a vital role in giving an outlet to the voices of protest and dissent. Tagore’s Amar Sonar Bangla — the national anthem of Bangladesh now — was first published in Bangadarshan.

Nationalistic writings apart, Bankim Chandra was gifted as a storyteller too. While he wrote several novels, here is a look at five of his most popular works of fiction.

Rajmohan’s wife

Bankim Chandra’s debut work, Rajmohan’s wife, is said to be the first published novel in English by an Indian. Serialised in Bangadarshan, the book has plots and characters symbolically mapping the birth of modern India and the emergence of the modern Indian woman in the 19th century. The novel has protagonist Matangini — a beautiful woman married to a brutal man — in love with her sister’s husband. It depicts the strength of her character who remains strong discharging her duties and living up to the expectations of middle-class society. The story shows Matangini as a woman who is not scared to break rules and face consequences, as she sets out in the middle of the night to foil her husband’s plot to harm her sister and her husband. The book portrays a realistic picture of a 19th-century Bengal village, its people and landscape.

Krishnakanter Will

The popular novel — first published in 1878 — is the story of a love triangle involving a couple and a young widow. The very contemporary plot has made it a subject for several TV serials and movies till date.

Bishabriksha (The Poison Tree)

This book (1873) too has a young and beautiful widow and the married male protagonist falling for her. The tragic tale of love also deals with the social issue of widow remarriage. Bankim Chandra was well ahead of his times when dealing with women’s issues. Bishabriksha shows women — even the caring wife being cheated by her husband — as liberal enough to live life on their own terms.

Kapalkundala

Published in 1866, Kapalkundala is the story of another woman with grit. Forest-dwelling girl Kapalkundala falls in love and marries an urban Nabakumar, but finds it difficult to fit into a city life, which she abandons. One of his finest works of fiction, Kapalkundala has been translated into several Indian and foreign languages.

Debi Choudhurani

After Anandamath, Bankim Chandra continued his call for a resurgent India that fights against oppression with strength from within, steeped in traditional Indian values. The story fuelled the patriotic struggle for Independence and the British government banned it. The ban was lifted post 1947. In this novel, Bankim Chandra showed the armed face-to-face conflict with the British Army being led by a woman. The character, Prafulla, is married but is shunned by her wealthy in-laws right after the wedding rituals get over. As the heartbroken father dies soon after and the family is left in penury, Prafulla flees in the middle of the night one day, only to end up as a dacoit fighting the British. The ending, where she asks for forgiveness from her father-in-law and requests to be taken back as her daughter-in-law, though disappoints many, is seen as a compromise Bankim Chandra might have had to make for his story to be accepted by the then conservative society. The novel was later adapted into a film in 1974, starring Suchitra Sen in the lead role.

Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/art-and-culture/bankim-chandra-chattopadhyay-the-face-of-bengal-renaissance-on-his-178th-birth-anniversary-2879527/

Tuesday, 26 June 2018

Treasure of Knowledge ‘National Digital Library’ opens for all: Javadekar


Breaking walls National Digital Library is open for all from today, said Human Resource Development Minister Prakash Javadekar.

Mr Javadekar on Tuesday at a function held at Vigyan Bhavan here dedicated National Digital Library which he also referred as treasures
of knowledge to the people of the nation. From now everyone can read books, research books and magazines for free on internet or mobile phones.

There are over one crore seventy million digital texts in this library and there are also video lectures besides audio books.

The digital library prepared by Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur, has content in 200 languages which can be read
twenty-four hours on a single window. Mr Javadekar said knowledge is must to grow (Padhoge toh Bachoge, Padhoge toh Badhoge).

Earlier, school teachers, students, principals could use the National Digital Library. But from now, anyone can use the digital library
on their mobile phones, computers. This all will be free of cost. “It has 30 lakh plus registered users. Educational materials are available
for users ranging from Primary to post-graduate levels. All for free,” said the HRD Minister.

