Thursday, April 26, 2012

‘SHAYAD, YAHEEN SE HO…’ by SATYA NARAYAN- Founder and Chairman of CL Educate and Indus World Group of Schools


CL Educate and Indus World Group of school has immense pleasure in inviting each one of you on the occasion of Book Release on Hindustani Poetry ‘SHAYAD, YAHEEN SE HO…’ by Satya Narayan, Founder and Chairman of CL Educate and Indus World Group of Schools. The book introduces us to another dimension of Satya’s personality-that of a poet. The event will be held on 27th April, 2012 at India Islamic Cultural Centre, Lodhi Road, New Delhi; from 1745 onwards. The poetry by Satya will be brought to life through music and abhinaya by famous artists Vidhi Sharma and Renu Pahari Bassi. Music will be by Mahesh Prabhakar. A photo exhibition has also been created for the occasion by Srinivasan Ramakrishnan.

We are honoured, as Dr. S.Y.Quraishi, Chief Election Commissioner, Govt. of India, has given his kind consent to release the book. The book is dedicated to Prof. Shahryar Saheb.

Kindly join us on this evening rich in creativity and culture.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

“How to get your child co-operate without conflict?”


Dainik Bhaskar and Indus World School  conducted a seminar on “How to get your child co-operate without conflict?” especially for parents having their children between the age group 9 to 13 years. The seminar was conducted on Monday - 23rd April 2012.The speaker Mr. Sujit Bhattacharya - an IIT & IIM Alumnus,Chairman Indus World School, is a renowned educationist who has spent around 15 years in the field of education, setting up of a chain of schools, curriculum development, teacher training and child psychology.

Talking about Preadolescence Mr. Bhattacharya said that it is a stage of human development following early childhood and prior to adolescence. In terms of age in years, preadolescence is generally defined as the period from 9-13 years. Preadolescence can bring its own challenges and anxieties. Preadolescence (preteen) Parenting is a time of transition. This is followed by the teenage years starting at age 13 and going through age 19, with the finale and logical conclusion being the creation of a newly minted adult. These Preteen Parenting years must be done correctly or your child may never really grow up. Laying down solid Parenting Roots is essential for healthy preteen growth and development. Preteen Parenting is parenting children through the process of growing up. With that definition some parents may view this task as never ending since some children seem to never really grow up. The goal of Preteen Parenting is to help your Preteen child navigate waters that are choppy, chilly, full of dangers (both real but mostly imagined), and which are ever changing with the level of complexity required of their growing worlds said Mr. Bhattacharya.

The seminar was followes by question answer round, where parents came up with lot of questions. This seminar helped parents to understand their children better in terms of how their personalities are shaped. It will also gave them an exposure on techniques to engage co-operation of children.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Multiple Intelligence workshop evokes good response


Indus World School conducted a seminar on Multiple Intelligence on Monday -  20th April. ‘Every child possesses 8 types of intelligence and the right age to tap each of these intelligences is up to the age of 11 to 12 years. Language, Mathematical & Logical, Music, Kinesthetic, Visual / Spatial, Naturalist, Interpersonal and Intrapersonal are the 8 types of Intelligences’ said Mrs. Varsha Rebello, Senior Counselor, Indus World School Group.

Giving a piece of advice, Rebello said that parents should involve themselves with their children during study and also share their academic activities. The parents should always keep a dictionary while interacting with the children as well as be members of library. “Understand the liking of your child and give him/her scope accordingly, “she said. The issues like intelligence of child, its definition, various aspects and long- term effects of these things on children, also came up during the seminar.

   The parents participated in the interaction session and raised questions on the issue of children’s intelligence. Many games were organized in the hall for the entertainment of children.

On the occasion Mrs Namita Parthasarathy, HM of the school said that "IWS is against rote learning. The curriculum is based on play-and-learn methodology for students from Pre-primary to Class II and learning-by-doing for higher classes and curriculum is designed revolving around these intelligences."

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Debate Competition using Video Conferencing


With growing technology, the world no doubt has become a small place, where distances are no bar and knowledge has no limit. This is what Indus World School also believes and is preparing its students for the same. Generally Video conferencing is used by corporate or companies, but in today’s tech world, Indus World School has given exposure to the students to showcase their talent with the help of video conferencing. Debate competition on “Children should be a part of social networking sites or not” was recently organized by Indus World School in which students of Aurangabad, Indore and Raipur participated with the help of video conferencing. Topic was given them two days before and students of grade 5, 6 and 7 prepared by referring different books and websites. Students were divided into 2 groups and asked to debate on the topic. Students were guided by the mentors on how to counter at talk and answer.  

