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NPTEL signs MOU with AICTE for Faculty Development Programme

NPTEL signs MOU with AICTE for Faculty Development

All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) the statutory body and a national-level council for technical education, under Department of Higher Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development and NPTEL have signed an MOU on July 24, 2018 whereby advanced NPTEL online certification courses are approved for Faculty Development Programme (FDP) by AICTE. – (F. No. AICTE/RIFD/FDP Through MOOCs/2017-18)

AICTE Notification, 1 page, pdf :   MoU between AICTE and NPTEL for recognizing NPTEL MOOCs courses as FDPs for faculty promotions

Roles & responsibilities of NPTEL

  1. It shall be the responsibility of NPTEL to conduct advance level courses through MOOCs, which are good enough to be FDP.
  2. NPTEL will do the certification of these courses with AICTE.
  3. NPTEL will act as facilitator for the operation of the programmes.
  4. NPTEL through its Academic Affairs Council (this is the senates of the different IITs that run courses on NPTEL) and its Progrmme Implementation Committee (Chaired by Director, IIT Madras and all NPTEL coordinators are member) will identify the set of advanced courses that are good enough to be FDP.
  5. The list of courses will be advertised on the NPTEL portal (nptel.ac.in) and a record of courses approved every semester will be maintained on the same portal.
  6. Online portal will be modified by NPTEL to invite applications for the conduct of advance level courses through MOOCs and the link also be provided at AICTE website.
  7. Since the NPTEL courses are supported by MHRD, NPTEL will be accountable for finance/grants sanctioned under the scheme and shall abide by terms and conditions stipulated by MHRD for financial grants.
  8. NPTEL will constitute a Steering Committee for effecting implementation of scheme. AICTE will provide its representative as a member on that Committee.
  9. After conduct of each programme, NPTEL will provide to AICTE a list of participant faculty from engineering college, alongwith their contact details, who attended the MOOCs programme in the eligible NPTEL courses and successfully completed the same.
  10. A special joint certificate will be issued by NPTEL to the participants who attended the MOOCs programme in the eligible NPTEL courses and successfully completed the same. The specially designed joint certificate will carry AICTE logo and signatures of Advisor, AICTE and NPTEL Coordinator appended on it.
  11. NPTEL will ensure that the above said certificate shall be issued only to those participants who qualify examinations.

Roles & responsibilities of AICTE: –

  1. AICTE shall nominate a representative to attend the meetings of Steering Committee for monitoring the implementation of the terms and conditions laid down in the MoU.
  2. An appropriate advertisement shall be placed by AICTE and NPTEL and applications will be invited online on NPTEL web portal with the link on AICTE website.
  3. AICTE shall conduct surprise visit to some centres while the conduct of test is in progress. NPTEL will provide the schedule to AICTE in advance.

What Faculty has to do

  1. Faculty has to enroll to courses on NPTEL portal, register for the certification exam(s) by filling the form and paying the applicable fees, appear at the designated exam centre and write the exam, and pass the exam by scoring marks according to criteria set by NPTEL.
  2. Faculty who participate in and pass the NPTEL courses approved by AICTE as FDP will apply separately to NPTEL and get the FDP certificate agreed upon by AICTE and NPTEL.
  3. This will be submitted by the faculty to AICTE to complete the process.

Applicability

The AICTE FDP is applicable from Jul-Dec 2018 semester onward. This will NOT be applicable to previously completed NPTEL Certification Courses.

List Of NPTEL Online Courses For AICTE FDP, Jul – Dec 2018—-    https://nptel.ac.in/AICTE_FDP     /          Click here to View / download, 7 pages, pdf

NPTEL partnering with CII to provide 226 technical courses

The Economic Times | 09 January 2018 | Anandi Chandrashekhar |

The note said that NPTEL has also started getting requests from outside India and Local Chapters have been established in Afghanistan and Ethiopia.

CHENNAI: The National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL) is partnering with the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII ) to provide technical content and tutorials. The partnership intends to explore how the training can be extended to meet industry requirements and come up with joint programmes to fill gaps in the education system. A press note stated that the objective of the partnership is to make fresh college graduates employable and job-ready. A total of 226 courses will be on offer starting this month. This is higher than the 159 courses offered in the last semester. Enrolments close on 22nd January 2018 for 90 courses and on 5th February 2018 for the rest. Courses on technology such as such as Data mining , Machine Learning , Business Analytics with Cloud Computing and Internet of Things (IoT) are being offered for a second consecutive term due to popular demand, the press note said. Other courses are on topics such as Business English, Spoken English and soft skills.