He said earlier there were gurus for knowledge but now you can get it from books which means books have become your gurus and these books are at
your doorstep just a click away on your computer. National Digital Library Mobile app is also available is in three languages
but soon it would be accessible in other languages too.

Source: http://english.gstv.in/treasure-of-knowledge-national-digital-library-opens-for-all-javadekar/

READING DAY PLEDGE

P N Panicker, the father of Library and Literacy Movement in Kerala

P N Panicker Foundation
P N Panicker, the father of Library and Literacy Movement in Kerala is an eminent personality, who was the pillar behind the socio- cultural rebirth in Kerala.
P N Panicker Foundation, the mother organization of P N Panicker Vigyan Vikas Kendra was established during the Sathabhishek year
(84th birth anniversary of P N Panicker) under the Chairmanship of Justice V R Krishna Iyer to spearhead developmental issues focusing on inclusive growth
in tune with the technological advancement.

P N Panicker laid the foundation of the holistic approach to human resources development, through the library and literacy movement he initiated and propagated
in his life time. He is also the father of many non-formal education movements like Kerala Association for Non-Formal Education and Development (KANFED),
literacy campaigns such as ‘Total Literacy 1986’ and novel institutions like Kerala Grandhasala Sangam (Kerala State Library Council).

P N Panicker Foundation organizes Jan Vigyan Vikas Yatras to reach to the mass of unreached. It also organizes efficient mass contact programme which is
 a unique experience for the Keralites. The Jan Vigyan Vikas Yatra, focuses on ‘Developing a path with people-focused inclusive growth driven by knowledge,
 technology, and innovation’. P N Panicker Foundation’s cultural and educational yatra, is now regulated in every nook and corner of the country as a
vibrant medium to educate the masses. P N Panicker Foundation was the first organization in the country to popularize e-reading among the rural masses
with internet facility in 2002. This initiative paved way for establishing 25000 rural home e- libraries in 2010.
Considering the commendable work carried out by the foundation, Government of Kerala organized an autonomous organization P N Panicker Vigyan Vikas Kendra.

Celebrating National Reading Month from 19th June to 18th July 2018
Kendriya Vidyalaya Gill Nagar Chennai

Exploring The Relevance Of Libraries In The Internet Age



We visit libraries in Delhi to assess their relevance for the younger internet generation

NEW DELHI: The world over, the digital age has seen the decline of libraries -- with more and more governments cutting crucial funding that supports public libraries. As the younger generation turns to the internet, Pankaj Singh, a Librarian at Dyal Singh Public Library. sums up the importance of libraries in the statement “libraries are the real heritage of a city.”

In the last two decades, the advent of technology has led to a huge increase in consumer options. Online ecommerce stores (Flipkart, Amazon), smart phones, e-readers and tablets have entered our fast paced lives. For all the convenience they brings, we have seen a huge shift in how we choose to read -- e-books have become as common as paperback books itself, and the trends show that e-books will only increase in popularity as time goes by.

So, would it be a logical to infer that fewer people would take the trouble of visiting a library? By extension, it’s worth asking the question -- are libraries now becoming redundant? Let’s look at a few prominent libraries in the New Delhi to provide some insight into the troubling question.

Delhi’s oldest library, Hardayal Municipal Public Library, is over 100 years old now. Located in a silent alley of Chandni chowk, the library is fully packed even on a hot summer afternoon. Everything is still old school here with plans of having an e-library not an immediate concern. Sunita, who is studying for her bank examinations here, says, “I come here because there isn’t enough space in my house to study peacefully. I get AC, too, here.”

Like Sunita, many students who are regular faces at the Delhi Public Library (DPL) and Dyal Singh Public Library (DSPL), are looking for a quiet, cool and convenient place to study in the summer. Public libraries across the city are a favourite study location for aspiring students. Every reading table at these libraries had a competitive exam book on it.

