logo
CVN memorial lectures organised

CVN memorial lectures organised

Hans India7 days ago
Vijayawada: The Bezawada Bar Association organised the CVN memorial lectures here on Tuesday to commemorate the death anniversary of the esteemed Senior Advocate, the late CV Nageswara Rao of Polavaram. Bar Association president AK Basha presided over the meeting.
Second Additional District Judge A Satyanand, and 12th Additional District Judge M Sunil were Chief Guests. Principal of Siddhartha Law College Ch Divakar Babu delivered the guest lecture on the crucial topic of 'Fundamental Rights – Role of Advocate and Protection of Advocates.'
During the programme, Padmaja, Senior Advocate and daughter of the late CV Nageswara Rao, shared poignant details of her father's extraordinary life. She highlighted his immense philanthropy, wherein he donated 500 acres of ancestral land in Polavaram village for the benefit of its residents. Despite being a renowned senior advocate, he tragically passed away during the COVID19 pandemic without even owning a house.
Second Additional District Judge A Satyanand and 12th Additional District Judge M Sunil commended Padmaja for continuing her father's remarkable legacy. Several prominent legal figures addressed the gathering, including Chalasani Ajay Kumar, Bathula Malleswara Rao, and Sunkara Rajendra Prasad, all members of the AP Bar Council. They were joined by ASS Ramprasad, civil rights leader and senior advocate, Dittakavi Ramachandra, senior advocate. The CVN Memorial also honoured CV Nageswara Rao's disciples, including Kanakayya, Joint Secretary Varaha Lakshmi, and Women's Secretary K Anuradha.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CVN memorial lectures organised
CVN memorial lectures organised

Hans India

time7 days ago

  • Hans India

CVN memorial lectures organised

Vijayawada: The Bezawada Bar Association organised the CVN memorial lectures here on Tuesday to commemorate the death anniversary of the esteemed Senior Advocate, the late CV Nageswara Rao of Polavaram. Bar Association president AK Basha presided over the meeting. Second Additional District Judge A Satyanand, and 12th Additional District Judge M Sunil were Chief Guests. Principal of Siddhartha Law College Ch Divakar Babu delivered the guest lecture on the crucial topic of 'Fundamental Rights – Role of Advocate and Protection of Advocates.' During the programme, Padmaja, Senior Advocate and daughter of the late CV Nageswara Rao, shared poignant details of her father's extraordinary life. She highlighted his immense philanthropy, wherein he donated 500 acres of ancestral land in Polavaram village for the benefit of its residents. Despite being a renowned senior advocate, he tragically passed away during the COVID19 pandemic without even owning a house. Second Additional District Judge A Satyanand and 12th Additional District Judge M Sunil commended Padmaja for continuing her father's remarkable legacy. Several prominent legal figures addressed the gathering, including Chalasani Ajay Kumar, Bathula Malleswara Rao, and Sunkara Rajendra Prasad, all members of the AP Bar Council. They were joined by ASS Ramprasad, civil rights leader and senior advocate, Dittakavi Ramachandra, senior advocate. The CVN Memorial also honoured CV Nageswara Rao's disciples, including Kanakayya, Joint Secretary Varaha Lakshmi, and Women's Secretary K Anuradha.

Homework 2.0: How personal computers are ending the age of rote learning
Homework 2.0: How personal computers are ending the age of rote learning

