AR soccer

IMPHAL, Feb 2: In today’s matches at Play Together for Manipur Football Tournament at Lilong,… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 2: In today’s matches at Play Together for Manipur Football Tournament at Lilong, host 28 Assam Rifles defeated Lembakhul Youth Club 3-2, Youth Welfare Club, Langthabal beat Joint Youth Devolopment Association and Th Birchandra Singh Football Academy blanked Mohammad Football Assn, Chingkham 5 – 0.  The evening game between Haorebi Islamic Development Association and Muslim Youth Club, Urup ended in a one-all draw.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/ar-soccer/

AR soccer

IMPHAL, Feb 2: In today’s matches at Play Together for Manipur Football Tournament at Lilong,… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 2: In today’s matches at Play Together for Manipur Football Tournament at Lilong, host 28 Assam Rifles defeated Lembakhul Youth Club 3-2, Youth Welfare Club, Langthabal beat Joint Youth Devolopment Association and Th Birchandra Singh Football Academy blanked Mohammad Football Assn, Chingkham 5 – 0.  The evening game between Haorebi Islamic Development Association and Muslim Youth Club, Urup ended in a one-all draw.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/ar-soccer/

Manipur lose

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur suffered a one-goal loss to Meghalaya in the AIFF U-14 boys… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur suffered a one-goal loss to Meghalaya in the AIFF U-14 boys football tournament at Kalyani, West Bengal. Tomorrow, Manipur plays two matches, against Assam in the morning and Bengal in the afternoon.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/manipur-lose/

Manipur lose

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur suffered a one-goal loss to Meghalaya in the AIFF U-14 boys… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur suffered a one-goal loss to Meghalaya in the AIFF U-14 boys football tournament at Kalyani, West Bengal. Tomorrow, Manipur plays two matches, against Assam in the morning and Bengal in the afternoon.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/manipur-lose/

Manipur wins BCCI tourney

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur emerged winners of the BCCI U-22 associate and affiliated members cricket… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 2: Manipur emerged winners of the BCCI U-22 associate and affiliated members cricket tournament defeating Meghalaya by six wickets in the final today. After winning the toss, Meghalaya chose to set a target and seemed to have made the right call after amassing 233 runs. However, Manipur made short work of the chase crossing home in the 48th over losing just four wickets. Robinson top-scored with a hurricane 79 off 83 balls while Santosh (35 off 42 balls) and unvanquished batsmen Mahesh (42 off 71) and Ng Rajesh (45 off 67)  made wholesome contributions. Amongst the state’s bowler Jenious and Williams were the most successful with three victims each. 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/manipur-wins-bcci-tourney/

Weapons of War or Peace

The screaming banner headlines about how French defence manufacturer Dassault won a massive 20 billion… more »

The screaming banner headlines about how French defence manufacturer Dassault won a massive 20 billion dollar fighter plane purchase deal with the Indian government and how the company’s rivals, the nearest one being EADS (European Aeronautic Defence and Space company) but including four others in the fray earlier namely, American firms Lockheed Martin (F-16) and Boeing (F/A-18), Russian United Aircraft Corporation (MiG-35) and Swedish SAAB (Gripen) also tell a story other than an exciting business battle that involved not just individual corporations but also national governments. All these countries belong to the developed world and are supposedly champions of international peace and human rights. They have plenty of money to sink into the peace and conflict studies, as well as to fund the human rights movement around the globe. Indeed their money is the fuel behind a majority of NGOs around the world working in these areas of growing global concern. From this bare outline the irony is already apparent.

The UN Human Development Report, 2002, dedicated to a study on deepening of democracy quite accurately pointed out that two democratic countries have never gone to war since WW-II and is unlikely ever to go to war again for apart from everything else, democracy is about settling national disputes by civilised debates, business competitions, and not the least, sports. The report probably had the so called mature democracies in these rich countries in mind. Indeed, it is unthinkable today that any two Western European countries or North America would go to war with each other. But the fact also is, they do not hesitate taking wars and weapons of war to other countries. If the international peace campaigns were to mean a complete ban on weapons manufacturing, probably these democratic countries would be the first to back out and begin a process of redefining democracy through cleverly sponsored NGOs and academic think tanks, to suit their ends. They remain the biggest merchants of weapons of war and therefore the vendors of death as well. Though they would talk peace, they would not like wars to end and put a seal on their highly profitable businesses. They would however not want these wars to be on their soils. Can there be a bigger hypocrisy than this?

