How do Guwahati and Shillong high schools compare with those of Bangalore
or Delhi?

Umesh
http://youtube.com/watch?v=WS_QENuOYL8
competition among high schools for their countries' future

DVD trailer 
http://www.2mminutes.com/

Harvard meet on world's best schools ignore India? 
http://www.gse.harvard.edu/news_events/features/2008/02/6_bridge.html

http://www.edweek.org/login.html?source=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.edweek.org%2Fsearch.html%3Fqs%3Dteam%2Bobama&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.edweek.org%2Few%2Farticles%2F2008%2F01%2F09%2F17video.h27.html%3Fqs%3Dteam%2Bobama&levelId=2100&baddebt=false




HGSE News <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 16:25:30 -0500 (EST)
From: HGSE News <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: HGSE News: March 2008

HGSE News - February 2008                                          
              If you cannot          read this e-mail, please visit 
http://www.gse.harvard.edu/news_events/enews/2008/03.html
        Graduate School of Education News        March 2008 
       Features               HGSE Alum to Head Philadelphia Schools
 Arlene Ackerman was recently  named the new CEO of the Philadelphia            
  School District marking her return to urban public school leadership.
       HGSE Alum Recognized for Outstanding Dissertation
         The dissertation of Ernesto Trevino, Ed.M.’01, Ed.D.’07,  which 
examined the educational                opportunities for indigenous children 
of Mexico, recently earned              the prestigious Gail P. Kelly Award.    
  
       Star Discusses Making Algebra Work in Recent Webcast 
       Assistant Professor Jon                    Star was the featured speaker 
of the Center for Comprehensive                    School Reform and 
Improvement’s webcast, Making Algebra                    Work: Instructional 
Strategies That Deepen Student Understanding on                    February 19.
       HGSE Grad to Lead Mass. Department of Education
       Mitchell Chester, Ed.D '91, comes to Massachusetts as the new 
commissioner        of education with more than 20 years experience working in 
education policy.   
       Collins Honored by American Library Association
         Gutman librarian John Collins was named  the 2008                  
Distinguished Education and Behavioral Sciences Librarian Award                 
 recipient by the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of 
the American Library Association, which                  represents 13,000 
academic and research librarians and interested                  individuals.
       Mind, Brain and Education Named Best New Journal 
       In a ceremony in Washington, D.C., Mind, Brain, and Education,           
       a journal founded and edited by HGSE Professor Kurt                  
Fischer, was named the best new journal in social sciences                  and 
humanities by the Professional and Scholarly Publishing (PSP)                  
division of the Association of American Publishers.
       Family Valued
 A look at the benefit, and possible downside, to family engagement in schools. 
(From Ed. magazine)
       BRIDGE Event Focuses on Tactics of the World's Best Performing Schools
       Over the past 20 years, many school systems around the globe             
     have undergone some form of education reform and yet the trillions         
         of dollars being spent in school systems, ongoing debates over         