Institutes such as IISER-Mohali, IIIT Bangalore will also be joining NPTEL in offering courses this year. Prof. Andrew Thangaraj, NPTEL coordinator at IIT Madras, said, “NPTEL has opened the doors of high-quality college-level education to everyone through its online course and certification program conducted by faculty from premier Indian institutes and universities. For students, credit transfer is increasingly becoming possible for NPTEL courses with support from MHRD, UGC and AICTE. ” The note said that NPTEL has also started getting requests from outside India and Local Chapters have been established in Afghanistan and Ethiopia. *Industry Initiatives* NPTEL is also launching an ‘NPTEL Industry Associate Programme’ where companies can partner with NPTEL to get employees trained and reskilled using these courses, with zero financial implication. Companies can use these courses for training fresh hires and to reskill existing employees as well. Rathira Ayurveda Recommended By Colombia NPTEL is the largest provider of MOOCs in India in the engineering stream. It works with more than 1,300 colleges across India. – Courtesy

MOOCs: The new generation learning

Digital Learning | | Archana Thakur | Opinion |

MOOC

MOOCs provide an affordable and flexible way to learn new skills, advance your career and deliver quality educational experiences at scale, writes Archana Thakur, Joint Secretary, University Grants Commission (UGC), how MOOCs is helping students in their learning for Elets News Network (ENN). Gone are the years when whatever we learnt in school or colleges used to get stuck with  us throughout our working life.  The rapid pace of technological advancement has turned constant learning as the most pressing need of the day and for this the massivee open online courses (MOOCs) have been adequately equipped to address and help in it. MOOCs have been one of the most hotly-debated topics in the education circles over the past few years. Opinions have been extremely polarising, with some people heralding it as the greatest leap for education since the invention of the printing press, and some dismissing it as another fad. MOOC is an online course which aims unlimited participation and open access via the web. The first MOOCs emerged from the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement. The term MOOC was coined in 2008 by Dave Cormier of the University of Prince Edward Island in response to a course called Connectivism and Connective Knowledge (also known as CCK08). CCK08, which was led by George Siemens of Athabasca University and Stephen Downes of the National Research Council, consisted  25 tuition-paying students in Extended Education at the University of Manitoba, as well as over 2,200 online students from the general public who were studying free of cost.

This provides interactive user forums to support community interactions among students, professors, and teaching assistants. MOOCs are widely researched development in distance education introduced in the US in 2006 for the first time. It emerged as a popular mode of learning in 2012. According to The New York Times, 2012 became “The Year MOOC”. MOOCs did not rely on posted resources, learning management systems, and video lectures. Instead it uses structures that mixed the learning management system with more open web resources. MOOCs are of two distinct types: one of them emphasises the connectivist philosophy and other resembles to more traditional courses. Stephen Downes proposed the terms “cMOOC” and “xMOOC” to distinguish in between them. The principle on which cMOOCs are based is of connectivist pedagogy indicating that material should be aggregated rather than pre-selected, remixable, re-purposable and feeding forward. It tries to connect learners to each other to answer questions emphasising collaborative development of the MOOC. MOOCs have a much more traditional course structure typically with a clearly specified syllabus of recorded lectures and self-test problems. The instructor is the expert provider of knowledge, and student interactions are usually limited to asking for assistance and advising each other on difficult points. MOOCs are becoming popular as they offer university-level courses without the need to complete an entire programme of studies. Students get the opportunity to study high quality courses online with prestigious universities, often free of cost. Users can select courses from any institution offering them independently. Video-based study offer interaction either through peer review and group collaboration or automated feedback through objective, online assessments. EdX is a non-for-profit provider, created by Harvard and MIT universities. Now extended to the Australian National University, TU Delft (theNetherlands), and Rice, Berkeley and Georgetown universities in the US.  Around the world, other MOOC providers include EduKart in India, ALISON in Ireland, and Aprentica in Latin America.

The reasons behind considering MOOC are:

         i.            Quality courses with low cost,

       ii.            Can be studied in combination with other work and

      iii.            Study resources are easily accessed from any computer at any location through web.

