Helping students learn at home: Experimental evidence from a technology-based Covid-19 response strategy in Indian government schools

Author(s):  
Andreas de Barros
Lightspeed ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 49-57
Author(s):  
John C. H. Spence

The story of the astronomical observations of James Bradley in the eighteenth century, whose measurements of the small movements of a star throughout the year provided an independent estimate of the speed of the Earth around the Sun relative to the speed of light. His work provided the first experimental evidence in support of Copernicus’s theory that the earth is in motion, and against the idea that it is stationary at the center of the universe. His simple telescope at home, his brilliant idea and perseverance, and his life’s work and influence. The importance of his result for the development of Einstein’s theory of relativity and for theories of the Aether in the following centuries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 39-43
Author(s):  
Gnanaraj Jesudian

Given the COVID-19 global pandemic, there are severe restrictions on travel in India and other countries. The Indian Government has issued an advisory for postponing non-essential or elective surgeries. Surgeons, especially those working in rural areas, have more time at hand to learn new skills.  Unfortunately, due to the lockdown, purchasing new equipment has been difficult.  We describe how Fellowship of Laparoscopic Surgery course skills for Gas Insufflation Less Laparoscopic Surgeries could be practised at home with easily available materials to make use of the time and build surgical skill capacity.


2017 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 584-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
CÉLINE BRACONNIER ◽  
JEAN-YVES DORMAGEN ◽  
VINCENT PONS

A large-scale randomized experiment conducted during the 2012 French presidential and parliamentary elections shows that voter registration requirements have significant effects on turnout, resulting in unequal participation. We assigned 20,500 apartments to one control or six treatment groups that received canvassing visits providing either information about registration or help to register at home. While both types of visits increased registration, home registration visits had a higher impact than information-only visits, indicating that both information costs and administrative barriers impede registration. Home registration did not reduce turnout among those who would have registered anyway. On the contrary, citizens registered due to the visits became more interested in and knowledgeable about the elections as a result of being able to participate in them, and 93% voted at least once in 2012. The results suggest that easing registration requirements could substantially enhance political participation and interest while improving representation of all groups.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nilu Nagdev ◽  
Felix Akpojene Ogbo ◽  
Mansi Dhami ◽  
Thierno Diallo ◽  
David Lim ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundFailure to use antenatal care (ANC) and inadequate receipt of components of ANC pose a significant risk for both the pregnant woman and baby. This study aimed to examine a regional analysis of factors associated with no or inadequate receipt of components of ANC services among Indian women.MethodInformation on 184,628 women of reproductive age 15-49 years from the 2015-16 India National Family Health Survey (NFSH-4) was used. Survey multinomial logistic regression analyses that adjust for cluster and survey weights were conducted to assess the socio-demographic and other factors associated with no or receipt of inadequate receipt of components of ANC in the six regions in India.ResultsAcross regions in India, 18% of women reported no ANC, and the prevalence of inadequate and adequate receipt of components of ANC in all six regions ranged from 16% to 43% and 34% to 81%, respectively. Our analyses revealed that in all six regions, poor households reported increased odds of receiving no or inadequate receipts of components of ANC. In all six regions, inadequate receipts of components of ANC was significantly higher among women who had limited knowledge about pregnancy complications and post-delivery complications. In all the six regions except the East region, women who delivered their babies at home reported higher odds of receiving no or inadequate receipts of components of ANC and women who had no postnatal checkup after delivery reported higher odds of receiving no or inadequate receipts of components of ANC in all regions except South, West and North East regions. Low levels of women's education and women who delivered their babies at home were associated with increased odds of receiving no or inadequate receipts of components of ANC in all six regions except North and East regions.ConclusionA better understanding of the factors associated and incorporating them into the short- and long-term intervention strategies, including free financial support from the Indian government to encourage pregnant women from lower socioeconomic groups to use health services across all regions.


Author(s):  
Sally Elizabeth Anne Varnham

“I suppose it is because nearly all children go to school nowadays, and have things arranged for them, that they seem so forlornly unable to produce their own ideas” Agatha Christie There is evidence that more and more parents in the developed countries worldwide are choosing to educate their children at home. This is despite, or because of, the existence of comprehensive government education systems which assume state responsibility. New Zealand and Australia, in common with countries in the European Community, the United States and Canada have education legislation which aims to ensure that education is free, available and compulsory to all children generally between the ages of 5 and 15. Government schools are publicly funded and this funding inevitably comes with varying degrees of state control. There is also, in New Zealand and Australia, private and church education available for those parents who want a formal education for their children outside the government system. Despite these alternatives, parents are increasingly electing not to entrust the education of their children to any of the formal systems and are choosing instead to assume sole responsibility for this education. How do governments respond to this exercise of parental choice? This paper examines the current legal position of home education in Australia and New Zealand. It considers the reasons so many parents are now choosing to opt their children out of schools and keep them at home; and the extent to which the state allows them this choice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1524-1524
Author(s):  
Brittany K. Ragon ◽  
Ashley Love Sumrall ◽  
Kris Blackley ◽  
Ify Osunkwo ◽  
Tamara Kay Moyo ◽  
...  

1524 Background: Reports suggested cancer patients were at greater risk for increased morbidity and mortality from COVID-19. A process to mitigate these risks was established at Levine Cancer Institute (LCI) in partnership with Atrium Health’s (AH) Hospital at Home (HAH) initiative. This virtual health navigation process employed expertise from the departments of Hematologic Oncology and Blood Disorders, Oncology, and Supportive Oncology, including a specialized nurse navigation team, to rapidly identify COVID-19 positive LCI patients, monitor them under physician supervision, and escalate care as needed with AH HAH program. Methods: AH Information Services created an automated list of LCI COVID-19 positive patients with a daily database. Each patient was reviewed by a nurse navigator. Review included hematologic or oncologic diagnosis, outpatient or inpatient status, and any COVID-19 symptoms. Once a malignant diagnosis was confirmed, a diagnosis-specific navigator contacted and screened the patient with a COVID assessment tool. Documentation was forwarded to the primary oncologist/hematologist. The tool scored patients for surveillance and treatment needs. A score of 0-2 prompted phone assessment every 48-72 hours, and score of 3-5 required every 24-48 hour calls with physician involvement when appropriate. If score of ≥6, care was escalated to LCI nurse/physician for admission to AH acute care HAH or conventional inpatient admission. Results: From inception on 3/20/2020 to data review date of 12/2/2020, 974 LCI patients were identified as COVID-19 positive and reviewed for nurse navigation (Table). Of the 974, 488 were navigated. Given limited resources, patients with benign conditions were not assigned a navigator, though a similar process was created for sickle cell disease. Of the 974, 75 are now deceased. Only 25 are deceased among the 488 navigated. Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic presented unprecedented circumstances to our patients and their clinicians. LCI expeditiously put policies and procedures in place to mitigate the intersection of COVID-19 and cancer. The multidisciplinary response strategy liaising between AH HAH and LCI followed, assessed, and assisted LCI COVID-19 positive patients. With our embedded nurse navigation team’s specialized attention along with enhanced physician oversight and close collaboration with AH HAH, opportunities for care escalation or adjustments in cancer-focused care were promptly identified. Analysis is ongoing to elucidate the lower mortality rate observed among navigated patients.[Table: see text]


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