         the value of teacher pay incentives, and standardized test movements   
               have yielded little effect in many countries. 
       Luttrell Advocates for Children's Rights at Annual Visible Rights 
Conference 
       Associate Professor Wendy          Luttrell recently spoke in Cambridge 
at the        second Visible Rights Conference: Photography by and For Children 
where youth violence, homelessness, environmental protection, and media        
literacy were among the discussed topics. 
       To view a more complete list of feature stories, please visit the HGSE   
       News home page.
       Events         Askwith Education Forums       March 13: Shaping the 
Field of Educational Research: Insights from the National (Back)Stage
       This forum, held in conjunction with the HGSE Student Research 
Conference, aims to illuminate the principles guiding institutional decisions 
about educational research.
       March 18: Darius Goes West: The Roll of His Life 
       Join us for a screening of Darius Goes West.  In this 
multi-award-winning documentary, 15-year-old Darius Weems,  and 11 of his best 
friends, set off across America with the  ultimate goal of having Weems' 
wheelchair customized by MTV's Pimp My Ride. A Q&A will follow the screening 
with Logan Smalley, HGSE student and film director; Darius Weems; and crew 
members Jason Hees and Sam Johnson.
       April 2: The Media: Driving Education Policy?
       Perhaps more than any other professional field, the education agenda—or  
at least the public’s perception of it—is greatly influenced by the  media and 
columnists. This discussion with leading print columnists  will explore the 
public’s view of American education, and how this  perspective is shaped by the 
news media.
       April 9: Adolescent Literacy: Translating Research into Effective Policy 
and Practice
       At this forum, discussion will center on the problem of struggling  
adolescent readers, which in recent years has been identified as a  "crisis" in 
the U.S. education system, drawing increasing interest from  researchers and 
policymakers.
       Other HGSE Events       March 27: HGSE Reception at the American 
Educational Research Association Annual Meeting
       If you are planning to attend the AERA annual meeting in New York,  
please be sure to join us for the Harvard Graduate School of Education  
reception.       Please check the HGSE          Events Calendar frequently for  
information on more upcoming          campus events.        
HGSE In The Media       The following is a list of recent media appearances by 
HGSE faculty members.          Please note: websites are increasingly requiring 
registration and, in          some cases, charging fees for viewing content. 
Current availability is          noted. 
       Ed Week Chat: Mica Pollock on Race in Schools
 Mica Pollock discusses how educators can address race-related issues in 
classrooms. (Education Week, 02/27/08, Free registration required)
       At Some Point, Private Hillary and Public Hillary Will Have  to Meet
       "It is also imperative that Clinton describe what Harvard psychologist  
Robert Kegan calls 'the moments where meaning is made' and the events that  
shaped her commitments." (Seattle  Times, 02/26/08)
       Team Obama
         Ed Week looks at   the background of some of Senator Obama's education 
advisers including   HGSE Professor Fernando Reimers. (Education Week, 
02/25/08) 
       
