Thursday, July 2, 2015

AIF-TSIL CSR Partnership

Learning Centre Inauguration in TSIL Campus
Launch Meeting in TSIL-From Left Executive Director TSIL, MD TSIL,  BEO and Myself



AIF entered into a CSR partnership with TSIL for implementing the DE program in 50 schools of Keonjhar district. Out of these 14 schools are in the CSR command area of TSIL and have been provided with laptops and projectors by TSIL. This is the first corporate partnership for DE in the state of Odisha. 

Thursday, October 16, 2014

AIF-Stir Partnership

DE Odisha implemented a new program focusing on identification of “Bright Spots” / micro-innovations by teachers. The program started with a workshop held in Hyderabad in July, which was attended by me and selected team members. In fact I was initially skeptical given the multiple program launches slated for the month of October 2014 as part of the DE Odisha Program. We adopted a well thought out strategy focusing on three districts – Sambalpur, Bargarh and Ganjam which we visited to kick start the process. At the same time we encouraged the team members of the other three districts to try and identify as many micro-innovations as possible even through telephonic conversations with the HMs and teachers belonging to schools they could not visit, given the short time span. By the end of a fortnight we could identify 163 bright spots from all the 6 districts with Ganjam topping at 111 out of which 23 were shortlisted and sent to Stir. They in turn shortlisted 6 bright spots and the respective teachers were invited to Delhi for the Stir event on the 5th of October. The second phase of the program was launched with a two day workshop in Bangalore held on the 8th and 9th of October. 

For more information on the program visit www.stireducation.org

Friday, October 3, 2014

A Decade with AIF

Receiving the Award from Ravi
I completed a decade with the American India Foundation on the 1st of September 2014. My memory goes back to 25th of June 2004 when we had the first meeting with the APC and Secretary School and Mass Education Dept., where the intervention was approved in principle and September 2004 when the MoU was signed by the then State Project Director Santosh Sarangi. Personally for me it has been a great journey and I have learnt a lot. For a person who had never wanted to work in Odisha, I am amazed and at times shocked at how fast a decade has passed. In fact I had been so involved with my program giving my heart and soul to it and having literally ate, slept and dreamt about the program all the time, coupled with a great team who have continued with me for so long, that I have literally  and never realized as to when a decade had slipped away. 

Core Group Meeting, Bangalore
I feel the program has not only provided a platform  for me but for all the team members, to unleash their creativity, tap their potential and significantly increase their knowledge and understanding as far as how learning happens, and the centrality of techno-pedagogy / instructional design in increasing learning outcomes is concerned. This knowledge will last a lifetime.

From the time we started in 2004 the program has undergone a lot of changes with the major inflection in 2010 when we introduced the "centralized training model" to learning achievement tracking
from 2013 on wards.

I was given the "long service award" by Ravi Kumar, CEO AIF in Bangalore as part of the DE Core Group meeting, held in the month of June 2014. Seriously I never expected an award for something which is so integrally interwoven with my life but then an award always makes one feel good - as after all I am but a fragile human being.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Workshop on Financial Literacy IIMA

Workshop in Progress
I was in IIM Ahmedabad in July to attend a workshop on "Designing Financial Literacy Programs" which was organized by Prof. Baruah and Shobhesh Agarwala. I was pretty much impressed by the design of the workshop and the way it was conducted. The research that was carried out by IIMA on designing effective intervention tools for FL shows that a combination of training plus videos proved to be most effective as far as retention is concerned. Being financially literate requires not only knowledge of the concept but also use of various financial instruments leading to inculcation of the desired habits which in turn leads to attitudinal change in the long run. One of the presenters in the workshop "Tamol Bandhopadhyay," "Executive Editor Live Mint," Mumbai did drive home a crucial point: he mentioned that we are generally wrong in thinking that individuals living below the poverty line lack knowledge of FL. That is one of those "partial truths which begets total errors." He gave an example of his driver whose home he once happened to visit and was amazed to find that he saved money that he earned from different types of work such as salary, money for taking the dog for a walk, extra money for over time etc. into different containers with different labels such as health, education, general expenses etc. He sent money back home located in far away Nepal from these savings. Tamol took the first step by bringing his driver within the formal banking system by opening two recurring deposit accounts for him with the State Bank of India, which he still maintains.
IIMA