MOOCs can generate affective learning through four pathways or mechanisms:

  1. Sharing instructor enthusiasm.
  2. Discussion on controversial topics.
  • Exposure to diversity.
  1. Experiencing innovative teaching approaches.

The disadvantages are that while most courses are free, some are fee-paying and videos are normally short, drop-out rates are high – up to 90%. These rates are marginally lower for paid-for courses. A reasonable degree of computer literacy is needed. Many of the MOOC users are graduates seeking to top up their skills and competences. MOOCs do not feed into a degree or other qualification but are self-contained. Only a few students complete the courses. Content of MOOC offered by other country may not match the culture and condition of the home country of the student accessing the course.

 Advantages of MOOCs over physical colleges and universities are-

  • Scaling up the course batch size is a few clicks away.
  • Thousands of young minds can be guided by an emeritus tutor.
  • Self-paced study enables student to study and learn at their own leisurely rate.
  • Online courses can help mitigate and remove all systemic barriers, thus truly making education a universally available resource.

Three of the most pressing critiques of an open learning system are (a) lack of an effective system to measure and validate the progress of the learners, (b) how to integrate the course credits into the present system so that it counts towards a degree from a college, and (c) how to ensure personalised guidance and mentorship. However, all these are resolvable as having certain multiple choices questions at the end of each session to evaluate the understanding of the learner and a few universities have started launching their full-fledged courses online or allowing certain validated MOOCs to contribute credits to their physical courses. In India, SWAYAM (Study Webs of Active-Learning for Young Aspiring Minds) was launched on 15 August 2016 which is an information technology platform. It aims at providing high quality education on various subjects from school level (class IX-XII) to under graduate and post graduate students, covering all disciplines is a new portal for MOOC. SWAYAM is a programme designed to achieve the three cardinal principles of Education Policy viz., access, equity and quality.

The objective of this effort is to take the best teaching learning resources to all, including the most disadvantaged. SWAYAM seeks to bridge the digital divide for students who have hitherto remained untouched by the digital revolution and have not been able to join the mainstream of the knowledge economy. To ensure best quality content are produced and delivered, seven National Coordinators have been appointed. They are NPTEL for engineering,  UGC for post-graduation education, CEC for under-graduate education, NCERT & NIOS for school education, IGNOU for out of the school students and IIMB for management studies. SWAYAM platform is indigenously developed by Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) and All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) with the help of Microsoft and would be ultimately capable of hosting 2000 courses and 80,000 hours of learning: covering school, under-graduate, post-graduate, engineering, law and other professional courses. It is thus anticipated that MOOCs impact is going to be felt strongly on the education system in India not only in improving standards and availability of quality education in all fields, on the click of a button but also granting affordability of learning science for students from rural background or colleges in remote areas with paucity of competent science instructors.

UK University Birmingham launches language course for India’s future engineers

Birmingham launches language course for future engineers

Dr Tim Jackson, Senior Lecturer in the School of Engineering

Engineering students around the globe have the opportunity to sign up for the University of Birmingham’s new online training that will help them improve their technical English language skills – free-of-charge. The University’s ‘Electrical Engineering: Sensing, Powering and Controlling’ course aims to support students for whom English is a second language in mastering many of the key terms and concepts in Electronic, Electrical and Systems Engineering. Birmingham’s new MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) is based on real first-year modules at the University. Students can sign up for the free course at www.futurelearn.com/courses/electrical-engineering/1

The MOOC is aimed at direct entry students planning to attend Birmingham to study in the discipline of Electronic, Electrical and Systems Engineering, but the content is helpful to any student planning to start in the first year of any engineering discipline. The three-week course runs from 13 November and has been developed by the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences. It is led by Dr Tim Jackson, Senior Lecturer in the School of Engineering. Dr Jackson said: “This is a great opportunity for students whose first language is not English to brush up their language skills and get to grips with the key terms and concepts associated with engineering. “The course will be delivered in English to help students to gradually develop their language skills. Students can learn online at their own pace, and there are opportunities to discuss their work online with fellow students and lecturers.”

