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Tuesday, May 31, 2016

[MTC Global] A graduation speech for undertain times

We have been discussing about the desirable changes in the curriculum and pedagogy in the education system. I wonder if the following commencement speech will add something to our thought process that would lead to real happiness for all stake holders.

Regards

Virendra Goel

 


Nature does not hurry, and yet everything is accomplished. --Lao Tzu



#MakeVirtueViral: A Graduation Speech for Uncertain Times

--by Nipun Mehta

, May 31, 2016

 

In his address to the 2016 class at DRBU(a small private school dedicated to liberal education in the broad Buddhist tradition -- a tradition characterized by knowledge in the arts and sciences, self-cultivation, and the pursuit of wisdom), Service Space founder Nipun Mehta makes a case for the power of stilling the mind, deepening awareness and practicing what he calls the 3 S's: small, service, and surrender. Framed in the context of a rapidly changing world that privileges money, fame and power, his talk is riddled with inspiring counter examples. Drawing on insights from revolutionary Do-Nothing farmer Masanobu Fukuoka, Sufi parables, stories from the White House, a bowing monk and more, Mehta's words serve as a clarion call back to humanity's universal values. Below is the transcript.

 

Thank you, all. Thank you, President Susan Rounds, Bhikshuni Heng Chih and distinguished faculty and board of DRBU. And Ven. Hsuan Hua, who had the incredible foresight to create such an incubator of wisdom. Many years ago, I remember being moved to tears when I first read the journals of two Buddhist monks who undertook a bowing pilgrimage -- three-steps, one-bow for 800 miles. With a mission to bring peace in their hearts and the world, they were destined for a place called City of Ten Thousand Buddhas. Reading the descriptions of this city, it sounded like an almost mythical realm. To be standing here today, and that too in the presence of those very same bowing monks -- Rev. Heng Sure and Marty Verhoeven -- is just a tremendous honor for me. Well, technically, Rev. Heng Sure isn't here but I'm sure he's live-streaming from Australia, so we can count that. :)  And what a joy and privilege it is to be able to congratulate you, the DRBU class of 2016, on your commencement day. I know we try to practice detachment, but I think it's safe to make an exception today and celebrate all of your hard work. Congratulations! You made it to the finish line. :)

Over these past years, all of you have been immersed in the study of virtue, in its many forms, across many different traditions. From Plato to Confucius, Nagarjuna to Darwin, Kant to Lao Tsu, your academic studies have spanned the Great Books from the West and timeless classics from the East.

Today, on your commencement day, I want to say the world needs you, students of virtue, more than ever. Your formal education may have ended, but the lifelong work of applying these insights is just about to start. Today's society has no shortage of information for the head, but what we lack sorely is application of our hands and cultivation of our hearts. What the world needs today is a resurgence of virtue. In the glitz and glam of our endless desires, we have forgotten the hands-head-heart embodiment of these values.

To put it another way -- the world needs your help to make virtue go viral.

If you look up news of the most promising innovations of the day, it won't be long before you run into the latest buzzword: artificial intelligence. In 15 years, our fastest computer will perform more operations per second than all the neurons in all the brains of all the people who are alive in the world. Imagine that! Already, we have driverless cars on the road, machines churning out award-nominated novels, and robots managing entire hotels. Elon Musk, has ominously described AI’s development as “summoning the demon” -- and he’s one of the pioneers of the field! Esteemed scientist Stephen Hawking warns us that it could “spell the end of the human race”. The problem, of course, isn't inherently technology. It is that we have reduced the vast scope of human ingenuity to what sells in the marketplace. We have taken the multidimensional gift of human connection and reduced it to a bunch of self-maximizing transactions.

It’s not that we have forgotten about our true values, but rather that we are fumbling in the wrong places to find them.

There is a famous Sufi story of Mulla Nasruddin, who lost his keys one night. As he’s searching for them on the side of the road, a few neighbors join in to help. After a fruitless search, one of them asks, “Mulla, where exactly did you drop the keys?” “Oh, inside my house.” The shocked neighbor responds, “Then why in the world are we searching for them under this lamp post?” Not missing a beat, Mulla replies -- “Oh, because there’s more light here.”

