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Dated April 6, 2000
Business Standard, Pune
Tata Consultancy Services
has embarked on an experimental social project that
promises to reduce the widespread illiteracy in the
country by using information technology and 'reverse'
form of education to educate the rural poor.
Instead of teaching
the rural illiterate the alphabets first, the new concept
uses the reverse approach - teaching them to read the
most widely-used vocabulary first.
Brainchild of F.C.
Kohli, Deputy Chairman of Tata Consultancy Services,
the pilot education project is being implemented in
Andhra Pradesh and holds good promise for a country
which is facing a widening gap between the literate
and the illiterate.
"Five villages are
being initially covered in Andhra Pradesh where 100
volunteers are involved in teaching rural people to
identify 300 to 500 words," Kohli said explaining TCS's
approach to educating the rural poor in the shortest
possible time.
Using the latest technology,
the TCS team has been able to identify 300 to 500 words
in Telugu that are important for an illiterate person
to get into reading. With this brief vocabulary study,
Kohli points out, a person will be able to read three-fourth
of a newspaper without much difficulty.
This reverse process
of education hopes that once the illiterate segment
of the population gets to know to read the most important
and the most used vocabulary, the need to study the
alphabet will follow naturally. Although the new idea
of educating the rural poor was conceptualized a year
ago, the actual implementation started in Andhra Pradesh
only five weeks back.
"There are 90 per cent
chances that our experiment will succeed and 10 per
cent chances that it might not succeed," Kohli said.
The TCS team in Andhra
Pradesh is working on newer tools to enable it to reach
more people like the setting up of servers and wireless
loops to connect to distant villages.
"In the last seven
years, India's illiteracy has been reduced by 10 per
cent and, at the current pace, we will need 35 years
to reach 95 per cent literacy (from the current 60 per
cent)," he said underlining the need to hasten the process
of literacy programs in India where over 40 per cent
of the population are still illiterate.
Kohli said the new
concept of education can be extended to several other
languages and that Centre for Development of Advanced
Computing (C-DAC),
which is working on translating software to translate
one language into another, could help this informal
education purpose too.
If the current experiment
of education in Andhra Pradesh is successful, Kohli
said India can rid-off 90 per cent of illiteracy in
5 years.
By Avertino Miranda
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