Follow us on Twitter      |   Join us on    

Education, Local Government

Plans for e-university in India

The creation of an e-university in Karnataka will see lecture notes being emailed to students, one of the many convenience to both students and teachers, according to B L Sridhar, principal secretary, department of personnel and administrative reforms (e-governance).

Photos

View photos

The idea is to see classroom lectures (notes) being mailed to students, so that they can concentrate in class rather than waste time taking down notes,” said Sridhar.

He said interactive web sites, projection systems and laptops are necessary tools for teachers.

Speaking at the lecture on `E-Governance Initiatives In Karnataka’ organised by the Indian Institute of Public Administration Karnataka Regional Branch on Tuesday, Sridhar said he had mooted out this suggestion recently at one of the seminars attended by the higher education department.

For e-university adoption mode of e-governance, there should be an e-library, e-examination or e-evaluation, all payments through e-system, student smart card, online counselling and notes being delivered online.

On BangaloreOne centres, Sridhar said the place for setting up such centres have been identified in Mysore, Mangalore, Gulbarga and Belgaum. At present, there are 43 centres that provides 29 services of 24 departments and utilities. Over 6.5 lakh persons benefit per month.

According to him, the idea for e-governance is to deliver services at the doorstep, make it hassle free, transparent, and facilitate decision makers to get all the datas, analyse and decide.

In regards to Human Resource Management Systems (HRMS), he said that HRMS is generating salary bills of more than five lakh employees spread across 29 districts and 176 taluks and maintaining their service history. Karnataka is the only state to have implemented HRMS.

Rate this article

1 Comments

On 9 February 2010 vv wrote:

Hi Friend, This is a very helpful information, thanks


Add your comment


Magazine

February 2010

Subscribe to the printed version of FutureGov

Magazine

Survey of the Week

Should social media posts by civil servants count as public records?

Most highly rated

Building a healthy Malaysia

Like many of its neighbours, Malaysia has been experiencing changing disease patterns. The era of ...

Should govts archive social media posts?

It is fashionable for government agencies to have a Facebook or Twitter account these days ...

Korea tops UN recession-time e-govt rankings

South Korea has led the world in how governments have used ICT to give citizens ...