New Delhi [India], December 10 (ANI/ThePRTree): North India’s premier educational celebration, The Higher Schooling Conclave (HEC) by Silver Fern Instruction Consultants was carried out around a time period of two days.
The HEC was not just one more conclave, but an practical experience backed by a significant influx of individuals, counselors, and authorities from the education and learning business.
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A structured pre-party ‘Rendezvous with the educators’ was arranged on the 18th for a meet up with and greet in between principals, administrators, senior administration of educational institutions, and the university delegates of prestigious establishments in which they had a term around the future of instruction overseas and the uncertainties connected with it.
22 out of the 42 delegates had been escorted for this tour to 3 partner schools- YPS Mohali, St. John’s Large faculty, and Bhawan Vidyalaya, Chandigarh providing them an insight into the functioning of the North Indian Instruction procedure.
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The to start with working day of the conclave on 19th witnessed a footfall of in excess of 1500 students partaking with foreign university delegates who experienced set up their stalls (42 in quantity) in addition to individuals of the Indian types these types of as Vedantu, Great Mastering, and OP Jindal.
Countries like Australia, Uk, US, Canada, and Dubai made their mark on the celebration with the lively participation of top rated notch universities like Waterloo College, College of Windsor, College of Victoria, College of Arizona, King’s University London, York College, College of Sydney, College of Bristol, The University of Sheffield along with the engagement of some reputed schools, Seneca Higher education, North Island Higher education, Algon Quin Higher education, and Georgian University
The enthusiasm of students was acknowledged by all, and their curiosity was currently being reflected by their issues which were answered by the respective delegates comprehensively.
A networking gala meal was hosted on the 19th for the specialists from the field graced with 78 college delegates, 20 principals, a massive number of teachers, counselors, administrators, and board users of schools from throughout Northern India to build a regional networking platform for educators.
The night was enriched by a panel discussion on ‘The Potential of Training: Problems and Opportunities’ which made conversations and dialogues all-around the instructional potential clients and the uncertainties joined to it. An exchange of dialogue was noticed involving the dignitaries of the stature of Dr Sumer Bahadur Singh (President of the Boarding Colleges Association of India), Dr Jagpreet Singh, Vivek Atray, Palak Behl, Kavita Chatterjee Das, Saheb Pal Singh, and Megha Srivastav who was the moderator for the very same.
HEC by Silver Fern was concluded on an exceptionally superior take note beefing up the richness of the education business with the contribution of specialist knowledge aligned with the passions of learners paving the way for much more this sort of gatherings in the upcoming.
This story is delivered by ThePRTree. ANI will not be dependable in any way for the content material of this short article. (ANI/ThePRTree)
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When the pandemic hit in 2020, production work in the taconite mines in northeastern Minnesota slowed way down. Yet mining companies still needed to provide health and safety training to their employees. With lockdowns in place, how were they going to do that?
Since the 1970s, this training had been provided by the miner safety and health training program through Minnesota State’s five northeastern Minnesota colleges. The federal Mining Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) mandates that all such training must be done in person. That requirement was rescinded temporarily in the spring of 2020, and courses shifted to 100 percent online. As Hibbing Community College safety and health instructor Eric Lund notes, “We’re still in that status as we speak.”
During the pandemic, about 4,200 students have been trained. Minnesota State’s training program also has extended its reach, providing its health and safety courses to students in other states—and in Iceland and New Zealand. The program has had international trainees before, but they had to fly in for a couple of days of face-to-face sessions. Now, Lund says, “they can do that training virtually from their home countries.”
Online education wasn’t invented in response to the pandemic. Minnesota’s colleges and universities had been offering virtual courses and degrees for several years before the coronavirus reared its ugly, spiky head. But in March 2020, Minnesota’s colleges and universities were forced to move their courses online. Nearly two years after the onset of the pandemic, schools, employers, and students have learned a lot about digital education.