As per records at DPL and DSPL, their membership has been rising over the years. Most come here for economical reasons but demands for books are not restricted only to competitive exams books, which partly explains the 2 lakh+ multilingual books at DPL and around 43000+ at DSPL.

According to Directorate General of DPL, Dr. Lokesh Sharma, “e-materials are not complete replacement for books. They have authenticity and dependability issues. Depending on kind of experiences people are having using materials off internet, their preference to e-material over books would vary from people to people, circumstances to circumstances and period to period.”

Trend of increasing membership is witnessed even in more research and literature based libraries of the city like Nehru Memorial library and Sahitya Akademi Library. “Over the years, we have seen more people coming to our library, especially those who are researching in inter-disciplinary field”, says Dr. Ajit Kumar (Library & Information Officer), Nehru Memorial Library.

Here, availability of scholarly works and quality control by the library are major contributing factors. For researchers and freelancers, internet turns out to be a place full of uncatalogued information, filtering through which is both time consuming and tiring. Most of the journals are not available online. Among those which are available, many are not accessible by everyone. Members get access to them through library’s e-platform.

“The Library is a place of knowledge dissemination. Number of people visiting library doesn’t matter as much as potential users. We get request from all over India for references from rarest books collection which we maintain. There are around 10-15 people who have been regular to our library for over 20 years now. Internet can supplement the knowledge from books, but books are here to stay.” says Dr. Sufian Ahmad (Librarian), Sahitya Akademi Library.

While the internet is no substitute for library for most researchers and book lovers, digitalization of these libraries is still a task that needs attention for bringing them near world-class standards. Copyright issues are the major hurdle in the digitization process. For full digitalization, one has to wait till an appropriate government act comes into place.

Another step towards making our libraries better would be stocking them with more books based on what readers want. This will require allotting larger infrastructure to the libraries for storing books physically and making more seating space for visitors.

While the preference of library over internet remains a grey area, an interesting voice to be heard on the matter in years to come will be of Nabhya Sharma, who holds the honour of being the current youngest member of Delhi Public Library, at the tender age of just 4 years.

Source | http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/en/newsdetail/index/8/13957/exploring-the-relevance-of-libraries-in-the-internet-age

Regulating medical education @ National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill, 2017


On the amendments to the National Medical Commission Bill
The National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill, 2017, which seeks to regulate medical education and practice, and replace the Medical Council of India, ran into rough weather in January when the medical fraternity protested against it, terming the Bill as “anti-poor”. They also protested against the proposed “bridge course” in the Bill, which allows AYUSH practitioners to prescribe modern medicine, arguing that this provides opportunities for quacks.

Faced with these protests, the Lok Sabha referred the Bill to a Parliamentary Standing Committee in January.

The government considered the recommendations made by the Standing Committee, as well as the general feedback, and tabled its report in the House on March 20. On March 28, the Union Cabinet approved the amendments to the NMC Bill, which seeks to replace the Indian Medical Council Act of 1956.

The approved amendments include allowing for the final MBBS examination to be held as a common exam across the country. This way students will not be subjected to an additional licentiate exam for the purpose of obtaining a license to practice medicine. The MBBS exam will serve as an exit test to be called the National Exit Test. This test will also serve as the screening test for doctors with foreign medical qualifications who want to practice in India.

The Cabinet has also removed the bridge course provision. It has been left to the State governments to take necessary measures for addressing and promoting primary health care in rural areas.

The amendments also concern fee regulation. The maximum limit of 40% seats for which fee can be regulated in private medical institutions and deemed universities has been increased to 50% seats. Further, it has been clarified that the fee will also include all other charges taken by the colleges.

Responding to the demands from States to increase their representation in the NMC, the nominees of States and Union Territories in the NMC have been increased from three to six. The NMC will comprise 25 members, of which at least 21 will be doctors.

The amendments also introduce stringent punishment for unqualified medical practitioner, or quacks, including a provision for imprisonment of up to one year along with a fine extending up to ₹5 lakh.