Topics covered will include:

• Overview of Electrical, Electronic and Systems Engineering
• Transducers and their purpose
• Electronic systems in context
• Solar power / batteries in space
• The Space Weather research group
• Electrical circuits
• Analogue and digital electrical engineering

By the end of the course, students will be able to:

• Investigate what is meant by electronic, electrical and systems engineering.
• Develop their skills in analysing and designing circuits and systems.
• Improve their confidence in communicating engineering ideas using English technical vocabulary.
• Assess how different electronic and electrical engineering systems are used in specific contexts.

For further information or to arrange an interview, please contact Tony Moran in the University of Birmingham press office on +44 (0)121 414 8254 / +44 (0)782 783 2312.

Notes to editors

• The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions, its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers and teachers and more than 5,000 international students from over 150 countries. –  Watch the Video

Mangalore University Academic Council okays open online courses for PG students

Deccan Herald | DH News Service, Mangaluru | Sep 18 2017 |

The Academic Council of Mangalore University has approved massive open online courses (MOOCs) for second-semester postgraduate students. Mangalore University Vice-Chancellor Prof K Byrappa said an orientation for first-semester students would be conducted in late October or early November to create awareness about the available MOOCs. About 350 courses are available online. The courses have already been uploaded on the UGC website. This is a part of the Ministry of Human Resource Development’s (MHRD) Swayam (Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds) initiative that envisages offering online courses to students by the faculty of centrally funded institutions. As per the Swayam website, the courses hosted on Swayam will be in four quadrants — video lectures, especially prepared reading material that can be downloaded/printed, self-assessment tests through tests and quizzes and an online discussion forum for clearing the doubts.

MOOCs will be offered as soft core courses and optional elective courses in second and third semesters at the postgraduate level. If a student opts for the courses under MOOCs, there will not be any regular teachers for these courses. Students can take the course material on the Swayam platform. They will have to take the online examination conducted by the respective university/institution which offers MOOCs identified by the UGC. The number of credits that a student who opts for MOOCs will be the same as the credit that a soft core or open elective course carries under Mangalore University regulations. The credits earned by the students under MOOCs will be adopted by the Mangalore University while declaring the result and awarding the degree. If a student takes more courses under MOOCs than the number of courses prescribed for the PG programme, Mangalore University regulations provide for extra credits. These extra credits will be considered as additional credits and will be shown in the marks card under the heading ‘additional Swayam/MOOCs’. According to Prof Byrappa, when a student opts for MOOCs, s/he has to register as per the regulations pertaining to the UGC (Credit Framework for Online Learning Courses through Swayam) Regulations, 2016. – Courtesy

This online course aims to spread STEM education to women from small cities across India

Edex Live | Reshma Ravishanker | 03rd August 2017 |

Participants have to use the knowledge gained from the course and make a submission for the project

The Anita Borg Institute (ABI) India launched 2017  Codeathon.in for women students in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) from smaller cities across India. As a part of the event, participants have to use the knowledge gained from the online course and make a submission for the project: Navigate the Mars Rover. The project involves designing and implementing a solution that will apply a variety of shortest path algorithms to help the Mars Rover find the optimal path between the starting point and the destination marked by the user. The end user will have the ability to choose the algorithm to be used.  This initiative is an online platform that offers the students an opportunity to enhance their coding skills while developing innovative solutions.

“Currently, the industry efforts in this area are concentrated in the six to eight metro cities. At times there is so much happening that the talent in these cities is spoilt for choices. There is a large pool of untapped talent in smaller cities that have a lot of knowledge, they need more exposure and confidence-building. 2017 Codethon.in aims to bridge this gap. The participation from colleges and students in the selected cities has been positive and we look forward to some great codingsaid Geetha Kannan, MD, ABI India. The event is being held in select engineering colleges in Bhilai (Chhattisgarh), Coimbatore (Tamil Nadu), Mysore (Karnataka) and a few cities in Kerala. It will be conducted online from July and will go on until September 2017. It will also offer all participants coaching and practical experience that will better prepare them students for exciting careers in technology. –  Courtesy    /   Click here to take a look at  Codeathon.in        /  The Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology is a nonprofit organization founded by computer scientist Anita Borg. The institute’s primary aim is to recruit, retain, and advance women in technology.The institute’s most prominent program is the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing Conference, the world’s largest gathering of women in computing.        https://anitaborg.org/about-us/india/

What makes NPTEL India’s EdTech hero — without newsy fundings and valuations

Factor Daily | Sriram Sharma | July 24, 2017  |

  • Initiated in 2003 by seven IITs, NPTEL’s YouTube channel has over 245 million views.
  • To put that in perspective, MIT’s OpenCourseware, another top Massive Online Open Course (MOOC) has fewer than half its views.
  • Online certifications are offered at Rs 1,000 per course, through an in-person proctored exam.