That, in a nutshell, is our problem too. Today’s society wants us to inherit the value system of the marketplace. Fall in line, and we’ll be rewarded with fancy titles on business cards, alphabets after our name, and dollars in our bank account. The shiny carrots of money, fame and prestige may grab our attention but we’re not going to find our keys under those glittering lights. Because that is not where we lost them. The keys to deep-rooted and sustainable happiness -- have, and always will lie, within ourselves.

In our mad rush for artificial intelligence, we are forgetting about plain, human intelligence -- let alone wisdom. We've forgotten that we are creatures capable of generosity, compassion, forgiveness and a vast array of other virtues.

Outer engineering won't get us there. It will have to be inner transformation.

Sure, innovations like AI may augment our labor, and even our creative activity, but no robot will ever be responsible for the resurgence of virtue. Making virtue go viral is an unassailable human responsibility. It will always be an inside job.

By taking on these challenges, make no mistake, you will be swimming against society’s current. But you’ll also be in flow with the deepest laws of nature.

Now I know commencement speakers are typically supposed to inspire you to make a splash in the world, be somebody, do something big and important. But this isn't a typical university, and you’re not a typical class. So I’m trusting I won’t get in trouble for this next piece of advice.

Learn the art of doing nothing.

Doing nothing gets a bad rap in our world today. We equate it with laziness and inactivity. Think lounging on your couch with a bag of chips watching TV. That’s not what we are talking about here, because that’s just physical inertia. The question we need to start asking is -- what is our mind doing in each moment? If it’s endlessly running on the hamster wheel of unconscious habits and thought patterns, then doing something can be just as, if not more, useless as lazing on your couch. In fact, this itch to act can often be detrimental to our individual and collective well-being. Martin Luther King Jr. himself warned us about this when he said, “Be careful not to mistake activity for progress.” We know the truth of this from experience -- think about how we fill the void in conversation with empty chatter, or how we fill a blank space in our schedule with refreshing our Facebook feeds (150 times per day, researchers say!). I remember a friend once asking me, "Nipun, information overload is killing me. Can you suggest a meditation app?" My immediate thought was, "Yes, it's called the off button." It’s hard to resist doing something. :)

If doing something is like the lines in a drawing, doing nothing is white space on the page. If doing something is like singing a remarkable song, doing nothing is the silence in between the notes. If doing something is people holding hands in a circle, then doing nothing is the empty space that is held in the center.

If we do something without understanding what it means to do nothing, then what we create is chaos, not harmony.

Perhaps no one knew this better than a small-scale Japanese farmer named Masanobu Fukuoka.

Around the time of WW2, he was sitting under a tree one day when, in a flash, he had a realization that everything produced by the mind is inherently false. Inspired, he went around trying to share this insight with others -- and failed miserably. No one understood. Instead of giving up, this young man did something that at first glance seemed bizarre, but turned out to be brilliant. He turned his hand to farming. In doing so, he was choosing to manifest his insights in a way that everyday people could relate to.

So Fukuoka took over his father's barren farm, and started experimenting with a technique he called "Do Nothing farming". By this, he meant that he would strive to minimize his physical footprint on the farm. "Let nature grow the plants," he said. And his job was to get out of the way, as much as possible. In his farming context, Fukuoka specified precisely what ‘do nothing’ meant -- no weeding, no tilling, no fertilizers, and no pesticides. This didn’t mean he just sat around all day. Far from it. He often joked that ‘doing nothing’ was really hard work.

Getting out of the way, figuring out the minimal intervention, is an extremely difficult task. One has to first become aware of all the relationships in the ecosystem, and then use that information alongside insight and intuition, to tune into the perfect acupuncture points that can trigger massive ripple effects.

Ultimately, the proof is in the pudding. For a farmer, this means yields must be high, and the produce better be good. And for Fukuoka it surely was. People flew across the world just to taste his apples. And no surprise, since his were no ordinary, mono-cropped apples. In fact, Fukuoka's farm didn't look like a farm at all; it looked more like a jungle, unorganized and wild. In “doing nothing”, Fukuoka was simply holding space for all the complex parts of the ecosystem to connect organically and find a natural equilibrium. In every bite of a Fukuoka apple, what you were tasting wasn’t just the richness of that one apple, or even that one apple tree, but the immense contributions of the entire ecosystem, that were all invisibly connected below the surface.

I personally didn't know about Fukuoka's example until much later in my journey, but I found immediate parallels with the way in which Service Space tended to the “social field”. In place of plants and trees, we had people. In the place of the soil, we had our minds. In place of fruits, what grew were acts of service.