Probably the argument then would be these weapons are not meant for war but for preventing wars. We have all heard this argument before haven’t we? Modernising the military, making nuclear weapons, developing terrible chemical and biological weapons, are all meant to be deterrents of future wars, provided of course these activities remain the monopoly of the developed countries. If other states even nurture vague ambitions to emulate these manufacturing capabilities, they would be termed as rogue states, and possibly bombed out of sanity. Iraq and Afghanistan learnt this the hard way. Iran and North Korea are also dangerously coming into the firing line of this outlook.

It must come as extremely disheartening to genuine peace workers that disarmament still remains highly unrealistic because of what Noam Chomsky called the “military industrial complex”. Both the military as well as the arms industries around the world need each other in what can actually be called an unholy alliance. If there is any alliance that is beyond severance at this moment it must be this one, considering the numerous vested interests intertwined and cemented so securely by prospects of making billons and trillions of dollars.

Beyond the “military industrial complex” and therefore the perpetuation of weapons circulation around the world, there are other implications. The one most noteworthy is the outcome, though perhaps not part of a design, of an unseen equation between this complex and the NGO movements campaigning for peace and disarmament. On this canvas, disarmament has come to virtually mean neutralising the war capabilities of non-state actors only. Recognized states can buy the deadliest and costliest weapons legally from the world market, but nobody else can. If the latter want to arm themselves the weapons have to be bought from the black market, and it is no surprise that beyond the legal arms market, an illegal one has also become a reality. In this sense even the “military industrial complex” is an endorsement of the Weberian notion of legitimate violence as a monopoly of the state. The vicious cycle of conflict, it seems is not just about to end in the backdrop of this sinister “military industrial complex”.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/weapons-of-war-or-peace/

Weapons of War or Peace

The screaming banner headlines about how French defence manufacturer Dassault won a massive 20 billion… more »

The screaming banner headlines about how French defence manufacturer Dassault won a massive 20 billion dollar fighter plane purchase deal with the Indian government and how the company’s rivals, the nearest one being EADS (European Aeronautic Defence and Space company) but including four others in the fray earlier namely, American firms Lockheed Martin (F-16) and Boeing (F/A-18), Russian United Aircraft Corporation (MiG-35) and Swedish SAAB (Gripen) also tell a story other than an exciting business battle that involved not just individual corporations but also national governments. All these countries belong to the developed world and are supposedly champions of international peace and human rights. They have plenty of money to sink into the peace and conflict studies, as well as to fund the human rights movement around the globe. Indeed their money is the fuel behind a majority of NGOs around the world working in these areas of growing global concern. From this bare outline the irony is already apparent.

The UN Human Development Report, 2002, dedicated to a study on deepening of democracy quite accurately pointed out that two democratic countries have never gone to war since WW-II and is unlikely ever to go to war again for apart from everything else, democracy is about settling national disputes by civilised debates, business competitions, and not the least, sports. The report probably had the so called mature democracies in these rich countries in mind. Indeed, it is unthinkable today that any two Western European countries or North America would go to war with each other. But the fact also is, they do not hesitate taking wars and weapons of war to other countries. If the international peace campaigns were to mean a complete ban on weapons manufacturing, probably these democratic countries would be the first to back out and begin a process of redefining democracy through cleverly sponsored NGOs and academic think tanks, to suit their ends. They remain the biggest merchants of weapons of war and therefore the vendors of death as well. Though they would talk peace, they would not like wars to end and put a seal on their highly profitable businesses. They would however not want these wars to be on their soils. Can there be a bigger hypocrisy than this?

Probably the argument then would be these weapons are not meant for war but for preventing wars. We have all heard this argument before haven’t we? Modernising the military, making nuclear weapons, developing terrible chemical and biological weapons, are all meant to be deterrents of future wars, provided of course these activities remain the monopoly of the developed countries. If other states even nurture vague ambitions to emulate these manufacturing capabilities, they would be termed as rogue states, and possibly bombed out of sanity. Iraq and Afghanistan learnt this the hard way. Iran and North Korea are also dangerously coming into the firing line of this outlook.

