Saransh

Saransh is a web portal launched by Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) of India, with the primary aim of promoting information and communication technologies in schools.[1] The Human Resource Development Minister Smriti Irani launched the portal on 7 November 2015.[2] Saransh is a self-review tool for all CBSE affiliated schools and parents. It serves as an interface for enhancing communication between schools as well as parents. It offers a data-driven decision support system to aid parents in evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of children, which, in turn would assist in taking informed decisions for children's future.[3][4][5]

Saransh
CountryIndia
Prime Minister(s)Narendra Modi
Key peopleSmriti Irani
Launched7 November 2015 (2015-11-07)
StatusActive
Websitesaransh.nic.in

Objectives

This tool aims at bringing transparency to the educational system in India. It is considered to be a novel step towards the progress of the Digital India campaign. It intends to provide e-books of all standards and subjects, thereby encouraging sustainable development. Moreover, the portal offers a one-to-one interaction platform between teachers and parents. Besides, information regarding competitions and attendance can now be directly shared with parents by using this tool. Among other benefits, it serves as an analytical tool for analyzing data and publishing informational reports. Schools can use this tool for analyzing subject performance of all students as a whole which would aid in identifying fields of improvement. Furthermore, the portal is equipped with 3 preceding years' data of all schools. Hence, a comparative year-on-year study can be done to recognize the well-performed areas and fields that still needs improvement. In addition, a comparative study about the performance of various schools within a region, state or nation is now available at fingers reach.[6]

gollark: I think politics is probably about as controversial as theology. Most people here are probably not the demographic to care much about theological conflict stuff.
gollark: We probably only need info, introductions/welcome (could be merged), computers, maths, politics/economics, general "things" (#3d-printing/<#694964719135490078>/<#677752722761711618>/<#677667174826901513>), media (music, creative works, video games, misc and links), images/things in the world (aviation/images/luxury hotels/surface transport/restaurants/pets).
gollark: I feel like this is an unproductively large number of channels.
gollark: No idea, not really, yes, people do that a lot, that's kind of done a bit, no.
gollark: The English-y GCSEs are very annoying. I did better in Ancient Greek and Latin than English on the mock things (literature/language were just done as one exam for some reason).

References

  1. "Saransh – A tool for connecting Schools and Parents". news.icbse.com. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  2. "Launch of saransh portal" (PDF). CBSE. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  3. Saxena, Shivani (12 November 2015). "CBSE launches web portal 'Saransh'". The Times of India. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  4. "'Saransh' now accessible to parents". tribuneindia.com. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  5. "Saransh - An Interactive Tool for Parents and Schools". StudyKaMaal. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  6. FPJ, Bureau. "CBSE launches Saransh to promote communication". Free Press Journal. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.