Source | The Hindu | 1st June 2018

The Best Places to Find Free Audiobooks (Legally)


Audiobooks are great for commutes, long trips, and dull tasks. Here are a number of places you can download Audiobooks legally, and for free. And they’re not all public domain stuff.
Many of the audiobook sites you can find on the internet let you download classic books in the public domain for free, but some sites have better quality books than others. We’ve rounded up some of the best of those sites, plus some ways you can get other kinds of audiobooks for free, too.
Project Gutenberg & LibriVox
Spotify
NewFixtion
Digital Book
Internet Archive
Learn Out Loud
Don’t Forget Your Public Library

NCERT Plan: video content in e-books


New Delhi: National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) books that are available online may now include video content along with text.

The academic body is considering a proposal named Energised Textbooks under which books for higher classes may have digital links to multimedia material where concepts will be explained through diagrams, charts and data.

"The e-publications of the NCERT merely present the text material. These books can create more curiosity and fun if they introduce multimedia material," an NCERT official said. CBSE and several state government boards follow NCERT books.

EkStep, an organisation founded by Nandan Nilekani, has already made a presentation before NCERT officials to upgrade the textbooks.

Contacted, S.K. Vidyasagar, director, field operation, of EkStep said the initiative was being taken under the Diksha programme of the human resource development ministry. He did not wish to divulge further details.

NCERT sources said the chapters in any book, while explaining certain concepts, would have QR codes that will be a link to the digital content.

A QR code is a barcode that is readable by smartphones and tabs through scanning.

"Several studies have found that video-based learning is not as good as personal interactions between students and teachers. It certainly helps in awareness. But students learn better during direct interactions because the teacher knows the student," Prof. Rajeev Kumar, who teaches computer science in JNU, said.

He added that video-based learning was expensive. The students need to have smartphones and access to the Internet, Kumar pointed out.

Source | The Telegraph | 7th June 2018

Data Protection @ Digital world - General Data Protection Regulation or GDPR



Over the past few weeks, inboxes across the world have been swamped with updates of privacy policies and terms of reference. You probably have faced such pop-ups on social media platforms, pointing out how they are changing the way they collect and manage personal data. The reason for this surge is that the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation or GDPR came into being on Friday, pretty much changing the digital domain.

These rules, limited to residents of the EU, promise much in terms of protecting users, and punitive measures against transgressing firms, equal to 4% of global revenue. Since such companies operate across geographies, they obviously will impact users getting online elsewhere, including in India. Among GDPR’s potential benefits will be flagging fake news, by not allowing bad actors easy access to target demographics.

As far as digital disinformation goes, tech innovation may better resolve that crisis than ham-fisted officiousness, as the recent attempt to control online outlets in India shows. A Brookings Institution report noted late last year the evolution of algorithms to weed out nearly 99% of fraudulent news.
For instance, the startup TruePic uses blockchain technology to serve as a digital notary for photographs and videos. This is relevant to countries like India where manipulated images can spark strife. The TruePic app watermarks smartphone visuals with date, time and location within seconds of their being uploaded, to ensure that for a change, seeing is believing.

In fact, there is a geopolitical element to this app’s utility. Images coming out of conflict zones, for instance, are often questioned and critiqued depending on political predilections. The same goes for those at public protests, as India has increasingly witnessed in recent months. An image authenticated by TruePic, meanwhile, makes it difficult for malicious actors to manipulate media for their purposes.

As these inventive intermediaries appear, they do so because they fulfil a need, often far more effectively than government diktats. Even social media platforms such as Twitter or Facebook have managed to democratise the flow of information. Of course, ineffective internal policing of hate material has only helped in making them targets of political potshots.