While we have applied the do-nothing principles in the work of Service Space, there is no reason why we can't design our relationships, our technologies, our institutions, and our communities -- and perhaps even our own enlightenment -- in this way. These principles are timeless and universal, and create virtuous cycles wherever they are found. In working this way, we've learned that an ecosystem is always greater than the sum of its parts.

When I graduated from college, I didn't know I could opt-out of all the typical do-something questions. I didn't know that when someone asks, "What do you do?", it's okay to be undefined. I still don't know what to write on that customs form where they have a fill-in-the-blank for profession. But what I do know is that to the question of "How much are you worth?" it's okay to include non-financial forms of capital -- like gratitude -- in your answer. To the question of what is your ten year plan, it's okay to say I don't know. As the Zen master Shunryu Suzuki once remarked, it is only when you don't know that you are open to infinite possibilities.  And remember, the value of your human life will always be more than the sum of your resume.

Today, as you navigate the nuances of your own journey, I want to leave you with three S's of do-nothing design that have served as guides in my life.

SMALL is the first S. Focusing on small invites us to let go of outcomes and fully inhabit the present. When we orient ourselves towards small acts and small effects, we learn to ride the ripple effect.

Few years ago, I remember my aunt telling me a story of an accident she was in, on highway 101. The car spun around 180 degrees, slammed against the center divider, her windshield was broken, and her 1 year old daughter in a car seat was screaming. As she tried to gather herself, a gentleman in another car stopped and came by her window: "M'aam are you okay?" "I've just called 911, but it would be great if you could if you help find my glasses, so I can see more clearly." Her glasses had flown and he did help her find them. In between, he got a phone call -- "Honey, I can't talk right now," he said and continued helping. Then he got another phone call, "Honey, I'll call you back." By this time, the cops were on the way, and things had settled a bit. When he got a third phone call, and he said, "Honey, I'll be there soon", my aunt said, "Looks like you really need to be somewhere. Why don't you go ahead? We’ll be okay now." And that man replies, "Well, it's my daughter's sixth birthday, and they're waiting for me to cut the cake. But you know, m'aam, if that was my daughter in the back, I'd hope that someone would stop to take care of you till you're okay." He stayed till the cops came.

It was a beautiful act, but if you were to ask my aunt, it's most powerful effect wasn't on her or her daughter. It was on on someone who wasn't even on the scene -- my uncle. My uncle can never, ever pass a stranded vehicle without thinking of how a stranger stopped to help his family, once. And all those he helps will help others, and the chain will continue.

Today's dominant paradigm wires us to think big, control life, get noticed. But don't weigh yourself down with thinking big. Small is beautiful, because small connects. What you give up in the impact and scale of the action, you will gain in awareness and understanding of interconnections. That awareness, combined with skillfulness, will allow you to tap into the power of the ripple effect.

In Service Space, we define this as a shift from leadership to laddership. A good ladder supports others in reaching greater heights of their potential. Bodhisattvas are perfect ladders. They race to the bottom of the pyramid instead of the top, they focus on the edges instead of the center. They work behind-the-scenes, not in the spotlight. If a ladder does his job right, no one will know to thank them, because it’s almost impossible, sometimes even for the ladders themselves, to point to any single “special” thing that they’ve done. Their gift lies in being completely natural. Their many, small, natural acts work in concert with a greater emergence, and ripple out into incredible results. Results that are always aligned on the side of virtue.

SERVICE is the second S. With a heart of service, we can activate dormant connections and regenerate the field.

It is obvious that every act creates a relationship. But the quality of that relationship is predicated on the kind of intention behind it. If we act in the spirit of transaction or, worse, exploitation, that limits the scope of that connection. The relationship eventually crashes or fizzles out. But when a small act is selfless, it unleashes a regenerative effect that can build all the way into eternity.

Last year, I was asked to join President Obama’s advisory council for addressing poverty and inequality. Quite an honor, and I was happy to serve. At our first White House meeting, we did an introductory circle around the question -- What gives you hope? Before I could think up something smart to say, it was already my turn to speak. And this is what spontaneously came to my mind, "Well, what gives me hope is love. What gives me hope is reading the NY Times story of how one person paid for coffee for the person behind her in line, and 226 people followed suit. Two hundred and twenty six people were voluntarily moved to pay it forward. What gives me hope is that life unfailingly responds to the advances of love."