It must come as extremely disheartening to genuine peace workers that disarmament still remains highly unrealistic because of what Noam Chomsky called the “military industrial complex”. Both the military as well as the arms industries around the world need each other in what can actually be called an unholy alliance. If there is any alliance that is beyond severance at this moment it must be this one, considering the numerous vested interests intertwined and cemented so securely by prospects of making billons and trillions of dollars.

Beyond the “military industrial complex” and therefore the perpetuation of weapons circulation around the world, there are other implications. The one most noteworthy is the outcome, though perhaps not part of a design, of an unseen equation between this complex and the NGO movements campaigning for peace and disarmament. On this canvas, disarmament has come to virtually mean neutralising the war capabilities of non-state actors only. Recognized states can buy the deadliest and costliest weapons legally from the world market, but nobody else can. If the latter want to arm themselves the weapons have to be bought from the black market, and it is no surprise that beyond the legal arms market, an illegal one has also become a reality. In this sense even the “military industrial complex” is an endorsement of the Weberian notion of legitimate violence as a monopoly of the state. The vicious cycle of conflict, it seems is not just about to end in the backdrop of this sinister “military industrial complex”.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/weapons-of-war-or-peace/

Vote counting

IMPHAL, Feb 1: ADC Jiribam has notified that the process for counting of votes of… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: ADC Jiribam has notified that the process for counting of votes of Jiribam constituency on March 6 has begun. Counting will be conducted in three tables-polling stations 40/1 to 40/12 in table 1, poling stations 40/13 to 40/25 in table 2 and 40/26 to 40/36 in table 3. 

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/vote-counting/

UG nabbed

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Imphal East commandos arrested a PLA cadre, Chongtham Ingochouba Meitei alias Ngamba,… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Imphal East commandos arrested a PLA cadre, Chongtham Ingochouba Meitei alias Ngamba, 25, son of Ch Surendra Kumar of Thambalkhong from Wangkhei Thambalkhong near junior high school and recovered one 9mm pistol with three live rounds from his possession. On verification, he disclosed that he joined the organization in 2008 through Bocha of Thambalkhong Ayang Palli Road and was involved in extortion and transportation of arms and ammunitions.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/ug-nabbed/

Khangabok MSF

IMPHAL, Feb 1: MSF has announced the office bearers its Khangabok Sangaiyumpham branch which will… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: MSF has announced the office bearers its Khangabok Sangaiyumpham branch which will function as a unit under the Thoubal district committee. Md Farooque of Thoubal College and M Doren Singh of New Public Higher Secondary School have been appointed as the president and general secretary. Other functionaries are Md Zia-ur Rahman, Ibemcha Devi and Moirangthem Binoy as finance secy, women’s affairs secy and information and publicity secy respectively.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/khangabok-msf/

Drug peddlers held

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Personnel of 31 AR recovered 70 grams of brown sugar stacked in… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Personnel of 31 AR recovered 70 grams of brown sugar stacked in seven packets from two women at Khudengthabi of Chandel district today. The drug peddlers, identified as Zanata Haokip, 36, wife of Mani Meitei of Moreh Ward No. 9 and Eajalekha, 40, wife of late Majuuddin of Sangaipham in Thoubal district, have been handed over to the Customs and Preventive Department, Moreh.  

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/drug-peddlers-held/

AR soccer meet

IMPHAL, Feb 1: 28 AR played out a 1-1 draw with Haorebi Islamic Development Association… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: 28 AR played out a 1-1 draw with Haorebi Islamic Development Association in the inaugural match of the Play Together for Manipur football tournament at Lilong COB football ground. In the second match of the day, Youth Welfare Club, Langthabal lost to Md Football Academy, Chingkham by a solitary goal.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/ar-soccer-meet/

End Prohibition

Prohibition has not worked in Manipur. It has not in all other places it was… more »

Prohibition has not worked in Manipur. It has not in all other places it was sought to be imposed. Everybody knows this, yet the farce continues. A few weeks ago, an article on the online edition of the Time said something similar with regards to abortion. It said not only has abortion been most rampant in countries that banned it, but also the practice was most unhygienic in these places. The first contention is disputable. In places these bans do not exist, people don’t notice them happening unlike in places where the bans do exist. The bans themselves arouse extra interests making researchers to do closer studies of the phenomenon in these places and less so in societies where there are no such bans. Otherwise, common sense should inform even the average men and women that the prevalence of these practices should somewhat remain the same, be there a ban on them or not. But the veracity of the second contention should be beyond any doubt.