Time of India

time18-07-2025

  • Time of India

Homework 2.0: How personal computers are ending the age of rote learning

For decades, homework has been designed as a static exercise—repetition, recall, and regurgitation. While classrooms have seen digital evolution especially post COVID 19, the structure of homework has lagged behind, often reinforcing surface-level understanding rather than deep cognitive engagement. The issue isn't with homework itself—it's with the design logic underpinning it. Static worksheets, textbook exercises, and copy-from-blackboard tasks simply do not align with how students learn today or how knowledge is constructed in a digital-first world. Homework in the era of personal computer The proliferation of personal computers (PCs) in the hands of learners is a pedagogical inflection point. With adequate connectivity and basic infrastructure, the humble PC is transforming from a word processor into a learning accelerator. Homework, when delivered through a computing device, is no longer constrained by linearity. Instead, it becomes a feedback-rich environment where learners interact with content, not just consume it. Key shifts include: Real-time scaffolding: If a student struggles with a concept, the system can break it down, simplify, and provide micro-interventions immediately. Multiple modes of representation: Complex topics can be rendered visually, interactively, or via simulations, accommodating different cognitive styles. Non-linear progression: Students are no longer bound to a fixed problem set. PCs allow for branching logic, where tasks adapt to performance. This is not automation. This is intelligent personalisation. From repetition to cognition: The new homework paradigm Memory-based tasks (e.g. write definitions 5 times) might train recall, but they fail to build transferability or conceptual clarity. PC-mediated homework, by contrast, leverages: Interactive problem-solving environments Layered feedback loops Dynamic content sequencing The outcome? Students don't just learn the 'what.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Villas For Sale in Dubai Might Surprise You Dubai villas | search ads Get Deals Undo They begin to grasp the 'why' and 'how.' A child solving a geometry problem on a PC is not merely arriving at a number—they're being guided through the logic that underpins the shape, the symmetry, the measurement. This transition—from answer-focused to reasoning-focused—is core to 21st-century learning outcomes. Teacher-assistive intelligence The second-order benefit of computer-enabled homework lies in what it offers educators. Unlike traditional homework that vanishes into piles of notebooks, digital homework leaves a data signature—attempts, error patterns, time spent, friction points. For teachers, this is actionable intelligence. It allows for: Micro-remediation in class based on previous night's error trends Differentiated grouping strategies without bias Time reallocation: less time checking homework, more time conducting Socratic discussions The PC becomes a backend engine for instructional decision-making, not just student engagement. Homework accessibility and equity W hen supported with access policies (e.g. shared devices, offline sync modes), PCs offer a chance to level the academic playing field. Students who miss class due to illness or lack of support at home can still interact with core concepts asynchronously. More critically, PCs lower the cost of error. Students can make mistakes privately, iterate multiple times, and receive encouragement—not embarrassment. This changes the emotional texture of homework from punitive to exploratory. Future-proofing homework: What needs to happen For PC-based homework to scale meaningfully, the following must align: Device access at the last mile Teacher training in data interpretation and tech fluency Policy alignment on digital homework as a formal extension of pedagogy Curated content ecosystems that privilege cognition over drill What's emerging is not 'homework on a screen,' but a new learning architecture. A paradigm, not a patch We're not putting Band-Aids on traditional homework. We're re-engineering it. Personal computers have opened the door to context-aware, adaptive, student-specific practice models. The question is no longer 'Should we digitise homework?' but 'How do we optimise it for thinking, not typing?' If used intentionally, the PC is no longer just a device—it's the student's most intelligent study partner. Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!

Maharashtra logs 86 new Covid cases, 4 deaths taking toll to 14
Maharashtra logs 86 new Covid cases, 4 deaths taking toll to 14

Indian Express

time03-06-2025

  • Indian Express

Maharashtra logs 86 new Covid cases, 4 deaths taking toll to 14

Maharashtra logged 86 new cases of Covid 19 on Tuesday taking the entire number of persons with the infection till date to 959. Four more deaths were reported taking the toll to 14 as per state health department data. Of the four deaths, two were from Nagpur while one each was from Miraj and Chandrapur. A majority of the 14 persons who succumbed and tested positive for Covid-19 had comorbid conditions like diabetes, cancer, interstitial lung disease, cerebrovascular disease, chronic renal failure, hypertension and Parkinson's Disease and other diseases. A total of 435 persons have recovered. Meanwhile, Mumbai reported the highest number of cases — 509 . As per the state health department data on Tuesday, 26 new Covid 19 cases were reported from Mumbai, 24 from Pune city while three each from Pune rural areas and Pimpri Chinchwad municipal corporation area. Covid-19 is now endemic and doctors have urged citizens to remain vigilant, and with the right precautions, protect themselves. Dr Nina Borade, Medical Officer of Health, Pune Municipal Corporation, said that routine testing was not usually necessary for mild symptoms like common cold and cough. 'However it is important to take extra precaution around persons at high risk who have comorbid medical conditions and are immunocompromised,' Dr Borade said. She added that mock drills have been carried out and directives issued to reserve 50 beds at Naidu hospital. Private hospitals have been urged to report cases to municipal health authorities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store