When we act in service, we advance the cause of love. Life has no choice but to respond. Then, our egos no longer need to save the world. Our relationships, reinforced by our small acts of service, will naturally do this.

Gautama Buddha's attendant, Ananda, once asked him, "On this very long path, it seems like noble friends are half of the path." The Buddha replied: "No, Ananda, it is not half the path. It is the full path." Not 60 percent, not three quarters, not 90 percent. One hundred percent. In the tiniest act of service, we build an affinity -- and a field of these noble affinities, according to Buddha, is all we really need.

In today's networked world, you are all well aware of the quantity of connections -- but remember also to keep track of the quality of connections. Researchers inform us that in a room full of just 50 people, more than 100 million trillion unique connections are possible. A hundred million trillion, with just 50 people. Typically, that potential is never realized, because self-interest and agendas impose artificial constraints on the field. Imagine holding a space of compassion for all the living beings in your sphere of influence. Now imagine the potential of all living beings doing the same for each other.

SURRENDER is the third S. With small acts, we plant seeds; with a heart of service, we cultivate the field. But before the harvest is ready, there is one significant step: surrender.

In 2005, at what felt like the peak of our service work, my wife and I sold everything we had and embarked on a walking pilgrimage in India. Our intention was to cultivate renunciation. We arrived at the Gandhi Ashram, and walked South -- ended up being for thousand kilometers. We would eat whatever food was offered, sleep wherever place was offered. Now, this is India in the summer months, sometimes with heat as high as 115 degrees. We might've just walked 30 miles the previous day, we might be hungry, we may not have slept in a comfortable place. Maybe someone was mean to us. Gazillion things could be wrong, but the thing that was the hardest was insecurity -- I could be eating the most nourishing meal, given with deepest love, but my mind would be racing ahead to security for tomorrow.

In so many profound ways, that pilgrimage was about surrender. People often think of surrender as a trust in "what goes around comes around." But feedback loops of karma are far more nuanced. Simply because you do an act of kindness doesn't mean you will be seeing an act of kindness the next day. The invitation is more about surrendering to the flow of life. Do we have the equanimity to receive all that life gives us -- the good, the bad, the ugly? Do we have the trust that any personal pain or pleasure is simply an offset for the larger equilibrium? Do we have a heart that is big enough to contain reward for someone else's toil and the consequences of someone else's mistake? These aren't questions that have answers. They are questions to be held with vigor, even in the most uncomfortable moments of life. And in the wake of that kind of surrender, T. S. Eliot's words come alive, “Wait, but wait without hope. Because hope could be hope for the wrong thing.”

Our modern society is great at creating vertical solutions. A fitness movement to tackle obesity, a mindfulness movement to tackle stress, a green movement to tackle environmental degradation. But amidst these vertical solutions, I hope you will also bring to life the integrated power of emergence. A power that is born of surrender. Of learning to serve and then waiting with equanimity and trust. As we practice enough small acts of service, each resulting affinity helps weave a resilient fabric. Stronger than a trampoline. No matter what the setback, it is natural to bounce right back.

So, as you chart a path of virtue in the world, I hope that the power of three S's -- small, service and surrender -- stays with you.

I want to close with a small story. When I was about your age, about to make a big decision in my life, I remember running into Rev. Heng Sure in the hallways of the Berkeley monastery. We had a very casual and brief conversation, but he shared a line that has stayed with me since.

He said, "I have never regretted choosing a path that is hardest on my ego."

I've returned to that line many times, and today, I invite you, students of virtue, to not just take the road less traveled, but take it one step further. Take the road that is the least traveled, the road that is almost never taken, the road that is hardest on the ego.

All of you, the class of 2016, are bound to do great things in the world. Along the way, may your small acts of good unleash an unending ripple effect. May your heart of service be cradled in a cocoon of noble friendships. May your surrender make you an instrument of a greater emergence. And above all, may each of you build a field of virtue that will transform your life and light up our world. 

 

 

RE: [MTC Global] My Article on Namo

I believe a success story of a Government can be written based only on improvement in quality of life of its people. This should be single most criteria to judge good governance. Of course, such goals are not achievable in a small span of time but I believe results of next election will be based on good governance as in terms of improvement in quality of life of common man – be it ease of dealing with government departments, quality of public services, dispensation of fare and quick justice or availability of daily needs regularly  at reasonable prices and stress free agriculture activity by the farmer.