This is for a variety of reasons. Take the case of prohibition in Manipur, which has been in place for the last three decades. Those born less than thirty years ago probably would think there never was anything legal about alcohol consumption in the state and that those who do consume it necessarily have to do so in stealth and against their conscience. They would not be wrong altogether. People continue to drink but they drink in stealth and indignity now. The only difference between the times there was no ban and now is, there are no longer any official outlets to buy liquor. Whatever is sold is in the black market. This has meant among others, two things. One, their prices have been inflated hugely, and two, there is never any certainty of brand availability so that people drink whatever is available, and this nobody will dispute has great potential of being a health wrecker.

These considerations apart, for a practice which has not been successfully abolished, the state would be losing considerably revenue each year. To make it worse, this revenue is not just lost, but turned into black money. If there are people who benefited from the long spell of prohibition, it definitely would be black marketers. Our appeal then is, those behind the longish prohibition in the state should begin rethinking on a strategy of lifting the ban but making sure its ill effect are minimised. As for instance, while sale and consumption of liquor is made legal again, drunkenness in public places could remain as infringement on the law. Today just the opposite seems to be happening. It is also interesting to note that two neighbouring states of Nagaland and Mizoram too have been officially dry for just about the same period as Manipur. In these two states it is the Church which called for the ban unlike in Manipur where it was underground organisations which made the first move, followed by the government. People familiar with these two places also know, as in Manipur, drinking has not come down. In Mizoram the enforcement is a little stricter, and alcoholic beverages are still not served openly in restaurants and bars. In Nagaland, although officially banned, the enforcement is much more relaxed and liquor is served in many restaurants openly.

It is now time to lift this ban in Manipur. Whatever lessons that needed to be driven home have been done so. The mission the prohibition was meant to achieve, that of controlling rampant alcoholism to the extent possible, has been accomplished long ago. Its continuance can now only do harm to the state and its people. As for instance, with the state preparing to open the doors to tourism, prohibition can become a big impediment. Tourists generally visit new places where they can relax, and in the universal picture of relaxation, chilled beer is an inalienable part. Those in the hospitality industry, especially the new swanky hotels which have sprung up in Imphal, where tourists, especially foreign tourists flock to, we are sure will vouch on this. Again, prohibition gives a place the image and atmosphere of puritanical orthodoxy in the sense the Taliban is fanatically so. Surely, nobody would want Manipur to suffer such an image in the outside world. We are not talking about licentiousness or permissiveness, but of a liberal approach to life, in which social norms are determined not by diktats but by individual sense of responsibility which intuitively puts a limit on the extent individual freedom can be pushed and thus draw the line between what is proper behaviour and what is not. This ability of free judgment on these matters is what should define civilised behaviour and not ones enforced through bans and diktats.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/end-prohibition/

Manipur defeats Pondicherry by 5-0

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Manipur defeated Pondicherry by 5-0 goals in today`s match of AIFF U-14… more »

IMPHAL, Feb 1: Manipur defeated Pondicherry by 5-0 goals in today`s match of AIFF U-14 Boys` Festival of Football held at Kalyani, West Bengal.

Akbar, Prikanta, Netrajit, AK Loyangamba and Guneshor were the scorers of Manipur team.

Meanwhile, Manipur also defeated Goa by 1-0 in the evening session of the tournament. Kenedy scored the lone winning goal for the state.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/manipur-defeats-pondicherry-by-50/

Vocational Education `“ A Very Odd Name!

By: G.S.Oinam CEO of London based skills and an expert team member of NVEQF India… more »