“Some people train for JEE from their 6th standard. There’s a huge number of people in India, students particularly, who have a strong analytical and problem-solving background. Not all of them get into IITs or the top institutions. What happens to those guys? They go to other colleges, and they do engineering. When they have access to IIT courses, a huge number of people are able to appreciate that. I think it really starts somewhere there,” says Professor Andrew Thangaraj, electrical engineering department, IIT Madras, in a phone call with FactorDaily. Thangaraj has been serving as NPTEL coordinator at IIT Madras since 2001 and is currently national MOOCs coordinator for NPTEL in the SWAYAM project of the ministry of human resources development (MHRD) of the Indian government. We’re discussing the impact and reach of NPTEL (National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning), which by some measures, is already a world beater. It’s also quite likely that you haven’t heard of it, unless you’re from an engineering background.

NPTEL was initiated in 2003 by seven IITs (Bombay, Delhi, Kanpur, Kharagpur, Madras, Guwahati and Roorkee) along with the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru, in 2003. In its first phase (2003-2009), NPTEL developed 235 courses in web/video format, at http://nptel.iitm.ac.in (now defunct)  http://nptel.ac.in/     In Phase II (2009-14), an additional 600 web and video courses were recorded, with new features, such as indexing and keyword search. A YouTube channel was created in this period. In Phase III, starting 2014, an optional NOC (NPTEL Online Certification) was offered for Rs 1,000 through a proctored exam, which has seen over one lakh registrations so far.  “With over 250 web and video courses and more in development, NPTEL’s extensive offerings are rivalled in scale by few other online courseware programs,” wrote Taylor Walsh in his 2011 book entitled Unlocking the Gates: How and Why Leading Universities Are Opening Up Access To Their Courses. A lot has changed since then, most significantly, the rollout of a proctored certification program that costs Rs 1,000. Enrollments for July 2017 are open now for 159 courses, its course explorer states.

So, how big is NPTEL? It’s the most accessed library of peer-reviewed educational content in the world, an emailed fact sheet states. According to Alexa, it’s ranked at 328 in India. Its YouTube channel, with close to 20,000 videos, has more than 800,000 subscribers and over 245 million views. Head-to-head, MIT OpenCourseware has more subscribers, but fewer than half the views (112 million views). But Youtube stats alone don’t give a full measure of this mammoth beast. Its content is also free to download, available on DVDs, and distributed under the CC BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike) license. In its product brochure, NPTEL calls itself “the largest online repository in the world of courses in engineering, basic sciences and selected humanities and social sciences subjects.” That’s quite a mouthful, and kind of explains why it doesn’t get more recognition for its achievements. The former President of India felicitated the programme earlier this month, if that helps. “The video repository provided by NPTEL and mirrored in YouTube is the largest technical education online video repository in the world, which is structured and developed according to a unified curriculum, with free and unlimited access without a formal registration for downloading them,” wrote professor Mangala Sunder Krishnan, National Web Courses Coordinator, NPTEL Project (2003-2015), in a draft entitled The Story of NPTEL. The article is currently under review for publishing by the Commonwealth of Learning, an intergovernmental body with its head office in Vancouver, Canada. The programme has recorded more than 300 million visits, the article states. “Unfortunately, no agency bothered till now to verify our claims,” wrote Professor Krishnan, clarifying in an email to FactorDaily that this figure does not include the millions of visits to Google Scholar, the MOOC platform used by NOC. NOC has hosted more than 350 courses and run proctored exams, and issued certificates to more than 100,000 registrants, he said.

How NPTEL is charting a new course

In the first 10 years of its operation from 2003 to 2014, NPTEL functioned as a repository for self-learning content. In March 2014, NPTEL gave its MOOC programme a unique value proposition — a certificate from the IIT or the IISc. The courses as such were free, anybody could enrol, go through the content, answer the assignment, and make use of the forum. But for Rs 1,000 per course, an in-person proctored exam would provide proof of proficiency. “We get them (the students) a hall ticket, photo and ID. Our representative is there at each centre, and we verify the credentials, and they take the exam in a proctored environment. That was the change we made in the Indian setting because it was important for us to know who is writing the exam,” said Bharathi Balaji, senior project officer at NPTEL. The platform support was given by Google, and launched by the MHRD, with TCS iON (a business unit of Tata Consultancy Services) as an exam partner, she said.