Technology is the future, so what better way to amalgamate technology to their learning. We are preparing children for their future and for sure technology cannot be left behind. IWS leaves no stone unturned to make sure that technology becomes a part of school learning. For this it will have robotics classes from coming session, it has visual programming from class three and above and planning for tablets in higher classes any much more to make technology one of the friends of children.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

IWS qualifies for India’s Biggest Inter-School Financial Quiz


IWS qualifies for India’s biggest Financial Quiz – Funancial Quest. Funancial Quest is a new initiative created by the National Stock Exchange aimed at spreading the awareness of financial stability across this nation. Taking that a little further, it becomes imperative for a large nation like ours to reach that message and to make the younger generation more financially prudent, more financially conscious and more financially stable. If our kids can be citizens tomorrow who are financially responsible and stable, as a nation we would be financially very secure and sound and that's the large objective of this phenomenal quiz that's going across the country.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Indusians make it through NTSC and other prestigious Competitive exams

Indusians make it through NTSC and other prestigious Competitive exams IWS proudly announces that its students, who had appeared for several competitive exams, came out with flying colours. Once again Indus has proved that it works upon the overall development of a child and provides all the possible support and platform for its development. Given below are the names of students and their scores in different competitive exams.
Exam Name                                   Student Name                                                        AIR       State Rank

VCO                                               Keshav Krishnamurthi                                           37
                                                       Abhishek Kanthed                                                  33
                                                       Trishank Baghet                                                     99
                                                       Chaman Gupta                                                      131
IMO (2nd Level)                               Aryan Bhaskar                                                     761             25
                                                         Swatantra Garg                                                 1473             65
                                                         Anshuman Patankar                                            960             35
NSO (2nd Level)                              Swatantra Garg                                                   1670            84
                                                         Chaman Gupta                                                   1075            59
NCO(2nd Level)                               Trishank Baghal                                                      93             6
NTSE                                                Raghvandra Singh Chauhan

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Saturday, April 14, 2012

Creating Knowledge Constructors

When was the last time you saw a child in your classroom ecstatic about having ‘discovered’ something, or ‘made’ something or even ‘reached at’ something? The chances are the answer would be, “can’t remember”. Sadly, that’s what school education has been reduced to, by some of its practitioners, i.e teachers.

Why can’t our community ensure that learning is meaningful, activity-oriented, enjoyable and everlasting, so that children assimilate knowledge and skills applicable by them in their everyday experiences?

Fortunately, a small minority of school managements has become aware of the vital importance of child-centric, joyful 21st century pedagogies which prepare students to transform into constructers — rather than mere consumers — of knowledge, and are working towards implementing them in their classrooms. In these competitive and challenging times, no school can afford a laid-back attitude towards best practices in education, because the act of delivering education has become a live issue and the purpose of education has changed. Education systems worldwide have to provide physically-fit, mentally-alert and emotionally-rich individuals equipped with communicative and new technology skills to take on global competition.

When we speak of mean-ingful education, we mean education which develops the cognitive — rather than memorisation — skills of students. The teacher is no longer a mere teacher; she has evolved into a facilitator, a mentor who creates a cond-ucive learning environment in her classroom. She should be trained to discern each child’s strengths and weak-nesses with the expertise to build on the former and rectify the latter. The modern teacher should have learnt educational psychology and be equipped to apply it in her classroom. She should be able to use her own intelligence to map the intelligences of students to deliver effective learning to them.

Experiential learning or learning-by-doing has long been advocated as the best pedagogy for making children learn. As the Chinese proverb says: “Tell me and I’ll forget; show me and I may remember, but involve me and I’ll understand.” Despite the self-evident truism of this observation, most teachers limit students’ levels of activity to their desks, or items brought in from a lab and shown to children in a haphazard manner, mainly to fulfill the teacher’s diary requirement.

On the other hand, visualise the joyful learning of a child who actually gets down on her knees to study the discipline and purpose of ants marching in orderly lines with their loads, or of a child encouraged to immerse her hands in wet mud to make toys, or children collecting varied and differently-shaped leaves during their environment studies class. Unfortunately, experiential education classes have been whittled down to once-a-week mandatory activity periods which don’t bring any joy either to teacher or pupil. The objective is to merely qualify as an “activity-oriented school”.

Nevertheless there’s a multiplying number of teachers and schools who genuinely believe that activity-centred learning is more effective — a concept endorsed by the Union government’s National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005. NCF encourages teacher-led activities such as taking children out for nature walks or excursions relating to themes being taught in class, or even just squatting on a duree to have a heart-to-heart with students. These experiences undoubtedly add dimensions to children’s learning. They will quickly understand that they are allowed to learn differently; they will relearn and come away feeling confident, happy and equipped.

Experiential or learner-centric teaching is positive and impactful. It helps children to reach the stage of “I’ve done this” or “I know this”. When a child is able to acknowledge her own learning, acquired at her pace, of her own volition and with her teacher’s support, it becomes true knowledge of everlasting value. If this process of learning and applying knowledge is given direction and acceleration, it will surely infuse children with confidence and prepare them to become producers of new knowledge.

A welcome development in K-12 education is that school managements, principals and teachers are responding positively to new experiential pedagogies. A growing community of progressive parents themselves denied “inward ways of learning” in their formative years are also endorsing this method of teaching as superior to the established chalk-n-talk pedagogy.
Bill Gates, the visionary promoter-chairman of the US-based IT multinational Microsoft Inc, once remarked that the requirement of the future is people who are creative, open-minded, and confident about their abilities. To nurture our students into becoming broad-minded, flexible, and knowledgeable individuals who regard their studies as exciting journeys of discovery and transform into active producers — rather than passive consumers — of knowledge, experiential learning must be initiated by all school managements. And a good time to start is now.

(Manleen Ahluwalia is member, governing council, Indus World Schools and principal, Indus World School, Gurgaon)