We as part of the DE intervention in Odisha are rolling out a pilot FL program in all the 100 government schools spread across 6 districts and Tamol's point will always be a guiding statement for me. Whether it is adults or children all of us are pretty much aware of the concepts of earning, saving, spending, budgeting, investment etc. (which comprise the core of FL ) and make use of them in some rudimentary form as part of their day to day lives. The only problem being that most of the sophisticated concepts that we use to describe the same cannot capture these rudimentary forms of the same. We need to take cognizance of this fact while designing our FL interventions.


Saturday, May 31, 2014

Steve Jobs

Click on the link below to watch one of the most inspirational videos that I have seen - Steve Jobs speech at Stanford.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gO6cFMRqXqU

Monday, May 26, 2014

Mid-Line Study DE Program Odisha

We just completed the mid-line study report and it took almost close to two and a half months to shift through the massive amount of data generated as part of the study. The study was administered in February 2014. The results are interesting and extremely motivating for me and my team members. Although I had expected an increase of about 10% in student learning outcomes in mathematics, science and geography the results show an increase in the range 25%-30% in the first year itself. The results have been shared with the School and Mass Education Department, Govt. of Odisha. They are interested in integrating the learnings as part of their mathematics and science module development. The study shows a very strong correlation between the DE methodology (Edukit usage, e-Samdhan, collaborative projects, Flipped Classroom methodology, regular coaching and mentoring of teachers by DE resource persons through regular school visits) and the top three performance areas in science, mathematics and geography in case of treatment I schools which clearly brings to light the impact of the DE Program.
As far as grade VI is concerned there has been a 29% increase in average scores (maths, science and geography combined). Similarly in case of grade VII there has been a 23% increase in average scores (maths, science and geography combined). Click on the link below to access the complete report.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Learning Achievement Levels in Govt. Schools

I am returning back to writing on my blog after a long time and that too with something as serious and complex as "learning achievement levels of kids in government schools." The topic has become a toast for the nation's intelligentsia and strangely eludes an easy solution. As part of my program intervention in government schools in Odisha we did a learning achievement baseline study and the results are interesting. I thought it will be interesting to share the challenges and the key insights thrown up by this study. This study was conducted with more than 5000 students in  87 government upper primary schools spread across six districts of Odisha.
Challenges and Key Insights 
A bottom heavy structure with a large number of students in the lower performing brackets is the main challenge. Almost all of them are back benchers, having very low self-esteem and in need of remediation. Classroom observations show that teachers also are reinforcing the status quo by focussing on the front benchers only. Just training and sensitizing them will not work. Teachers need to be coached and mentored at the school level and constantly sensitized to the fact that they should not be neglecting the back benchers. Equity is the need of the hour and it should be ensured that not only the quality of instruction improves but it also reaches each and every single child.
While the best performing school systems in the world manage to stay at the top by following a beginning of the pipe approach by carefully selecting, meticulously training and grooming the candidates for the job of a teacher, we on the contrary follow an end of the pipe approach by trying to remedy a situation whereby a large chunk of people who do not have any aptitude for teaching, end up as contractual teachers. Entering the teaching profession is an option of the last resort. This has sadly made teaching a low status profession in India, where teaching figures somewhere down the list, as a career option for the young generation. This has created a vicious cycle in that the low status of the profession sends a market signal which attracts poor quality candidates or candidates who take to teaching as a profession of the last resort. Add to this the poor quality of teaching in the teacher training institutes where the trainees do not get much of a practical exposure to teaching at the school level. In addition to that there are a large number of untrained teachers also at the school level.