         Teacher Absenteeism Affects Student Achievement
       "Does teacher absenteeism have a direct impact on student  achievement? 
You bet, say Harvard researchers Raegen Miller, [Professor] Richard  Murnane, 
and [Professor] John Willett, who are examining the effect of teacher  absences 
on fourth-grade test scores in a large, urban school district." (School Library 
Journal, 02/20/08) 
       Tenure, Part II: Revitalizing Burnt-Out Profs
       "If routine breeds stagnation, will well-established  universities be 
able to change? Professor Richard Light of Harvard’s Graduate  School of 
Education thinks so. He has a grant from the Spencer Foundation to  demonstrate 
that colleges can themselves become learning institutions. Not only  do schools 
impart education to students, but they also have the potential to  embed 
creative ideas within themselves. Light is working to develop best  practices 
that schools can share to keep innovation in teaching moving  forward." (The 
Chronicle of Higher Education, 02/20/08) 
       Shades of  Brilliance
       "A graduate  student attending the Harvard Graduate School of Education, 
[Susan] Foster has  been teaching the Step into Art program alongside Rischin 
for a year. 'I think  one of the best parts of the program is the students are 
really excited to see  the art in person,' Foster said. 'They already come 
equipped with the knowledge  of that piece of art so I think they are more 
excited to see it because they  know something about it.'" (The Daily News 
Tribune, 02/20/08) 
       When Modern Life Just Doesn't Add Up
       "'It improves retention and outcome dramatically,' says  [Senior 
Research Associate John] Comings. 'Just putting a map into their heads  of 
where they are going appears to be very important for maintaining their  
motivation to learn and also their achievement.'" (The Guardian, 02/19/08) 
       Good Parenting Ups Kids' Mental Skills
             "At a critical time in early childhood when the brain is  
developing, stress inhibits the formation of connections between brain cells  
and restricts blood flow to the brain. 'It literally disrupts brain  
architecture,' says [Professor] Jack Shonkoff, MD, a child development expert  
at Harvard University." (Web MD, 02/15/08) 
       Study Examines Whether Complex Financial Aid Forms are  Barriers to 
Post-Secondary Education
       "The College Enrollment Study is a joint venture that  involves 
University   of Toronto associate  professor Philip Oreopoulos of economics, 
researchers from Case Western Reserve,  and principal investigator [Professor] 
Bridget Long from Harvard." (University   of Toronto, 02/11/08) 
       The End of Literacy? Don't Stop Reading
       "'I don't worry for a nanosecond that reading and writing  will 
disappear. Even in the new digital media, it's essential to be able to  read 
and write fluently and, if you want to capture people's attention, to  write 
well. Of course, what it means to 'write well' changes: Virginia  Woolf didn't 
write the same way that Jane Austen did, and Arianna  Huffington's blog won't 
be confused with Walter Lippmann's columns. But the  imaginative spheres and 
real-world needs that all those written words address  remain,' writes 
Professor Howard Gardner." (The Washington  Post, 02/15/08) 
       A World of Potential
       "David Zarowin, executive director of WIDE World, an online  
professional development program housed at the Harvard Graduate School of  
Education, is working with officials in the Jing An school district in Shanghai 
- the  one with the stringless harp - on online courses for teachers." (Boston  
Globe Sunday Magazine, 02/03/08) 
       Chilean Early Childhood Program Makes a Difference 
       "Late in January, a delegation from Chile visited Harvard to discuss 'Un 
 Buen Comienzo' ('A Good Start'), an early childhood education program  
undertaken in 2006 by the Harvard Graduate School of Education,  Harvard 
Medical School, and the David Rockefeller Center for  Latin American Studies, 
with the Chilean Ministries of  Education and Health and other local 
institutions that impart preschool  education." (The Harvard Gazette, 02/01/08) 
       Where Have all the IT Girls Gone?
         "Howard Gardner, professor of cognition and education at Harvard 
University, ascribes this difference  only in part to gender. 'In early years, 
there's evidence that boys are  somewhat more oriented toward physical objects, 
while girls are more oriented  toward other persons and social interchange. But 
these are only averages, and  the within-gender differences far outweigh the 
across-gender differences.'" (Management Today, 02/01/08) 
       Building a Knowledge Base for Educational Leadership
       "'Something important is clearly afoot in the training of educational   
leaders. For more than a decade, academics and policymakers have been at   work 
developing and implementing standards for the preparation of   education 
leaders through the Interstate School Leaders Licensure   Consortium,   under 
the aegis of the Council of Chief State School Officers. Now,   these standards 
have worked their way into the certification systems in   most states,' writes 
Professor Richard Elmore." (Education Week, 01/29/08, Free registration 
required) 
       My Turn: 2008 Partners -- You, I and the Media
       "I've read two interesting books that relate to the issue of  our access 
to a monumental amount of information. Dr. Howard Gardner (Harvard  educator 
and psychologist) describes what I think we all need to do when  deciding who 
to vote for. In his new book, Five Minds for the Future, he writes  a 
synthesizing mind is critical for today and the future, saying, 'A synthesizing 
 mind is able to knit together information from disparate sources into a  
coherent whole.' Being able to do this could result in our feeling confident we 
 have chosen the right candidate." (Burlington  Free Press, 01/29/08) 
       Web 2.0: Helping Reinvent Education
       "Chris Dede, Timothy E. Wirth professor in Learning  Technologies at 
Harvard's Graduate School of Education, opened his talk  Thursday morning at 
FETC 2008 with an unexpected statement. 'What you're going  to hear this 
morning,' he said, 'is a talk I've never given before.'" (The Journal , 01/08)  
 