Institutions of higher learning have made changes to what educators call “modalities”—the different ways education is delivered. They’re redesigning classrooms in ways that accommodate both online and in-person learning. They’re tapping new digital tools that go beyond Zoom. They’re creating more courses that are completely digital, or a blend of virtual and in person.
That’s because students, faculty, and the schools themselves have gotten used to online education and experienced its advantages and flexibility. Even after many students—mostly undergraduates—have returned to campus, it’s unlikely that higher education will return to a pre-pandemic normal.
Staying flexible
Like other colleges and universities, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota shifted to completely online learning formats beginning in March 2020. Saint Mary’s traditional undergraduate campus was mostly back to class and the face-to-face format by the fall of 2021, says Andrea Carroll-Glover, vice provost for online strategy and programs. The university still offers fully online courses “to provide that flexibility to our students, and to ensure that our traditional undergraduate students are able to graduate with the technology skills that employers are looking for.”
On the bachelor completion and graduate side, the university is continuing to explore new opportunities online. Beyond fully online programs, Saint Mary’s also is offering more hybrid undergraduate programs, which combine online and in-person time. “It has really changed quite a bit in terms of how we think about our portfolio, how we think about delivery modalities, and how we’re able to serve our students in living our mission by leveraging flexible learning models with opportunities for practical application,” Carroll-Glover says.
Online education programs rely on platforms called learning management systems (LMS). In the fall of 2020, Saint Mary’s shifted to an LMS called Canvas. “This elevated the student experience,” Carroll-Glover says. Thanks to Canvas, the online teaching and learning experience became “mobile friendly, much more intuitive, and enhanced the faculty’s teaching experience,” she adds. For instance, faculty can use new mobile features to see when students are posting assignments or discussions.
Building on Canvas, Saint Mary’s integrated an online recording and streaming platform called Panopto to ensure it had strong video capabilities. The university also incorporated a tool into its Canvas LMS called Ally, which helps instructors provide alternative formats to make their courses more accessible for people with disabilities. For instance, Ally can help teachers accommodate students with color blindness through the use of more visible text colors and image captioning.
Carroll-Glover says that Saint Mary’s strong online experience has attracted many transfer students from other colleges. It also has allowed the university to extend its geographical market: More of Saint Mary’s new students live and study outside of Minnesota, some as far away as California.
At Minnesota State University, Mankato, classrooms equipped with monitors, microphones, and speakers allow students to participate both in person and remotely.
Upgrading virtual business courses
Graduate-level business education programs also have adjusted their modalities for MS and MBA students. Again, many of these programs have been offered online for some time, but university business schools are incorporating what they’ve learned during the pandemic into new approaches to delivering education.
Case in point: Deploying Zoom, the platform that became the short-hand term for pandemic communication. “We all had to learn how to use [Zoom’s] breakout rooms and the annotation tools,” says Patricia Hedberg, associate dean of the University of St. Thomas’ Opus College of Business. “We expanded our understanding of the technology and are using it deeper than we had before.”
Hedberg says that St. Thomas invested a great deal in remote learning during the pandemic, and university faculty learned how to effectively present instruction online. “We’re seeing that pay off now—that we can offer that flexibility,” she says.
“We want that online experience to be similar to the learning experience you’d get in person,” Hedberg says. The St. Thomas online instructional group combines pedagogy with technology, and it works with faculty to “have the right tools to accomplish the same learning outcome [virtually] and a similar type of engagement with students.”
For instance, the group added more screens in university classrooms to allow online and in-person students to be together and interact. For such mixed classrooms, St. Thomas has added several tech enhancements. These include using a stylus “to scribble on the screen,” which shows up on the PowerPoints projected both online and in person.
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For faculty, Hedberg says, this means more choices. “You have more opportunities to think about what you want the outcome to be for students,” she says. “What’s the best way to share information? What’s the best way to have some kind of interaction and discussion about the information?” In other words, St. Thomas believes that online education tools and platforms can actually enhance education. Opus is now looking at technologies that would allow its students to do projects with businesses across the world.
