heralding education to-home through e-learning
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Heralding Education-To-Home (ETH) through e-Learning
Dr. Vijay Bhatkar, Chairman, ETH Limited
From Vedic times, India advented and nurtured a unique „Gurukul‟ system of learning. Literally,
entering Gurukul meant becoming a devoted member of Guru‟s family of learners. In the Indian
tradition, the supreme Guru has been equated with God, being the creator, the sustainer and the
ultimate liberator of the aspiring learner. The Gurukul system still exists in India in many traditional
branches of learning such as music, performing arts, indigenous medicine and traditional arts and
crafts. Slowly, the Gurukul system however gave way to class room based learning at all levels of
learning from pre-school to higher education. One of the earliest universities of the world were created
in India, notably amongst them being Taxashila, Nalanda, Kashi, Ujjain, and Madurai. Learners from far
and wide flocked to these great centres of learning. As long as India nurtured great universities and its
unique Gurukul system, India remained in the forefront of development and prosperity.
Over the years, with successive invasions, India‟s Gurukul as well as institutional system of education
got declined. Britishers brought to India the British education system dismantling India‟s great learning
system. New schools, colleges and universities were created and many of them with English as a
medium of instruction. Literacy at the beginning of the last century was only 6 per cent. Schools and
colleges were far and few. Learners, boys and girls, had to travel several miles and even swim across
rivers to attend the school. In 1893, Swami Vivekananda expressed in anguish, “If our girls and boys
are unable to reach the schools, then the schools must be brought to the doorstep to every home”.
And he made a prophecy that this will happen in the next hundred years and then India will create
wealth and prosperity which She had never seen before in Her entire history.
The time has now come to bring education directly to home. Vikram Sarabhai in the 80‟s launched the
Satellite Institutional Television Experiment (SITE) and brought TV based education to rural farmers of
India. This was a revolutionary experiment at that time. Now, it is my aspiration to see Education-To-
Home (ETH) happen through the advances in ICT. Indeed, the coming of Internet, launch of EduSAT,
decreasing prices of computers and networking, proliferation of CDs and DVDs, recent reductions in
cost of projection systems and increasing awareness of e-learning will make the ultimate goal of ETH
possible.
e-Learning is critical to this goal and to fulfill the prophetic prophecy of Swami Vivekananda. e-
Learning is particularly relevant to India as the nation faces the challenge of making 400 million people
functionally literate on one hand and to provide higher education to millions of aspiring learners on the
other. India has excelled in ICT and now the challenge is to use this very technology for enhancing its
education system and to bring education to home by dissolving the barriers of geographies, economic
levels and languages. Intention for learning should be the only barrier for learning in the 21st century.
The general assumption that e-learning is synonymous with all education and training using ICT,
including distance, is fallacious if e-learning is defined only as a tool for learning and not teaching. If
learning has to make a difference in existing education system, then it must be integrable in the
traditional education system in our schools, colleges and universities. Here, ICT must enhance
learning, teaching as well as management of education institutions. The role of e-learning can be
supplementary, complementary as well as alternative to the existing education system.
Like John Chambers of CISCO, many people view e-learning as the next killer application of Internet.
Peter Drucker said, “Online continuing education is creating a new and distinct educational realm.
There is a global market that is potentially worth hundreds of billion of dollars”. However, the initial
hype about e-learning has now waned and the second wave of e-learning is about enhancing the
conventional education system in a significant manner as well as about creating an entirely new
educational paradigm for aspiring learners from not only schools and colleges but also from homes
and workplaces.
This CSI Communications theme issue is devoted to e-Learning. e-Learning has been tauted as the
biggest revolution since Internet. E-Learning has two aspects: one as a new paradigm of education and
other is hype. The hype is over and now we need to get to serious business. There is a plethora of
literature both on web and in print medium on e-learning.
In this theme issue of CSI Communications which has been brought out in an express manner, I have
selected a few feature articles. They reflect neither the scope nor the depth of this growing body of
knowledge. Our idea is to present select aspects of e-learning from authors who are attempting to
impact this field in terms of technology as well as practice.
The paper by Shashank Hiwarkar explains what e-learning is and how it could be integrated with
traditional education. Here, the author has recommended an inclusive model combing CD-based
learning, class room-based learning, and web-based learning. An e-learning architecture is presented
combining these three modes of learning. The paper presents case studies for implementing digital
school, digital college and digital university based on real-life implementations.
There are several ways to build knowledge infrastructure for education and enterprise. Prof. K. R.
Srivathsan of IIITM-K has advanced the concept of education grid in Kerala. In his paper appearing
here, he has revisited five laws of information science that were originally enunciated by Ranganathan
to delineate on architecture for building knowledge infrastructure for educational institutions and
enterprises. He has illustrated the architecture advanced by him on the Kerala education grid which he
is actually building for the State of Kerala.
Prof. M. S. Swaminathan has advanced the idea of building Virtual Universities for Agrarian Prosperity
to bring the benefits of Knowledge-based agriculture to the farmers of India. A first such university will
be launched in Maharashtra, called Virtual University for Maharashtra‟s Agrarian Prosperity (VUMAP).
Professor Ram Takwale, who has been at the forefront of the open university movement in India, is
presenting here a model of VUMAP. The concept of VUMAP represents an attempt to bring the benefits
of e-learning directly to million of farmers of India.
Until recently, e-learning has been largely used in leading enterprises and educational institutions.
How can e-learning be used to bridge the digital divide? Bridging digital divide through e-learning is
the subject of the paper authored by Vivek Sawant et al of Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Ltd.
(MKCL). MKCL has done a sort of miracle by making one million people computer literate in a span of
just few years without any financial help from the Government. Now, MKCL is setting-up distributed
class rooms, creating high quality content, installing delivery mechanisms and bringing the benefits of
e-learning to the masses of India. The person behind this movement is Vivek R. Sawant, the Managing
Director of MKCL.
By far the biggest challenge in e-learning is not development or implementation of e-learning
technology and infrastructure but to create high quality multimedia content. The biggest initiative in
this direction in India has been the launch for the National Programme on Technology Enhanced
Learning (NPTEL). The broad aim of NPTEL is to facilitate the competitiveness of Indian industry in the
global markets through improving the quality and reach of engineering education. NPTEL will develop
curriculum based video courses and web based e-learning courses through IITs and IISc and a large
number of partner institutions. We have summarized here the goals and objectives of NPTEL for the
benefit of our readers.
At different points of history, leaders at that time called for fundamental transformations in education
and training to face the emerging realities. Now, at the beginning of the 21st century, we are asking the
question how education and training will get transformed through advanced technologies like e-
learning. What is the 2020 vision of e-learning? Our Chief Editor Dr. T. V. Gopal has summarized these
visions from the Report of the US Department of Commerce titled, “Vision 2020: Transforming
Education and Training Through Advanced Technologies”. These visions from leaders in the field of
education and e-learning will help us in shaping our own goals of bringing education to all aspiring
learners of India by 2020. My own aspiration is to see the mission of Education-To-Home (ETH)
accomplished by 2020.
Dr. Vijay P. Bhatkar is presently the Chairman of ETH Research Lab, Pune. He is best known as an
architect of Param series of supercomputers through C-DAC which he founded in 1988. Dr. Bhatkar
has been the Member of Scientific Advisory Committee to Cabinet and also IT Task Force constituted
by PM in 1998. He is credited with creation of several national institutions and innovation based start-
ups. His vision is to make Education-To-Home (ETH) a reality, transcending the barriers of
geographies, languages and economic levels.