Certificates are awarded on the basis of a 25% weighting for the assignment score, and a 75% weighting for the final exam score. Certifications come with three tiers of merit — Gold (90% and above), Elite (60-90%), and Successfully Completed (40-60%). Every course conducted on NPTEL records a wide range of statistics on enrollments, registrations, certificates issued, and top-ranking students. NPTEL’s courses are also differentiated on the basis of diversity of the courseware offered, regardless of their popularity. While courses on computer science, Indian philosophy, quantum physics, and design get thousands of enrolments, there are some that get just hundreds. “We don’t do just popular courses — IoT, big data, and digital marketing are in hot demand today, but that’s not all we do. All the core engineering disciplines are covered in our courses. We cover all disciplines, including management and humanities, UG (undergraduate) and elective courses, PhD-level courses. Some courses have just a 100 students, but you won’t find them being offered at any institute across the country,” Balaji said. Based on NOC Statistics, computer science is the most followed subject on the platform in terms of top enrolments — the top nine enrolments are all from just this stream. NPTEL is also indirectly influencing the quality of teaching and technical skills of college faculty in the country. Fifteen percent of NPTEL’s enrolments come from faculty members, an NPTEL infographic on learner profiles shows. “This is something that has naturally happened, and it’s turning out to be a faculty development programme without us even thinking it to be so,” said Balaji.

Upping the talent stack

Why would anyone visit NPTEL when there is a plethora of world-class options available, including MIT OpenCourseware, and dozens of courses from the world’s top universities on edx.org? One clue might lie in the fact that not everyone in India is comfortable with a western accent. “There are plenty of MOOCs available, but the accent of the teachers is not Indian, and they charge more money for certification courses. So I have not applied for them,” said Alok Shakya, a final year engineering student at KNIT Sultanpur, UP, who has completed five certifications from NPTEL. He had applied to IIT-JEE earlier but didn’t get through, he said. Shakya took NPTEL’s courses to get a better grasp of concepts in the IT industry, as he didn’t find any good resources in his college. He stumbled upon NPTEL while searching for an explanation on a programming concept on YouTube. “I watched the videos and my doubts regarding that particular concept became clear. My college seniors also advised me to go for NPTEL courses,” he said. His favourite professor on NPTEL is Tanmai Gopal, who co-created the course entitled Introduction to Modern Application Development (IMAD), he said. While 80% of NPTEL’s audience comes from India, it also has participants from across the world. “We have a lot of traffic from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri-Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia, Saudi, apart from US and Canada,” said Balaji. “Even for our exam in March, there was a faculty member from Saudi (Arabia), who had enrolled for a course and wanted to get the certificate. So, she actually flew down on the day of the exam in the morning, and got her certificate,” said Balaji. NPTEL’s most-watched video on Youtube, a lecture entitled Introduction to Basic Electronics has fairly positive comments from people around the world. “This Man is brilliant! Every American teacher could learn from this man!!!,” writes one commenter.

NPTEL’s greatest hit

According to NPTEL’s statistics, Introduction to Modern Application Development (IMAD) is the most popular course on the platform. The free online course was launched a year ago and has cumulatively seen over 1,00,000 registrations so far. “People haven’t just taken this course, more than 10,000 applications have been built. I feel it’s pretty amazing for something that was just a side project for us,” said Tanmai Gopal, CTO and cofounder of Hasura, a Bangalore-based cloud infrastructure focused startup, speaking to FactorDaily on the success of the course. “There’s a huge gap between the kind of knowledge you need when you start doing development, building applications, and what you actually learnt in university and school,” Gopal said. “On a side note, a big difference between India and the Silicon Valley is that everybody really understands tech there. There’s so much awareness in the entire ecosystem about what applications are, and how they’re built etc. But, their rate of innovation is much faster. Their applications are of a much higher quality from the word go. It kind of boils down to this fundamental knowledge of how applications are built, or how to get one built if you’re a business owner,” he said. To encourage deep, quality discussions on the platform, Hasura set up a Stackoverflow-type forum for people inside the community. The game-changer for students was the ability to write and deploy code, and see the finished product on their own subdomain. “Everybody has the will and energy to do things, but you need money, a credit or debit card, and spare income to do a random thing like hosting a server,” Gopal said. The IMAD.Tech portal was created using Hasura’s back-end technology, which enabled tens of thousands of people to run their own subdomain on a small cluster of servers.