Phil Miller, assistant dean of MBA and MS programs at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management, notes that Carlson had been building its online capacity before the pandemic hit. “Our capabilities and our facilities have evolved to meet that changing landscape,” he says. During the pandemic, Carlson School Dean Sri Zaheer “made a commitment to make sure that students could participate whatever way they chose, as could faculty.” In the summer of 2020, Carlson made “a massive push” to make sure every classroom had a rear-mounted HD camera and ceiling mics. “At a minimum, every class can stream,” Miller says.
When it comes to how a hybrid course runs, Miller says “there’s a whole stack of tools that are embedded in Canvas,” an LMS that Carlson began using about five years ago. Now instructors are adding more technology to that toolbox.
Miller, for instance, teaches a problem-solving class at the MBA level that includes collaborative projects. To enable the professor and students to interact virtually, he began using a platform called FeedbackFruits, which allows participants to “cross-comment” on projects online. “It very easily allows me to structure that whole engagement so that you can post your deliverable and I can comment,” Miller says. Tools like FeedbackFruits have become an important part of delivering virtual education, he says.
The lessons of the pandemic also have influenced the way the Carlson School offers its non-degree leadership programs for business executives. Nora Anderson, executive director for executive education, introduced completely online leadership courses with the arrival of the coronavirus.
Carlson has created a new kind of online program. Instead of participants meeting on Zoom for four days straight, it extended the program across six months with regular two-hour online sessions. “We had leaders from Europe, Asia, and the U.S. all going through this learning experience together,” she adds. The Carlson School is now launching a second cohort of this program.
“I’d venture to say that we would not have designed the program this way before the pandemic,” Anderson says.
‘Hyflex’ higher education
This past summer, the Carlson School introduced what Miller characterizes as “the next evolution,” called hybrid flexible, or “hyflex.” Eight Carlson classrooms were fitted with “a higher degree of technology and integration,” including tracking cameras and large, prominent monitors. The result, Miller says, is “an immersive room that allows virtual and in-person participants to fully integrate in a class [at the same time]. We see a lot of our working professional programs evolving in that direction.”
Minnesota State senior vice chancellor Ron Anderson believes that hyflex has the potential to significantly impact the way his system delivers education. He distinguishes hyflex from hybrid, where a class meets in person once or twice a week, then online at other times.
Anderson also says that students will “move seamlessly between delivery modes depending on their needs.” Minnesota State is “seeing a lot of interest in this increasing flexibility for scheduling and juggling other commitments.”
“I would estimate about half of our non-credit offerings this current semester are being offered in an online modality,” he says. There are limitations—some courses still need to be hands on, such as those in which students handle industrial equipment. But even some of those courses “are now being coupled with some components being delivered online or via Zoom.”
Larry Lundblad, Minnesota State’s executive director of workforce and economic development, notes that “what we were doing on campus was paralleled by business and industry. They were getting used to Zoom and other distance formats. Everyone had to learn at once.”
With the persistent labor shortage and companies needing every hour of labor they can get from their current workforce, “many employers are reluctant to let employees participate in training,” Lundblad says. “These alternative ways of delivery are meeting a need where workers can stay in place for at least a portion of the training.”
Like nearly all educators, Lundblad doesn’t see a full return to the old normal. “This is a permanent shift,” he says. “The employers, the students, and the instructors are all saying that the flexibility can be a good thing. Now the emphasis is on, ‘How can we make this work better?’ ’’
Mining safety instructor Lund has seen a “generation gap” in terms of preferences for online and in-person instruction. Younger workers, he says, are quite comfortable with digital learning. And like many higher-education faculty members, he believes that the demand for online courses will continue to be strong, particularly because companies and students have gotten accustomed to it. It’s not yet known whether MSHA will allow some form of virtual learning to continue. “If they do,” Lund says, “it’s probably here to stay.”