By: G.S.Oinam
CEO of London based skills and an expert team member of NVEQF India – invite me one day and  said, students doesn’t turn out for vocational courses even ensured them job placement / linkage after training. Perhaps, his opinion may be an experience of big cities or type of industrial training courses may not attract to the students. Vocational education is a very odd name; change the name into “Professional Training Courses “ to attract students in a fashionable way; this is my finding and suggestion after studying South Korean experience and comparison with Indian experience. Job seekers are also looking future prospects and careers. ITI /ITC and 17 Ministries are providing short term vocational and technical training courses along with stipend for workers in some courses. The Modular Employable Skills (MES) scheme is being offered under the Skill Development Initiative Scheme (SDIS). The Ministry of Labour and Employment undertook the development of a new strategic framework, namely the MES, for skill development for early school leavers and existing workers, especially in the unorganised sector in close consultation with industry, micro enterprises in the unorganised sector, State Governments, experts and academia. Government target for vocational education is mostly level 1 & 2 courses. For such type of courses, trainers must go to the work place where group of workers are working to provide them skills development programme. For example, Fevicol Company does less advertisement Fevicol product in the newspapers. Company executives will go to the field to organise programme to promote their products where groups of carpenters and plumbers are working. Because, majority of the carpenters, plumbers do not read newspapers. But, they do advertise a product “Fevi quick” to the newspapers and TV because most of the users of the product are readers of newspapers. 2nd example, Frankfinn is a well-known vocational institution for hospitality and air hostess. They are providing diploma course for cabin crew, airport ground staffs, hotel management with job assurance and placement facilities. Change of name into professional course has attracts the students in hospitality and nursing profession. However, job market of civil aviation industry in India is declined—many of the airlines run loss business. Many Nursing institutions in Manipur are also providing level 3 & 4 diploma courses. Most of Manipuri nursing practitioners at outside states have come back to Manipur after getting experience – they don’t like to settle outside state (mostly girls) unless government job or better perks and facilities are provided. However, fresher nurses are still going to outside states for job. Now, state will face additional burden of hospital job unemployment in Manipur unless more hospital and clinics are open.

Skills development is only namesake and beginning in the state—state policy makers must prepare better policy frame work base on scope and labour market available for job creation. For example, if state has potential for job creation in agriculture, horticulture, fishery, commerce etc—skills development programme and vocational courses shall be given due important on the above subjects matter to enhance skills of the existing local work forces and to meet the requirement of new skills workers on the specific field. National vocational qualifications frame work is general frame work and it is base on all Indian contexts. Qualifications frame work and specific subject has to be identified by State Councils for Vocational Training concern subject to local resource available and have been established to assist the NCVT both knowledge, practices and attitude.  For example, ‘Kaona Phak’ mat making training can be successful for self help groups and large scale production as well. Singapore had developed a “comprehensive vocational training infrastructure,” forging strong linkages between education institutions and training agencies. The National Skills Recognition System is Singapore’s national framework for establishing work performance standards, identifying job competencies and certifying skills acquisition. It is implemented by the Standards, Productivity and Innovation Board. To assess the workers, assessment centres were set up. Workers can be certified at centralised assessment centres, workplace or a combination of both. In Hong Kong too, the provision of public sector training has been strategic. Vocational and technical schools received serious attention in Japan even during the 19th century (Yamamoto, 1994).  The “Taiwan Miracle” owes to its system of VET. In UK, the national framework covers general secondary and tertiary education, VET, work-based learning and prior learning. Accreditation of Prior Experiential Learning (APEL) describes the process of giving formal recognition to learning that derives from personal experiences often gained in employment or voluntary work situations. NVQs are also part of ‘Modern Apprenticeships’ which are funded through work-based learning. In several countries of the region many academic secondary schools that concentrated for a long period on preparing students for university entry, tried to become multi-purpose institutions to serve a broad spectrum of students and needs, including specific types of occupational training.  In addition, various types and models of specialised secondary training institutions have been created in several countries to meet different middle level manpower needs.

However, in Manipur, members of skills experts committee are all bureaucrats. Manipur has wasted crores of public money spending outside states on vocational training courses like spa, skin care, hair style, nail cutting training etc. without considering importance, priority and benefits. Our babus knows only how much to spend but they don’t care how much to achieved. Establishment of more vocational training centre / institutions in Manipur is the best option. However, courses should be restructured based on labor demand. Ensuring the vocational stream is not dead-end – by allow vocational students to proceed to higher education and linking up vocational schools with specific industries to ensure that curriculum and outputs match industry needs. Determinants of Quality in Skill Training are faculty, curriculum, infrastructure, evaluation of student learning, government and administration, and industrial / farm partnership.

People are expecting more from the newly formed Manipur Skills Development Society, Government of Manipur. The role of Manipur Skills Development Society must be focus on 1) Identification of skill development needs 2) Development of a sector skill development plan and maintain skill inventory; 3) Determining skills/competency standards and qualifications.4) Participation in affiliation, accreditation, examination and certification.6) Plan and execute training of trainers and 7) Promotion of academies of excellence.

