Thursday, January 31, 2008

Go Figure!

January 31, 2008

A man deposited $50 in a savings account, then withdrew it in various sums. When he'd recovered his $50 he was surprised to find $1 left in the account, though it had drawn no interest. When he inquired, the bank produced this ledger:


where's the error



Link Via www.futilitycloset.com

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Sins of Omission

January 30, 2008

Posted in Language by Greg Ross on January 16th, 2008

A Queens College teacher left a note on his classroom door:
PROFESSOR TOBIN WILL NOT MEET HIS CLASSES TODAY. He later noticed that a student had erased the first letter in CLASSES. So he erased the second letter as well.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Quote of the Day

January 28, 2008


Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Weinberg: "With or without religion, good people will do good, and evil people will do evil. But for good people to do evil, that takes religion."

Monday, January 21, 2008

Shayeris from my father's journal

January 21, 2008


Here are some Urdu shayeris I recently read in my father's journal. Apart from myriad information in his journal he had a great collection of Urdu shayeris. They are sublime! Here are a few from the collection. Enjoy!

"Khud hi ko kar buland itna
ki har taqdir ke pehele
Khuda bande se khud hi puche
bata teri raza kya hai"

"Neend aaye to khawab aaye
khawab aaye, to tum aaye
par tumhari yaad mein
na neend aaye, na khawab aaye"

"Saki, peene de mujhe
masjid mein baith ke
ya woh jagah bata
jahan khuda nahin"

"Aagar tum khawab mein chale aate
tumhara kya bigar jata
hum e deedar ho jata
tumhara parda raha jata"

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Some funny tag lines...

January 17, 2008

My friend Rajib Roy -- oenophile, long distance runner and a blogger -- www.rajibroy.com has funny tag lines in his site apart from his take on management learning. I do visit his site just to check out his tag lines.

Here are a few:

I doubt, therefore I might be!!
48.2% of all statistics is made up on the spot!
Atheism is a non-prophet organization!
Eat Right. Stay Fit. Die Anyway!!
Inheritance: a dead give away!!
Why do Chinese philosophers always try to Confucius?
Shin: A device for finding furniture in the dark :-)
Veni Vedi Visa - I came, I saw, I did a little shopping :-)
A good pun is its own reword :-)
I drink well, I eat well and I sleep well - but that's all :-)


Enjoy...

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

One more cartoon...

January 16, 2008


Nano ke side effects!!!!

January 16, 2008

An excellent cartoon on the Nano phenomenon from the Hindi press:

Five Ways to Fight Memory Loss

January 16, 2008

As per Dr. Weil in his website:

Five Recommended Lifestyle Changes:

Exercise your mind. Research shows that the old adage “use it or lose it” applies to your mental power as much as to the rest of your body. Crossword puzzles, mind games, and challenging reading or educational classes can all help you keep your brain agile and strong.

Exercise your body. Physical exercise seems to correlate with better mental function, perhaps because of improved circulation.

Eat a diet rich in antioxidants and omega-3 fatty acids. Vegetables and fruits are the best sources of antioxidants, although tea and dark chocolate contribute as well. Cold-water fish, freshly ground flaxseed and walnuts provide omega-3s.

Avoid alcohol. Alcohol’s damaging effect on brain cells is well established in the medical literature.

Reduce stress. Learn and practice regular relaxation techniques like meditation or yoga.

Sunday, January 6, 2008

The City Sleeps Underwater


The City Sleeps Underwater
Originally uploaded by denimdignity
A photograph taken by my daughter in our Florida trip!

Best Blogs of 2007 that You Maybe Aren't Reading:

January 6, 2008

Here is the link and see if you have bookmarked one of these Links

Friday, January 4, 2008

Losing an Edge, Japanese Envy India’s Schools

January 4, 2008
Losing an Edge, Japanese Envy India’s Schools -- NY Times

Read this morning in New York Times. Lately there has been a lot of talk of the US education system. Now Japanese also envy India's schools?

The link to the NY Times Article

Here is the whole article...

MITAKA, Japan — Japan is suffering a crisis of confidence these days about its ability to compete with its emerging Asian rivals, China and India. But even in this fad-obsessed nation, one result was never expected: a growing craze for Indian education.

Despite an improved economy, many Japanese are feeling a sense of insecurity about the nation’s schools, which once turned out students who consistently ranked at the top of international tests. That is no longer true, which is why many people here are looking for lessons from India, the country the Japanese see as the world’s ascendant education superpower.

Bookstores are filled with titles like “Extreme Indian Arithmetic Drills” and “The Unknown Secrets of the Indians.” Newspapers carry reports of Indian children memorizing multiplication tables far beyond nine times nine, the standard for young elementary students in Japan.

And Japan’s few Indian international schools are reporting a surge in applications from Japanese families.

At the Little Angels English Academy & International Kindergarten, the textbooks are from India, most of the teachers are South Asian, and classroom posters depict animals out of Indian tales. The kindergarten students even color maps of India in the green and saffron of its flag.

