Date:13/07/2008 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/07/13/stories/2008071355211200.htm 

Front Page 

NIIT e-learning kit wins UNESCO accolade 

Anand Parthasarathy 

'Smart Science Station' e-nables class 7-12 learning 

- Photo: Anand Parthasarathy; inset: NIIT 
 
The NIIT Computer-aided Smart Science Station with the electricity kit; a 
student uses the sound kit to listen to her own heartbeat. 

Bangalore: A handy learning kit, made in India, harnessing a personal computer 
to enhance the experience of school science experiments, has won accolades
at a recent UNESCO convention on Innovative, Information Technology-driven 
teaching.

The 'Smart Science Computer-Aided eXperience (CAX)' kit, developed by NIIT, was 
the only Indian entry to win a certificate of commendation in the "Education
Planner and Administrator" category at the convention held in Bangkok between 
June 24 and 26. It competed with 146 entries from 19 countries.

The kit consists of a data capture unit and three hardware modules to perform 
experiments in electricity, heat and sound, according to the syllabus in Indian
schools for classes 7 to 12. When plugged into any PC and used with the 
software provided on a CD, the kit becomes a self-paced and self-learning 
station
where children are guided to 'touch and feel' over 80 science experiments, 
which in most schools are now taught just as theory.

"The emphasis is not just on measurement, but on observation," says L. 
Balasubramanian, Chennai-based head of the NIIT's School Learning Solutions 
initiative.
"The kit fosters curiosity-based learning." 

While the audio-visual package has been created in English, so much of it is 
intuitive that it has been used with great success in tribal areas in Madhya
Pradesh with minimal mentoring, he says. 

Among the 50 schools nationwide, already deploying the CAX kit, are 
Vidyaniketan, Bangalore; Bhaktivedanta School, Mumbai; Scindia School, Gwalior; 
Indrapuram
School, Ghaziabad; NSN Matriculation HS School, Chennai, and SHAR Central 
School, Sriharikota.

While the kit itself is said to cost around Rs, 30,000 - about three units 
would be needed for a school - NIIT has been offering it as part of its e-Guru
package of computer-assisted learning in which e-nabling many subjects is made 
possible by many participating schools, charging students a small monthly
or annual fee.
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