Industrial skills training are usually conducted by the respective industrial unit; however, recent recession in India attracts the experience person or skills people by recruiters consequently, farms want to hire employees already trained so that the cost and time of employees training can be saved. However, your professional training pass certificate is not the only criteria for your job. You will be require further training after recruitment at least 2-3 months accordingly company management style – reputed company has own management styles. For example, if you are recruited for hospitality job in a 5 star hotel, you have to under go training for 3 months simply to say “welcome to our restaurant.” After transferring your job from one 5 star hotel to another 5 star hotels, another training programme will be conducted simply to say with smile “welcome to our restaurant” to follows company own style.

Taiwan and South Korea are the most experience and successful countries of vocational education in the world. For students who do not wish a college education, vocational schools specializing in fields such as technology, agriculture or finance are available, in which the students are employed right after graduation. Around 30% of high school students are in vocational high schools. To make vocational high schools more attractive, in April 2007 the Korean government changed the name of vocational high schools into professional high schools. Korean vocational high schools offer programmes in five fields: agriculture, technology/engineering, commerce/business, maritime/fishery, and home economics. What are home economics? It is similar to Home Science in India. In Ireland it is called home economics—scientific and social. This subject is known as Family and Consumer Sciences in USA. Students are trained in stitching, knitting, textile, designing, cooking, money management, family relationship, nutrition and child care and also given social lessions. Unfortunately, Manipur University does not open Home Science Department.

The NVEQF India is a framework on international lines to link various qualifications and set common principles and guidelines for nationally recognized qualification system to monitor, manage creating the curriculum for Vocational Education in India. Currently the Vocational Training under NVEQF is provided in some courses like, Automobile, IT, ITES and Telecom Industry. In general the NVEQ (National Vocational Education Qualification) are work based courses/awards designed to enhance the skills of people at work. These courses are based on the competency level of participants and hence, the participants should prove their talents at work. Eleven countries presently have NVQFs including Australia, Austria, Denmark, Ireland, Malaysia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Switzerland, India and UK. This makes a person to choose the appropriate level of diploma/degree/certificate courses, thereby enhancing their knowledge.

The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) has recently hosted a conference focusing on the development of models for delivering skills training to people in the North Eastern region of India, comprising eight states. The conference, held in Guwahati in the state of Assam, particularly focused on the relationship between skills and migration and the need to generate demand for skilled workers in the region. Manipal-City & Guilds’ Rajat Khawas was among the speakers. The Prime Minister of India, Manmohan Singh, has emphasised the need for India to close the gap between skills supply and demand, characterising the country’s steps towards skills development to date as “rather tentative”. Speaking at a meeting of the National Council on Skill Development, the Prime Minister called for all Ministers to scale up their skill development programmes substantially and propose ambitious skilling initiatives in the 12th five year plan. A new study by talent management firm DDI has found that India’s business leaders out-perform their Chinese counterparts in the critical skills required for successful leadership. In particular, they appear to be better at spotting emerging talent and in making leadership selection decisions. The survey spans 2,600 companies in 74 countries.

The Indian PM had declared on June 2010 for setting up of 1,600 new industrial training institutes and polytechnics, 10,000 new vocational schools and 50,000 new skill development centres to ensure 10 million students get vocational training. Currently, 17 ministries / departments deliver vocational educational training programs to 2.8 million people. There are 9,583 schools offering 150 vocational courses of two-year duration in broad areas of primary, secondary and tertiary sectors of the economy. In addition, the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) imparts vocational education in 80 courses in various areas- agriculture, business and commerce, humanities, engineering and technology, home science and health and para medical skills, taking the total enrolment in vocational education courses of all these schools to roughly 6,00,000. The framework will have a competency-based modular approach with provision for credit accumulation and transfer. Students would have the scope for vertical and horizontal mobility with multiple entry and exits. This effort will bridge the gap and give employment to a large number of students with a handsome salary, HRD minister said. Providing skilled people to labour-intensive sectors like automobile, construction and manufacturing will reduce unemployment in India. CBSC schools have included vocational courses under NVEF since 2011. While 220 million students are in schools, less than 15 million are expected to pursue higher education, and better vocational education will improve the chances of employment for the dropouts.