Regards

Virendra Goel

 

From: join_mtc@googlegroups.com [mailto:join_mtc@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jagan Mohan Reddy
Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 7:45 AM
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Cc: exclusivembaglobal@googlegroups.com
Subject: [MTC Global] My Article on Namo

 

Dear All

A very good morning to you all.

 

Today's Metro India carried my article titled "Whether Namo is Upto the Mark?" and the link for the same is as under:

 

 

Best wishes

 

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy



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Re: [MTC Global] My Article on Namo

Dear Dr Reddy-garu
Nice article and you have focused on many areas. I do believe hard labour is the only solution. And the following  paragraph has inspired me . One line I am quoting from your article, 
"How he works?

According to one of the officers, who retired from service in Feb 2014 but was recalled along with 7 officers based on their excellent track record, even on Holi and Diwali days he and the entire team is with Modi"

With regards . 


On Wed, Jun 1, 2016 at 7:45 AM, Jagan Mohan Reddy <drjaganmohanreddy@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear All
A very good morning to you all.

Today's Metro India carried my article titled "Whether Namo is Upto the Mark?" and the link for the same is as under:


Best wishes

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy


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--

Dr Shankar Chatterjee
Former Associate Professor, Eritrea
Former Assistant Prof, Govt. Degree College, Tripura
Former Senior Planning Officer, Govt of Assam 
Presently
PROFESSOR & HEAD (CPME)
NIRD & PR ( Govt. of India), Rajendranagar
Hyderabad-500 030, Telangana, India 
 0091-40-24008418
 (Off) 
0091-9848060580(Mob)
We have responsibility to nurture the environment.

 SAVE NATURE - PLEASE THINK BEFORE TAKING PRINT

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Re: [MTC Global] My Article on Namo

Dear Reddy Sir,
Nice article. We need to appreciate NAMO and his government.  His restless working certainly will improve India. Also he has to be concerned over his health. Let our prayers keep his health intact for India's total development.
Regards,
Prof. Vijendra Kumar SK
Assistant Professor and Counseling Psychologist,
Centre for Counseling & Career Guidance,
PES University,
Bangalore.


On Wednesday, June 1, 2016 9:40 AM, Jagan Mohan Reddy <drjaganmohanreddy@gmail.com> wrote:


Dear All
A very good morning to you all.

Today's Metro India carried my article titled "Whether Namo is Upto the Mark?" and the link for the same is as under:


Best wishes

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy


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Sent from Gmail Mobile
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RE: [MTC Global] Right" or "Wrong" Decisions?

Well said Dr. Reddy

Regards

Virendra Goel

 

From: 'Dr. Pratap Reddy S' via Management Teachers Consortium, Global [mailto:join_mtc@googlegroups.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:08 AM
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [MTC Global] Right" or "Wrong" Decisions?

 

IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHERE TO GO-ANY ROAD WILL TAKE YOU THERE!

 

Dr.S.Pratap Reddy 

Founder Chairman 

 

On Monday, 30 May 2016 2:13 AM, Jagan Mohan Reddy <drjaganmohanreddy@gmail.com> wrote:

 

Five men got lost in a vast forest. They tried to find their way out. The first man said,
"I will follow my intuition and go left." 
The second man said, "I will go right. I have a strong feeling about this." 
The third man said, "I think I will walk back the same path we came. This should be
the safest option." 
The fourth man said: "I think we are on the right track already, so I will keep going
straight. I am sure this forest will end and I will find a village or a farm to ask for directions." 
The fifth man said, "I don't know what to do. I think I will climb up this tall tree and take a better look
around before I make up my mind." 
So the fifth man did that. While he was climbing, the other four men scattered towards their own
directions. The fifth man now could see from above what was the shortest way to a village. He
thought that the others should not have chosen the paths they did. He was wrong, though. 

Each man chose his own path and gained a different experience. The man who went left,
found a long path but in the end, it led him to the town. The man who went right, had to fight
a pack of wolves, but this way he learned how to survive in the forest. 

The man who went back, met another team of hikers and he made new friends. The man who
went straight, found indeed a farm and was hosted by the family for a couple of days before
leaving for the village.

Everyone was enriched in their own unique way by the journey. 

Some reflections on this story... 

What if, there are no "right" or "wrong" decisions? 