The next wave of technology will help debug the virulence of some online media. A light regulatory touch can assist the process. However, major moves like GDPR will work for giants like Facebook, Amazon or Apple, while smaller players will fall into a complicated compliance black hole. The effect will be felt not just in the EU, but also across the world. Governmental measures sound great until you realise they will be administered by bureaucrats. Babus let loose on ambiguous protocols — what could go wrong, right? There’s the telling EU GDPR resource to educate the public on the “main elements” of the rules that encompass over 150 pages and 99 Articles. That’s been inaccessible much of the week leading up to its coming into force.

Source | Hindustan Times | 26th May 2018

Google brings audiobooks to Home: Here's how you can read..err listen to books on the smart speaker


Finding the time to read is a struggle all bibliophiles face. Sometimes the books are too many or one does not find the time to read them. Meanwhile, for those who are not interested in reading, developing the habit of reading can be a daunting task. Therefore, tools like audiobooks can be helpful in listening to books and also updating oneself with recent releases.

Google Home and Home Mini.

In January, Google had released its audiobooks section on Google Play. With the help of audiobooks, you can read..err listen to books on multiple devices. This is available on smartphones, Google Home, Chromecast or Android Wear. The update is available on Android and iOS. But how does one listen on Google Home?

These audiobooks are available on Google Home, Home Mini and Home Max. In India, Google had launched the Home and Home Mini. Since it comes integrated with Google Assistant, you can give commands to the Home to read.

You can buy an audiobook on Google Play. Some of these books are free of cost while some have to be purchased. After purchasing the book, it is added to the Google Library. According to Google, a Family Library option is also available so that family members can listen to the books.
To invoke the audiobook, say, “Ok Google, read my book" to the Google Assistant on your phone or the Google Home. You can also give commands such as "Ok Google, who is the author?", if you want to know about the author of the book; or “Ok Google, stop playing in 20 minutes,” if you want to set a timer to it.

You can listen to the audiobook and complete your everyday chores while listening to it. And since it is available on Android, iOS, or the web, users can switch between devices without being tied to any particular platform.

The audiobook section was launched in 45 countries in nine languages.

Updated Date: May 22, 2018 20:56 PM

Source | https://www.firstpost.com/tech/news-analysis/google-brings-audiobooks-to-home-heres-how-you-can-read-err-listen-to-books-on-the-smart-speaker-4478175.html

Writing a literature review


Format and steps of writing a Literature Review from University of New England

A literature review is usually written as part of a postgraduate thesis proposal or at the beginning of a dissertation or thesis. A literature review gives an overview of the area of study: what has already been said on the topic; who the key writers are; what the prevailing theories and hypotheses are; what questions are being asked; and what methodologies are appropriate and useful.

In a literature review, you demonstrate that you have read and understood previous and current research in the area.

1. Format for a literature review
2. Steps for writing a literature review

Format for a literature review

A literature review follows an essay format -
Introduction, Body, Conclusion.

Steps for writing a literature review

1. Do a literature search
2. Find the literature
3. Read the literature
4. Write short summaries
5. Organize the summaries
6. Write each section
7. Decide on the order of presentation
8. Write the conclusion
9. Write the introduction
10. Proofread and edit carefully

Full Intellectual Available @ https://www.une.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/12177/WE_Writing-a-literature-review.pdf

Nekton's Launch of First Open-sourced Global Ocean Data Portal @ OCTOPUS (The Ocean Tool for Public Understanding and Science)



OCTOPUS (The Ocean Tool for Public Understanding and Science) launched on May 14, 2018 by Nekton to begin a new era of collaborative marine research and improved ocean governance.

OCTOPUS provides a single source to freely access the latest global marine data. OCTOPUS dynamically harvests and harmonises open-access marine data including oceanographic observations, biodiversity and human stressors on the ocean. Its objective is to support scientific study and decision-making for the improved management of the ocean.

OCTOPUS is created as an open-access portal for the scientific and ocean governance communities to utilise freely and develop new applications using its analytical tools.

OCTOPUS was built and developed in collaboration between the Oxford Martin School and the Zoology Department at the University of Oxford. The Nekton Oxford Deep Ocean Research Institute ('Nekton') lead the development and management of OCTOPUS.