Little Angels is located in this Tokyo suburb, where only one of its 45 students is Indian. Most are Japanese.

Viewing another Asian country as a model in education, or almost anything else, would have been unheard-of just a few years ago, say education experts and historians.

Much of Japan has long looked down on the rest of Asia, priding itself on being the region’s most advanced nation. Indeed, Japan has dominated the continent for more than a century, first as an imperial power and more recently as the first Asian economy to achieve Western levels of economic development.

But in the last few years, Japan has grown increasingly insecure, gripped by fear that it is being overshadowed by India and China, which are rapidly gaining in economic weight and sophistication. The government here has tried to preserve Japan’s technological lead and strengthen its military. But the Japanese have been forced to shed their traditional indifference to the region.

Grudgingly, Japan is starting to respect its neighbors.

“Until now, Japanese saw China and India as backwards and poor,” said Yoshinori Murai, a professor of Asian cultures at Sophia University in Tokyo. “As Japan loses confidence in itself, its attitudes toward Asia are changing. It has started seeing India and China as nations with something to offer.”

Last month, a national cry of alarm greeted the announcement by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development that in a survey of math skills, Japan had fallen from first place in 2000 to 10th place, behind Taiwan, Hong Kong and South Korea. From second in science in 2000, Japan dropped to sixth place.

While China has stirred more concern here as a political and economic challenger, India has emerged as the country to beat in a more benign rivalry over education. In part, this reflects China’s image in Japan as a cheap manufacturer and technological imitator. But India’s success in software development, Internet businesses and knowledge-intensive industries in which Japan has failed to make inroads has set off more than a tinge of envy.

Most annoying for many Japanese is that the aspects of Indian education they now praise are similar to those that once made Japan famous for its work ethic and discipline: learning more at an earlier age, an emphasis on memorization and cramming, and a focus on the basics, particularly in math and science.

India’s more demanding education standards are apparent at the Little Angels Kindergarten, and are its main selling point. Its 2-year-old pupils are taught to count to 20, 3-year-olds are introduced to computers, and 5-year-olds learn to multiply, solve math word problems and write one-page essays in English, tasks most Japanese schools do not teach until at least second grade.

Indeed, Japan’s anxieties about its declining competitiveness echo the angst of another nation two decades ago, when Japan was the economic upstart.

“Japan’s interest in learning from Indian education is a lot like America’s interest in learning from Japanese education,” said Kaoru Okamoto, a professor specializing in education policy at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo.

As with many new things here, the interest in Indian-style education quickly became a fad.

Indian education is a frequent topic in forums like talk shows. Popular books claim to reveal the Indian secrets for multiplying and dividing multiple-digit numbers. Even Japan’s conservative education ministry has begun discussing Indian methods, said Jun Takai of the ministry’s international affairs division.

Eager parents try to send their children to Japan’s roughly half dozen Indian schools, hoping for an edge on the competitive college entrance exams.

In Tokyo, the two largest Indian schools, which teach kindergarten through junior high, mainly to Indian expatriates, received a sudden increase in inquiries from Japanese parents starting last year.

The Global Indian International School says that 20 of its some 200 students are now Japanese, with demand so high from Indian and Japanese parents that it is building a second campus in the neighboring city of Yokohama.

The other, the India International School in Japan, just expanded to 170 students last year, including 10 Japanese. It already has plans to expand again.

Japanese parents have expressed “very, very high interest” in Indian schools, said Nirmal Jain, principal of the India International School.

The boom has had the side effect of making many Japanese a little more tolerant toward other Asians.

The founder of the Little Angels school, Jeevarani Angelina — a former oil company executive from Chennai, India, who accompanied her husband, Saraph Chandar Rao Sanku, to Japan in 1990 — said she initially had difficulty persuading landlords to rent space to an Indian woman to start a school. But now, the fact that she and three of her four full-time teachers are non-Japanese Asians is a selling point.

“When I started, it was a first to have an English-language school taught by Asians, not Caucasians,” she said, referring to the long presence here of American and European international schools.

Unlike other Indian schools, Ms. Angelina said, Little Angels was intended primarily for Japanese children, to meet the need she had found when she sent her sons to Japanese kindergarten.

“I was lucky because I started when the Indian-education boom started,” said Ms. Angelina, 50, who goes by the name Rani Sanku here because it is easier for Japanese to pronounce. (Sanku is her husband’s family name.)

Ms. Angelina has adapted the curriculum to Japan with more group activities, less memorization and no Indian history. Encouraged by the kindergarten’s success, she said, she plans to open an Indian-style elementary school this year.

Parents are enthusiastic about the school’s rigorous standards.

“My son’s level is higher than those of other Japanese children the same age,” said Eiko Kikutake, whose son Hayato, 5, attends Little Angels. “Indian education is really amazing! This wouldn’t have been possible at a Japanese kindergarten.”