Could it be that every decision offers us new experiences, which in turn offers us innumerable
further opportunities for growth? 

It has taken every decision of our life to bring us to where we are right now. In the fullness of the
present, are we really in the wrong place? Even if it feels so, can we be sure? 

What if there are no mistakes? Only opportunities?

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy

Hands that serve are holier than the lips that pray


 

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[MTC Global] My Article on Namo

Dear All
A very good morning to you all.

Today's Metro India carried my article titled "Whether Namo is Upto the Mark?" and the link for the same is as under:


Best wishes

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy


--
Sent from Gmail Mobile

--
The views expressed are individual and not necessarily MTC Global also share the same views.
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Management Teachers Consortium, Global" group.
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Re: [MTC Global] Right" or "Wrong" Decisions?

IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHERE TO GO-ANY ROAD WILL TAKE YOU THERE!
 
Dr.S.Pratap Reddy 
Founder Chairman 


On Monday, 30 May 2016 2:13 AM, Jagan Mohan Reddy <drjaganmohanreddy@gmail.com> wrote:


Five men got lost in a vast forest. They tried to find their way out. The first man said,
"I will follow my intuition and go left." 
The second man said, "I will go right. I have a strong feeling about this." 
The third man said, "I think I will walk back the same path we came. This should be
the safest option." 
The fourth man said: "I think we are on the right track already, so I will keep going
straight. I am sure this forest will end and I will find a village or a farm to ask for directions." 
The fifth man said, "I don't know what to do. I think I will climb up this tall tree and take a better look
around before I make up my mind." 
So the fifth man did that. While he was climbing, the other four men scattered towards their own
directions. The fifth man now could see from above what was the shortest way to a village. He
thought that the others should not have chosen the paths they did. He was wrong, though. 

Each man chose his own path and gained a different experience. The man who went left,
found a long path but in the end, it led him to the town. The man who went right, had to fight
a pack of wolves, but this way he learned how to survive in the forest. 

The man who went back, met another team of hikers and he made new friends. The man who
went straight, found indeed a farm and was hosted by the family for a couple of days before
leaving for the village.

Everyone was enriched in their own unique way by the journey. 

Some reflections on this story... 

What if, there are no "right" or "wrong" decisions? 

Could it be that every decision offers us new experiences, which in turn offers us innumerable
further opportunities for growth? 

It has taken every decision of our life to bring us to where we are right now. In the fullness of the
present, are we really in the wrong place? Even if it feels so, can we be sure? 

What if there are no mistakes? Only opportunities?

Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy
Hands that serve are holier than the lips that pray



--
The views expressed are individual and not necessarily MTC Global also share the same views.
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Re: [MTC Global] A NEW PEDAGOGICAL TOOL

Dear Prof Surender Reddy,

I fully endorse your views. I have experimented in few colleges. The participants were very happy and took keen interest and active participation in RCWP.

Saikumar



Prof M L Saikumar
formerly Dean with
Institute of Public Enterprise
Plot No 154, Happy Homes Colony
Near Pillar No 200, PVN Rao Express Way
Hyderabad - 500 048

Cell: 087900 78102

On Tue, May 31, 2016 at 10:18 PM, Surender Reddy Geedipalli <gsr123@gmail.com> wrote:
 Dear MTCians, 

One of our new techniques of pedagogy is Reverse Cross-Word Puzzle (RCWP).

Here the solution matrix is presented to the participants. It contains intelligently compiled words relating to a selected subject/theme which are arranged horizontally (across) and vertically (down). Some of the words cross each other; hence the name cross-word. 

In the RCWP, the students are required to frame the questions and/or clues. The questions must be right, apt and smart. The rating will be on the basis of the quality and correctness of the questions. The questions must depict the knowledge and understanding of the subject. We firmly believe that asking the right questions is more important and also more difficult than providing the correct answers. 

RCWP is a versatile technique which can be used to teach/learn any subject with amazing ease and alacrity. It will promote the art and habit of asking questions. 

I do hope that it will gain greater acceptance by the esteemed teachers and the zealous taught in the days ahead. You will surely agree that new techniques cannot be found or created easily. So, we are surely proud of RCWP and are determined to work earnestly for its success. SNIST is already among the largest and one of the best technical institutions in India.  Kindly give us your valuable feedback. 

Regards,
Prof. G Surender Reddy
Dean, SNIST, Hyderabad


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