"OCTOPUS enables scientists, policy makers and the general public to have open-access to a wide variety of current and high quality marine data to inform and catalyse their activities. In effect, it is a gateway to
knowledge on marine ecosystems.”

--- Professor Alex Rogers, Nekton Science Director, University of Oxford, OCTOPUS Founder

Source | https://octopus.zoo.ox.ac.uk

Online resource for academicians soon @ Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya National Mission on Teachers and Training (PMMMNMTT)





They can connect with experts, access books and journals in their fields of study
University and college teachers across the country will soon be able to connect with experts in their fields of study and also pose queries on academic questions that they wish resolved through suggestions offered by these experts or other teachers of their discipline.

A National Resource Centre, envisaged as a one-stop point for Indian academicians to enhance their research and teaching skills, will make such cooperation across universities possible with the launch of a portal within months from now.

The National Institute of Educational Research and Planning (NIEPA) is in the process of rolling out the centre, an initiative that is part of the Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya National Mission on Teachers and Training (PMMMNMTT), an ambitious scheme launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Varanasi.

Detailed database

The centre will enable college and university teachers to access a detailed database of academic resources, including lists of books, top journals and subject experts in their area of interest. It will also suggest a mechanism to higher education institutions to assess students’ satisfaction with teaching and research in the institutions, so that the faculty are able to figure out what students think about their college/university and make improvements.

NIEPA will hold a series of intensive workshops with experts in various disciplines in the next two months to put together an effective resource centre, said an official who did not want to be named.
The PMMMNMTT calls for a National Resource Centre to be “set up with the vision of developing teachers who are able to enhance their potential and push the frontiers of knowledge through research, networking and sharing of existing resources in the competitive knowledge world”. The portal will be launched with detailed information on resources in some key subjects: History, Political Science, Sociology, Economics, Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and Biology. Education and Management will also feature among the chosen disciplines.

Source | The Hindu | 19th May 2018

Kanyashree’ project @ IIT-KGP expresses interest in project - we can integrate this NDLI digital library with the Kanyashree project



IIT-KGP expresses interest in 'Kanyashree' project, willing to work with government

Kolkata: IIT Kharagpur is willing to work with the Bengal government on its Kanyashree project and provide technological upgradation for further enhancement of the quality of learning for girls.

"We have developed National Digital Library of India (NDLI) where all types of books are available in a single platform. If we can integrate this digital library with the Kanyashree project, we will be able to assess the progress of education of girls and accordingly provide them with the correct input to enhance their education level," IIT Kharagpur director Dr Partha Pratim Chakrabarti said.

He further maintained that IIT KGP has come up with a research centre for Artificial Intelligence (AI) on its Kharagpur campus and is coming up with another centre for emerging technologies like AI, Internet of Things (IoT) and Machine Learning at Rajarhat.

"Emerging technologies like AI can be used in Kanyashree project and this will improve learning, hence, contribute to the development of a girl child in the real sense of the term. We want to contribute in a big way to this development, so we are looking forward to work with the Bengal government," Chakrabarti said.

The project, which was rolled out in March 2013, presently has 4,84,8970 beneficiaries. IIT Kharagpur had once extended their help when there was a problem in the smooth functioning of the project.

Kanyashree is the pet project of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee for the upliftment of girls from the poor families and enables them to pursue higher studies, which they are unable to do due to economic constraints.
It is a targeted conditional cash transfer scheme aimed at retaining girls in schools and other educational institutions. It also aims towards skill development and prevent child marriage. The United Nations in June last year awarded the Bengal government for its "Kanyashree" scheme.

The project won the first place for Public Service at the World Forum out of a total of 552 projects from 62 countries, which were nominated for the award.

Source | http://www.millenniumpost.in/kolkata/iit-kgp-expresses-interest-in-kanyashree-project-willing-to-work-with-government-300364