South Korean Experience:

The Korean vocational education and training (VET) system is heralded as one of the key factors contributing to the country’s past economic growth. VET has played an important role in developing a skilled labor force during Korea’s economic development. The vocational education and training (VET) system in Korea has been evaluated to supply skilled human capital needed for rapid economic development at the right time at the right place. However, the status of the VET track is weakening in Korea as higher education becomes more important and general education becomes more attractive for students and their parents complying with continuous economic development. The declining status of VET is not only of importance to Korea but also to most developed countries.

Statistics demonstrate the success of South Korea’s national education programs. In 1945 the adult literacy rate was estimated at 22 percent; by 1970 adult literacy was 87.6 percent and, by the late 1980s, sources estimated it at around 93 percent. Although only primary school (grades one through six) was compulsory, percentages of age-groups of children and young people enrolled in primary, secondary, and tertiary level schools were equivalent to those found in industrialized countries, including Japan. Approximately 4.8 million students in the eligible age-group were attending primary school in 1985. The percentage of students going on to optional middle school the same year was more than 99 percent. Approximately 34 percent, one of the world’s highest rates of secondary-school graduates attended institutions of higher education in 1987, a rate similar to Japan’s (about 30 percent) and exceeding Britain’s (20 percent).

Social emphasis on education was not without its problems, as it tended to accentuate class differences. In the late 1980s, a college degree was considered necessary for entering the middle class; there were no alternative pathways of social advancement, with the possible exception of a military career, outside higher education. People without a college education, including skilled workers with vocational school backgrounds, often were treated as second-class citizens by their white-collar, college-educated managers, despite the importance of their skills for economic development. Intense competition for places at the most prestigious universities—the sole gateway into elite circles—promoted, like the old Confucian system, a sterile emphasis on rote memorization in order to pass secondary school and college entrance examinations. Particularly after a dramatic expansion of college enrollments in the early 1980s, South Korea faced the problem of what to do about a large number of young people kept in school for a long time, usually at great sacrifice to themselves and their families, and then faced with limited job opportunities because their skills were not marketable.

Most observers agree that South Korea’s spectacular progress in modernization and economic growth since the Korean War is largely attributable to the willingness of individuals to invest a large amount of resources in education, the improvement of “human capital.” The traditional esteem for the educated man, now extend to scientists, technicians, and others working with specialized knowledge. Highly educated technocrats and economic planners could claim much of the credit for their country’s economic successes since the 1960s. Scientific professions were generally regarded as the most prestigious by South Koreans in the 1980s.

Vocational education system around the world:

The South Korean system of vocational education is designed from high school to associate degree (junior collage) to graduation, then master / doctoral in university. Students have the option to continue general class or vocational class after passing junior high school by entrance test or join in general degree course after passing associate degree in vocational or junior collage (senior secondary level in India)

The Japanese system may have the simplest design. Students completing basic education go to general secondary education, and from there they either enter firms that provide entry-level training or go on to tertiary education.
• The North American system has no “streaming” until after secondary education and it relies on post-secondary education to facilitate transition to work. Students completing secondary education go to community colleges and polytechnic institutes (which provide vocational technical instruction) for short courses, and to universities, which provide both general and professional training.

• The French system streams students into vocational courses at the secondary level. Students in vocational courses are prepared for entry to the labor market, and those in the humanistic scientific streams are prepared for higher education.

• The German system is based on a long tradition of apprenticeships. For a (diminishing) majority of secondary school students, instruction consists of school-based general instruction and firm-based occupation-specific training (the “dual” system). The system, regulated by guilds, has a set of qualifications that provides broad equivalency between graduates of the academic and the dual subsystems.

• The Latin American training system is a hybrid of the French and German models. For students completing basic education: (a) it relies on autonomous vocational training institutes for those proceeding to the labor market, (b) on general (humanistic-scientific) education at secondary level for those proceeding to tertiary education, and (c) on school-based vocational education for others.

• The Australian system allows transitions between the vocational and tertiary education systems. Employers play a key role in the management of the vocational system.

• The Indian system could be said to resemble most closely the Latin American model.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/02/vocational-education-a-very-odd-name/

IM refutes

IMPHAL, Jan 31: The NSCN-IM has condemned the reports published in a local daily claiming… more »

IMPHAL, Jan 31: The NSCN-IM has condemned the reports published in a local daily claiming its involvement in aiding NPF candidates at the Assembly elections.

Contesting the report, a press statement issued by its information and publicity department termed the contents as wild allegations and a weak attempt to drag the organisation into the present election scenario in Manipur by painting a rogue picture.

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2012/01/im-refutes/