Dr. Fred Carl Rowland, 84, passed away surrounded by his loving family on November 20th, 2021 in the house he built with his sweetheart, Linda, Heal Me Healthy.
Born in Salt Lake City in 1937, Fred was raised on the east bench, where he attended and graduated from East High School. As a young man, his commitment, intelligence, and strong work ethic earned him bachelor’s and master’s degrees in the sciences at the University of Utah, and a doctorate degree in Physical Education at Brigham Young University. In 1968, he met his best friend, Linda Rohbock, and married her in the Salt Lake City LDS temple. Together, they adopted and raised five unique children from all across the globe. Theirs was an adventurous home filled with devotion to the gospel, education, and sports of all types, and their children developed a healthy respect for rugged individualism and a huge fondness for the great outdoors.
A coaching legend, Fred began his athletics career coaching mens’ and womens’ state championship cross country teams, but was most at home on the wrestling mat. His storied coaching career spanned more than forty years, where he mentored hundreds of students both in the classroom, and on and off the mat. In addition to coaching, Fred taught Biology and Drivers Ed at Mountain View High School, and under his leadership, wrestling teams at Orem High School, West High School, and Mountain View High School earned state championships and many other regional and tournament awards. He was the recipient of multiple individual awards including honors from the Utah Wrestling Association as “Man Of The Year” and the esteemed inclusion into the Utah Sports Hall Of Fame as a Distinguished High School Coach. But wrestling wasn’t just a sport for Fred; it was a source of spirituality that allowed him to teach his athletes the principles of commitment, obedience, hard work, and study, helping them to become better athletes, and even better people.
As an avid backpacker, fisherman, and all around nature enthusiast, Fred grew a second skin in the outdoors. He relished in the wild, particularly his beloved Big Cottonwood Canyon, where he went frequently to find solace and peace. An avid reader, he was rarely found without a worn Louis Lamour book in his hand. His love of the West and his thirst for adventure led him and his children on countless backpacking trips, biking treks, and explorations up every known canyon along the Wasatch Front. Not even his 6 year old daughter was spared when he famously “encouraged” her summit up Provo Peak in a pair of jelly shoes.
It was his annual cherished High Unitas summer excursions, however, that brought out the best in Coach Rowland. To hear him howl as he plunged into a high alpine lake is the stuff of legend- a mountain man blessing to all of us lucky enough to be within earshot. He leaves behind in all of us a deep reverence, respect, and love for all the beauties of our earthly home in the mountains.
Fred’s ultimate loves in life were his wife of 52 years, Linda, and his beloved dog, Chance. As well as their five children and the gospel of The Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, for which he bore a granite-like testimony. Fred and Linda were lucky enough to fully participate in their own lives and the lives of their children and grandchildren, and travel to many far-flung destinations. These travels were capped by the fulfillment of one of their lifelong goals: a mission for the LDS church in Fresno, California.
Fred was preceded in death by his parents, Fred E. Rowland and Iris Viola Alm, his granddaughter Zana Chee Raquel Anderson. Fred is survived by his wife, Linda Louise Rohbock, cherished children, Taj (Priya), Rux (Kristin), Joshua, Jarom, Ana (Brandon) and Deborah, his thirteen grandchildren, and his brother, David Rowland (Laura).
The family wishes to thank the doctors, nurses, and caretakers, specifically with Envision homecare and hospice who aided in keeping him at home surrounded by his family in his last days.
Fred’s enduring spirit will undoubtedly find you outside, in the melody of the streams and the tops of rocky mountains. It will visit you on that final lap, it will climb beside you up that tallest summit. And during that extra practice, when you are sweating blood and tears, he will be there still, hand on the mat, coaching you on forever.
Service Details:
Visitation – Friday, November 26th, 2021 6:00pm – 8:00pm at Walker Sanderson Funeral Home located at 646 East 800 North, Orem, UT 84097
Funeral Services – Saturday, November 27th, 2021 at 11:00am at Park 7th Ward located at 114 South 400 West, Orem, UT 84058
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — Due to the fact he was in center university, Joe Leson has often been interested in having things aside to find out how they get the job done, place them back together “or make them far better,” he claimed.
