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Webinars, admissions, university rankings and other educational news

Webinars, admissions, university rankings and other educational news
thehindu.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thehindu.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Policies in place for country s educational growth

Two colleges apply to AICTE to offer engg programmes in Tamil

How e-learning can be a game-changer in India

Updated: May 08, 2021 14:46 IST If more engaging offline material can be created in various regional languages and English for both school and college levels, ed-tech can truly be a powerful leveller Share Article AAA Ed-tech needs to reach underprivileged students and those who study in regional languages to fulfil its potential as a leveller.   | Photo Credit: Ritu Raj Konwar If more engaging offline material can be created in various regional languages and English for both school and college levels, ed-tech can truly be a powerful leveller Technology has the potential to span categories and classes and become a powerful leveller in education. But the 30-odd digital start-ups present in the Indian market are designed to help students prepare for competitive examinations such as the JEE, NEET, and the Civil Service. Online tuitions and coaching or Maths and Science lessons especially for high school students are also popular and most of the content is in English.

How An IIT Kharagpur Computer Scientist Is Unveiling Sanskrit Literature Through Artificial Intelligence

How An IIT Kharagpur Computer Scientist Is Unveiling Sanskrit Literature Through Artificial Intelligence by Karan Kamble - May 7, 2021 09:31 AM Dr Pawan Goyal is an associate professor at IIT Kharagpur. Snapshot Researchers led by IIT Kharagpur s Dr Pawan Goyal have developed an artificial intelligence-based system to process Sanskrit texts. The goal is to provide access to ancient literature. Sanskrit may be the least spoken of the scheduled languages in India, but it has been mighty resilient — even perhaps making a small comeback — in recent years. According to 2011 Census data, close to 25,000 people had Sanskrit as their mother tongue, and while that may not seem like much in a population of over 130 crore, it marks a growth of more than 10,000 speakers over a decade.

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