“I could learn basic things by executing them on the console that the course provided on IMAD,” said Yogesh SP, a developer who works at Pathtracker.io, a Bengaluru-based tech startup. He appreciated how one could “learn by doing” in the course. “The course is more about creating a live website. It helped improve my HTML, CSS, JS, SQL skills. It enhanced my skills and provided me with a step-by-step approach to building a website,” he said. His future plan is to crack the Associate Android Developer course, and become a full-time Android developer. “That was one of the big things for students. It’s not just listening to things; after listening to me, you’re supposed to go try something out, and you’re supposed to go build something. You can build this on your mobile phone, on a tablet, Windows, Mac, Linux — it doesn’t matter,” Gopal added.

Growing enrollments with Local Chapters

Local Chapters, an initiative launched by NPTEL to drive up student participation, was launched in April 2015 as a pilot in Tamil Nadu. Through this programme, NPTEL appoints an SPOC (single point of contact), either a faculty member or a college student, as its ambassador. Until now, NPTEL has on-boarded over 1,000 colleges across the country in the programme and adds 5-10 more each week. Tamil Nadu (192) and Maharashtra (190) have the highest number of local chapters, followed by Andhra Pradesh (91). Enrolments are concentrated around industrialised states where there are a lot of engineering. colleges, said Thangaraj, adding that NPTEL’s state-wise statistics are in sync with the gross enrolment ratio for a university education. “Traditionally, even IT recruitment is like that and fits the same patterns. We are trying to make inroads into other states. It’s a bit of a long battle, and we’ll probably get there,” he said. Since last year, NPTEL has started recognising these Local Chapters as well, and rating them according to performance, based on the number of toppers, gold medalists, and elite students they produce. “We do a rating of the top 100 Local Chapters, also on our site,” said Balaji. While NPTEL has successfully closed the college loop, the industry loop is something it is yet to nail. However, it has had some success in offering its courses to decrease the onboarding time at companies, Balaji said. “Companies hire freshers and want them to do some courses before they come in. Companies said it reduced their training time at the job. TCS openly announced in one of our data analytics forum that if anybody has completed this course at TCS, we have a vacancy here,” she said. – Courtesy    /       http://nptel.ac.in/

Learn to create mobile apps with free online course from IIT Madras

India produces lakhs of engineers every year who aspire to enter the tech industry. However, there’s a skill gap between market needs and what students have learnt. In this difficult job environment, with massive layoffs predicted in the near future, both working professionals and college students are looking for ways to upgrade their skill sets and learn the latest technologies. Introduction to Modern Application Development or IMAD, is a free MOOC (Massive Open Online Courses) – offered by Indian Institute of Technology, Madras and Hasura, a core technology start-up – which aims to bridge this skill gap.

IIT Madras is offering an opportunity to all those with basic programming skills to learn App development in eight weeks. The Institute will be starting the free online course IMAD from 24th July 2017.

Through this course, one can learn to develop mobile applications, popularly known as ‘Apps’ which have become an integral part of our everyday lives. More than 83,000 students have registered for the course so far, making it  India’s largest MOOC. They have come up with more than 6,700 apps. Around 430 candidates have landed internships with start-ups. Students who successfully complete the course get a certificate from IIT Madras. The top students from IMAD are also eligible for product development internships at Hasura. These internships give the students an opportunity to hone their app development skills in the real world and provide much needed exposure to industry. The course will be broken into 5 modules that will be covered over 8 weeks:

  1. Introduction to the Internet, and its common network protocols

  2. Build a basic but complete web application

  3. Learn the how and why of modelling data for your application using databases

  4. Learn about performance and how to ensure security for an application

  5. Learn how to build your own mobile application

Registration for the course has begun and can be done by visiting http://www.imad.tech . The website also has resources required to learn or to brush up required programming basics. Besides being free for everyone, anywhere, the course strives for the right balance between theory and practice by focusing on building an application quickly while also ensuring that it never breaks. A 20-minute course video will be available online on YouTube and can be viewed anytime. One can take the course even from the comfort of their home. The course will have graded assignments, and a final test to help one remain focused through the course.  The course will be conducted by Prof. Gaurav Raina, Assistant Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, IIT Madras, and also a visiting research fellow in the Statistical Laboratory at Cambridge University along with Mr. Tanmai Gopal, Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Hasura. He is also an alumnus of IIT Madras from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering. Speaking about the course, Prof. Gaurav Raina, said: “It’s a great time to be working in technology, but one really needs to have relevant skills. If you are a student, a working professional, or someone looking to work in technology, the IMAD course aims to prepare you for the rapidly changing technology sector.” This course will help in developing skills crucial to someone wanting to develop apps and get started on their own. It is aimed at equipping one with the ingredients to get started with an idea. There is also the tangible benefit of internships at some of the top tech start-ups/companies in India. In addition, an examination (optional) will be conducted on completion of the course and on successfully clearing it, one can obtain a certification from IIT Madras.

A few statistics about the course so far

Total number of registered students – 83,190
Number of internships offered – 430

Student Profiles:
● College Students – 64% (more than 53,000 registrations)
● Working Professionals – 15% (more than 15,000 registrations)
● Faculty and Educators – 2% (more than 1800 registrations)

Demographic distribution of students:
● 13-20 years age group – 35%
● 20-40 years age group – 58%
● 40+ years age group – 6%

Geographic distribution of students
India – 98% of all students
Outside India (20 countries) – 1500 registrations –     http://www.imad.tech/      — Click Here to Register : https://onlinecourses.nptel.ac.in/noc17_cs40/preview

Enrolment open: AuthorAID free online course in Grant Proposal Writing & Research Writing starting on 18 April 2017

Online Course in Grant Proposal Writing & Research Writing For early career researchers in developing countries.  
Supporting  Developing Country Researchers in Publishing Their Work…AuthorAID is coordinated by INASP.

Following the success of the third AuthorAID MOOC (massive open online course), we are pleased to announce our upcoming online course in grant proposal writing and research writing. This is an open online course and it is free of cost.

Who the course is for: Early career researchers in developing countries.

Main topics covered in the course: Literature review, publication ethics, making a research plan, writing a grant proposal, targeting the right journals, writing and publishing a research paper.

Course duration: 8 weeks

Course dates: 18th April to 12th June 2017

Course leaders: Andy Nobes and Ravi Murugesan of INASP, along with guest facilitators from the AuthorAID network

Complete information about the course along with enrolment instructions are available in the course announcement document. Please go through this document carefully if you are interested in the course. The deadline to enrol is 18th April 2017.

Please note that although this is an open course, if we see a very high number of people joining, we may have to limit enrolment due to server capacity. We suggest that you enrol in the course as soon as possible if you are interested.

INASP designs and runs capacity development activities that cater for both women and men’s interests and needs. We use methods that increase active participation and an inclusive learning environment, adopting attitudes and behaviors that value differential experiences and perspectives and ensuring listening and respect for each other’s experiences and views.  Read More…Brochure – 5 pages (pdf)     /         http://www.authoraid.info/en/

10,000 plus modules available on ePG Pathshala website as Open Educational Resource

10K plus modules available on e-Pathshala Around 10,000 plus modules have been developed in 57 subjects which are available on the ePG Pathshala website as Open Educational Resource, informed MHRD in a release here on Wednesday.

New Delhi:* Around 10,000 plus modules have been developed in 57 subjects which are available on the ePG Pathshala website as Open Educational Resource, informed MHRD in a release here on Wednesday. It can be used as a supplementary reading material by the PG students. Also under the study webs of Active -Leaming for Young Aspiring Minds (SWAYAM) programme of Ministry of Human Resource Development, UGC has developed 72 MOOCs courses of which 43 are available on the SWAYAM platform https://swayam.gov.in/ . The content developed under this programme is of high quality, curriculum based and interactive which is available in open access through the e-PG Pathshala website i.e. http://epgp.inflibnet.ac.in/   |     Click Here to Download UGC Circular : Published on 21/03/2017 –  UGC Letter reg: e-PG Pathshala and SWAYAM platform