So becoming an engineer, he reported, was a foregone conclusion. Leson shared his job route with college students all through a Mind Obtain Navigators function Monday afternoon.
“Even when I got to high school my job route was often just – I’m undertaking some form of engineering,” he mentioned. “I was exposed to a large amount of it. My dad’s an engineer, so I have family heritage there with the profession.”
Leson, a project manager with MS Consultants Inc. in Youngstown, was joined by his colleagues at the organization, including Undertaking Manager Steve Preston and Jillian Penman, graduate engineer.
Penman, who gained a baccalaureate in engineering from Youngstown Point out College this yr, labored two internships with MS Consultants as a Transportation, Bridge Structures intern in advance of signing up for the agency complete time in May possibly.
For Penman, an affinity for math and science led her to adhering to the engineering vocation path at the encouragement of her large university instructors.
“When I was little, I appreciated wondering of items in my head and bringing them to daily life making use of Legos and stuff,” Penman claims. “So with that form of mentality, I was like, ‘How can I do this in actual existence?’ And the very best industry I imagined of was civil engineering, simply because generally you layout a little something on paper and then it will come to everyday living.”
From now right until 2026, the U.S. seems to be to incorporate practically 140,000 new engineering work opportunities, according to the Bureau of Labor Studies. Civil engineers make up the bulk of individuals new employment at 32,200.
The engineers at MS Consultants have their fingerprints on a amount of spot tasks residents enjoy every single day. From the Canfield bridge that crosses more than state Route 11, to the Phelps Street project in downtown Youngstown, to the wastewater cure plant in East Palestine, these and other assignments began as a program by MS Consultants engineers.
Through Monday’s webinar, the panelists talked about what their day-to-working day seems like, what education and learning is needed to develop into an engineer, what are the diverse pathways that exist in the subject and what they like most about their position.
Preston stated his preferred aspect of the work is currently being ready to leave the communities far better than when they located them.
“If they’re contacting us, there is a rationale. They have an challenge,” Preston mentioned. “The matters that we provide, the services we present support persons day to day, and you could not even notice it.
“The chance that we get to give back again to our group I think is truly, definitely particular.”
Listen to a lot more from the panelists in the video clip posted over.
Brain Attain Navigators is a virtual profession exploration plan introduced by The Organization Journal in partnership with Junior Achievement of Mahoning Valley and the Educational Service Center of Jap Ohio.
Forthcoming Navigators webinars contain:
Nov. 8 at 12:30 p.m. | Entrepreneurship: Be Your Personal Manager – Featuring a panel dialogue with Melissa Poland, proprietor and operator of Sweet Melissa’s, and Ted Schmidt, PNC Lender, regional president, Youngstown.
Nov. 15 at 12:30 p.m. | Production: Ellwood Aluminum – Showcasing a panel dialogue with Scott Gregory, standard manager, and Hank Stull, human methods manager.
Laura Wittka, Operations Manager and Co-Founder, EDU International Business Institute FZCO
Co-founder Nicolas Ballaz and I launched EDU International Business Institute in June 2021 to provide legally binding contracts to recent graduates who are looking for an internship or a position in a company. We aim to provide graduates the most convenient and fast service, while enhancing their career opportunities and brighten their future.
Nicolas Ballaz, Managing Director and Co-Founder, EDU International Business Institute FZCO
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Cvit Software House began in 2016 as an enterprise resource planning (ERP) implementation and service provider. We now cater to the ERP needs of public and private sectors in the UAE and provide outsourcing services to companies worldwide. We have fully integrated smart processes and applications to support the digital transformation of our clients. Not only do we focus on providing first-class support and services to our clients but we also offer up-to-date training on the latest versions of our software solutions to further enhance their operations.
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Faranak, Founder, Enaya Education
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