       Harvard Family Research Project        After School Programs in the 21st 
Century
       The latest Issues and Opportunities in Out-of-School Time Evaluation 
research brief from the Harvard Family Research Project draws on seminal 
research and evaluation studies to address two primary questions: (a) Does 
participation in afterschool programs make a difference, and, if so (b) what 
conditions appear to be necessary to achieve positive results? The 12-page 
brief concludes with a set of questions to spur conversation about the evolving 
role of after school in efforts to expand time and opportunities for children 
and youth in the 21st century. 
       Harvard Education Publishing Group           Harvard Education Press 
       Harvard  Education Press is pleased to announce the March release of 
Resourceful Leadership: Tradeoffs and Tough Decisions on  the Road to School 
Improvement, by Elizabeth   City, which examines  decisions about the use of 
three key resources - time, money, and staff - and how  tradeoffs among them 
are integrated into school leaders' improvement strategies. City is a senior 
faculty member at Boston's  School Leadership Institute, where she teaches 
courses in using data, learning  and teaching, and staffing and professional 
development and coeditor of Data  Wise: A Step-by-Step Guide to Using 
Assessment Results to Improve Teaching and  Learning (Harvard Education Press, 
2005).
         
         Harvard  Education Press will be sponsoring a special session at this 
year's American  Educational Research Association conference in New York City. 
The session, "Teaching  with Cases: An Introduction to the Use of Cases in the 
Development of  Educational Leaders," will be presented by Richard Elmore and 
Susan Moore  Johnson of HGSE; it will  take place Wednesday, March 26, 2008, 
from 10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m. in Concourse G, Lower Level, Hilton New York 
Hotel. This special session will provide an opportunity for instructors, 
professional  developers, and researchers to discuss the use of case studies in 
the  education, training, and professional development of educational leaders 
at all  levels. The session introduces the new Harvard Education Press title, 
Managing  School Districts for High Performance: Cases in Public Education 
Leadership.
         
         Harvard Educational Review
         Harvard Educational Review will be sponsoring two events at the 
American  Educational Research Association Annual Meeting in connection with 
the spring 2008 special issue  dedicated to adolescent literacy. On Tuesday, 
March 25, from 4:05 p.m. to 6:05 p.m. in Concourse G, Lower Level, Hilton New 
York Hotel, there will be a panel discussion "Improving Adolescents' Literacy 
Skills: What Do We Know and What Do We Have to Learn?" featuring Mark Conley, 
Michigan State  University; Elizabeth Birr Moje, University of Michigan; 
Timothy Shanahan, University of Illinois at Chicago;  Alfred Tatum, University 
of Illinois at Chicago; and discussant Catherine  Snow from HGSE. Following the 
panel there will be a reception in celebration of  the Special Issue from 
6:15-7:45 p.m. in the Lincoln  Suite, 4th Floor,  Hilton New York Hotel. 
         
       The Harvard Educational Review is pleased to announce the release of 
Indigenous Knowledge and Education: Sites  of Struggle, Strength, and 
Survivance, edited by Malia Villegas,  Sabina Rak Neugebauer, and Kerry 
Venegas. This new volume from the Harvard Educational Review Reprint  Series, 
examines a wide range of Indigenous cultures and educational settings,  
including Native American, Haitian, Mexican, African, and Australian. 
       
         Harvard Education Letter
       The  March/April 2008 issue of the Harvard  Education Letter includes 
the following articles: Educating Teenage  Immigrants: High schools experiment 
with ways to group new  English-language learners by Lucy Hood; A Conversation 
with Catherine Snow on Hot Topics and  Key Words: Pilot project brings teachers 
together to tackle middle school  literacy; a point of view commentary by 
Richard Weissbourd, The "Quiet"  Troubles of Low-Income Children; and Waking Up 
to Sleep  Deprivation by  Sue Costello and Richard Weissbourd.
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Umesh Sharma

Washington D.C. 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

http://www.uknow.gse.harvard.edu/index.html (Edu info)

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/ (Management Info)




www.gse.harvard.edu/iep  (where the above 2 are used )
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http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
       
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