Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Assignment

NCF 2005
The National Curriculum Framework (NCF 2005) is one of four National Curriculum Frameworks published in 1975, 1988, 2000 and 2005 by the National Council of Educational Research and Training NCERT in India. The document provides the framework for making syllabii, textbooks and teaching practices within the school education programmes in India.
The NCF 2005 document draws its policy basis from earlier government reports on education as Learning Without Burden and National Policy of Education 1986-1992 and focus group discussion. The approach and recommendations of NCF-2005 are for the entire educational system. A number of its recommendations, for example, focus on rural schools. The syllabus and textbooks based on it are being used by all the CBSE schools, but NCF-based material is also being used in many State schools.
NCF 2005 has been translated into 22 languages and has influenced the syllabii in 17 States. The NCERT gave a grant of Rs.10 lakh to each State to promote NCF in the language of the State and to compare its current syllabus with the syllabus proposed, so that a plan for future reforms could be made. Several States have taken up this challenge. This exercise is being carried out with the involvement of State Councils for Educational Research and Training [SCERT] and District Institutes of Education and Training [DIET].
The document is divided into 5 areas:
Perspective
It provides the historical backdrop and the rationale for undertaking the revision of the National Curriculum Framework. It discusses curricular reform efforts since Independence drawing from Gandhiji’s vision of education as a means of raising the nation’s conscience towards injustice, violence and inequality entrenched in the social order. It refers to the recommendations of the National Commission on Secondary Education, 1952-53 (Mudaliar Commission) and the Education commission, 1964-66 (Kothari Commission) and traces and development of Curriculum Framework, 1975 as also the formulation of the National Curriculum Framework, 1988, following the adoption of the National Policy on Education in 1986. It refers to the report entitled Learning without Burden (1993), which highlighted the problems of curriculum overload which made learning a source of stress for children during their formative years. It refers to the National Curriculum Framework for School Education introduced in 2000.
Learning and Knowledge
The Chapter focuses on the primacy of the learner. Child centred pedagogy means giving primacy to children’s experiences, their voices and their active participation. It discusses the nature of knowledge and the need for adults to change their perceptions of the child as a passive receiver of knowledge; rather the child can be an active participant in the construction of knowledge by encouraging children to ask questions, relate what they are learning in school to things happening outside, encouraging them to answer form their own experiences and in their own words rather than by memorizing. It recognizes the need for developing an enabling and non-threatening environment, since an environment of fear, discipline and stress is detrimental to learning. Healthy physical growth is the pre-condition for development and this requires that they benefit from nutrition, physical exercise and freedom from physical discomfort. Development of self identity through the adolescent years, particularly in the case of girls who are constrained by social conventions, is an important component. This chapter emphasizes that gender, caste, class, religion and minority status or disability should not constrain participation in the experiences provided in school. It pints out that the diagnostic criteria of ‘earning disabilities’ is not well established. It is, therefore, entirely possible that learning disabilities may arise from inadequate and insufficient instruction.
Curriculum Areas, School Stages and Assessment
It recommends significant changes in Language, Maths, Natural Science and Social Sciences with a view to reducing stress and making education more relevant to the present day and future needs of children. In Language, it makes a renewed attempt to implement the three-language formula with emphasis on mother tongue as the medium of instruction. India is a multi-lingual country and curriculum should promote multilingual proficiency in every child, including proficiency in English, which will become possible only if learning builds on a sound language pedagogy of the mother tongue. It focuses on language as an integral part of every subject, since reading, writing, listening and speech contribute to a child’s progress in all curricular areas and therefore constitute the basic of learning.
School and Classroom Environment
The Chapter talks about the need for nurturing an enabling environment by bringing about suitable changes in the school and classroom environment. It revisits traditional notions of discipline and discusses the need for providing space for parents and community. It also discusses curriculum sites and learning resources, including texts and books, libraries, education technology, tools and laboratories, etc. This chapter addresses the need for plurality of material, as also the need for teacher autonomy and professional independence.
Systemic Reforms

It covers issues of quality and the need for academic planning for monitoring of quality. It reaffirms faith in Panchayati Raj and suggests the strengthening of Panchayati Raj Institutions through systematic activity mapping of functions appropriate at relevant levels of panchayats, while simultaneously ensuring appropriate financial autonomy on the basis of the funds-must-follow-functions principle. This chapter also looks at issues of academic planning and leadership at school level to improve quality.

Monday, 8 February 2016

VIDEO SCRIPT

HOME THEY BROUGHT HER WARRIOR DEAD –
                                                          Alfred Lord Tennyson
VIDEO SCRIPT

SYPNOPSIS :True vile of death and the matter of continuity of life.
OBJECTIVES:
Ø to enable students to group the theme of the poem.
Ø to show the life situations of human being.
Ø   to develop an awareness about the power of relationship.


SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES:to familiarize students to group the life of warriors their  patriotism and their family.
Medium: video and audio [ENGLISH]
TIME: 4 mints.

VIDEO  / TIME 
Ø Shot 1 (30 sec)                             
The house of the warrior and        
the crowing sound of crows
[CS].            

Ø Shot 2 [30 sec]
Wife of the warrior and others are standing. Their faces show deepgrief [m5].

Ø Shot 3 [30 sec]
Setting the room to say the body of the dead warrior.

Ø Shot 4 [60 sec]
A close up of the warriors heart broken wife without any expressions in her face she neither speakers nor moves . The furious sea and its shot]

Ø Shot 5 [60 sec]
The progressions in emotions of women when the music lays her own body in her lap.
[cu followed by MS]






AUDIO

Ø Silence followed by sound of amelodious solo violin.


Ø  Music






Ø Song
[oruyaathramozhiyode..]




Ø Music








Ø  Voice [noise of people in the house.

Music in background.