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EDUNEWS & VIEWS

Tata’s indelible legacy in science and education

Beyond business, Ratan Tata, the ex-leader of India’s massive business empire, believed in the true power of science and education

Dipin Damodharan

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Ratan Tata. Image credit: tata.com

Ratan Tata, India’s most admired industrialist who passed away on October 9, 2024, has left behind an indelible legacy that extends well beyond the business sector, profoundly influencing education and scientific advancement in India. His visionary outlook emphasized the transformative potential of knowledge, reinforcing his belief that education is essential for societal growth.

Throughout his life, Tata, the man who built a business empire with revenue of $165 billion, was deeply committed to empowering future generations. Through Tata Trusts, he championed philanthropic initiatives aimed at supporting students from economically disadvantaged backgrounds, offering scholarships that allow them to pursue higher education both domestically and internationally. This commitment reflects his conviction that education should be accessible to all, serving as a vital pathway to opportunity.

Among his significant contributions is the establishment of Tata Scholarships at prestigious institutions such as Cornell University, which facilitate access to top-tier education for deserving Indian students. Tata’s vision also led to the founding of key educational institutions within India, including the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR). These institutions play a crucial role in nurturing talent and fostering innovative thinking.

In 2014, Tata Trusts, which controls majority stake in Tata Sons, made a significant contribution of $9 million to the Centre for Neuroscience at IISc, aimed at advancing vital research into Alzheimer’s disease.

Under his guidance, the Tata Group greatly increased its investment in research and development, laying the groundwork for India’s rise as a global technology leader. Tata’s focus on innovation not only addressed market demands but also created a foundation for trailblazing advancements that have the potential to transform industries.

One of Tata’s most impactful legacies in science is his unwavering support for leading educational and research institutions. The Indian Institute of Science (IISc) in Bengaluru, which has roots in Jamshedji Tata’s vision, continued to thrive under Ratan Tata’s leadership.  A government agency recently ranked IISc as India’s top university.

In 2014, Tata Trusts, which controls majority stake in Tata Sons, made a significant contribution of $9 million to the Centre for Neuroscience at IISc, aimed at advancing vital research into Alzheimer’s disease. This initiative shows his belief in the importance of scientific inquiry and its potential to tackle pressing societal challenges.

In the fields of genetics and biotechnology, Tata’s foresight led to the creation of the Tata Institute for Genetics and Society at the University of California, San Diego

Tata’s dedication to advancing scientific research is further highlighted by the establishment of specialized centres addressing societal needs. The Tata Centre for Technology and Design at IIT Bombay and the MIT Tata Centre of Technology and Design were created to develop engineering solutions for resource-limited communities. These initiatives not only stimulate innovation but also connect academic research with practical applications, ensuring that scientific progress serves society.

In the fields of genetics and biotechnology, Tata’s foresight led to the creation of the Tata Institute for Genetics and Society at the University of California, San Diego, with a substantial $70 million donation. This institute conducts cutting-edge research in genetics, gene editing, and stem cell therapy, placing India at the forefront of global genetic studies.

Tata’s commitment to environmental sustainability is reflected in his support for research at the University of New South Wales Faculty of Engineering, focusing on developing water purification technologies for underserved regions. This dedication highlights his belief in the capacity of science to create sustainable solutions for pressing global challenges.

As India reflects on the loss of this influential leader, Ratan Tata’s enduring legacy in education and science serves as a powerful reminder of his vision. His initiatives have positively impacted around 3.6 million students and teachers across 26 states and 145 districts in India, helping to shape a future where knowledge and innovation drive societal advancement. Ratan Tata’s life and work inspire us to recognize that true success is measured not just by business achievements, but by the positive change we bring to the world through education and research.

Tata’s Education

Ratan Tata’s educational journey began at Campion School in Mumbai, India’s financial capital, where he studied until the 8th grade. He then attended several prestigious institutions, including Cathedral and John Connon School in Mumbai, Bishop Cotton School in Shimla, and Riverdale Country School in New York City, from which he graduated in 1955. Following high school, he pursued higher education at Cornell University, earning a bachelor’s degree in architecture in 1959.

During his time at Cornell, Tata joined the Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity. In recognition of his commitment to education, he made a historic contribution of $50 million to the university in 2008, marking him as the largest international donor in its history. Additionally, Tata furthered his studies by completing the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School in 1975.

Dipin is Co-founder and Editor-in-Chief at EdPublica. A journalist and editor with over 15 years of experience leading and co-founding print and digital media outlets, his pieces on education, politics, and culture have been published in global media outlets, including The Huffington Post, The Himalayan Times, DailyO, Education Insider and so on.

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EDUNEWS & VIEWS

India is not in competition with any other nation: ISRO Chief

ISRO Chief V. Narayanan urges youth to lead India’s technological revolution

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ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan

In a powerful address at the 8th edition of the Chhatra Sansad India Conclave (CSI), ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) Chairman V. Narayanan inspired over 20,000 young minds to push boundaries and take India to new heights in space exploration and scientific innovation. His message was clear: the nation’s future in technology will be shaped by the youth, and they are crucial in propelling India to the forefront of global advancements.

In his keynote, V. Narayanan, Chairman of ISRO, spoke about India’s ongoing strides in space exploration. He emphasized that India is not in competition with any other nation but is focused solely on advancing its own technological progress. “India’s future is in the hands of its youth. You are the driving force behind the country’s technological and scientific transformation,” Narayanan said, calling for continued innovation in space research.

The conclave, held at Lovely Professional University, gathered influential leaders, policymakers, and thinkers under the theme “Vision India 2047: Bharat @ 100.” The event was a platform for dynamic conversations about India’s growth and the role youth will play in shaping the nation’s future as it approaches its centenary of independence.

Dr. Ashok Kumar Mittal, Member of Indian Parliament and Founder Chancellor of LPU, set the tone for the event, urging the youth to embrace their power to reshape India’s trajectory. He highlighted LPU’s commitment to nurturing future leaders who will lead the country in global arenas.

Dr. Ashok Kumar Mittal, Member of Parliament and Founder Chancellor of LPU giving memento to social reformerDr. Maulana Kalbe Rushaid Rizvi, during Chhatra Sansad India Conclave at LPU

Other prominent speakers at the conclave included Smriti Irani, former Union Minister, who encouraged the youth to leverage their talents to build businesses and enterprises that would drive India’s economic future. Motivational speaker Jaya Kishori inspired attendees to embody discipline, values, and purpose-driven action, while Temjen Imna Along, Minister of Tourism & Higher Education for Nagaland, spoke of an inclusive India where progress benefits all regions and communities.

The event also saw insightful video messages from several distinguished figures, including Nitin Gadkari, India’s Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways, and Vikrant Massey, Indian actor, emphasizing the role of youth in the ongoing digital revolution and India’s rise on the global stage.

A key feature of the conclave was a thought-provoking debate on “One Nation, One Election,” which sparked discussions on the potential impact of a unified electoral system on India’s future governance. The debate, chaired by Maulana Kalbe Rushaid Rizvi, allowed students to actively contribute their views on shaping India’s democratic structure.

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EDUNEWS & VIEWS

‘Blue Ghost’ soft-lands on the moon in one shape

With Blue Ghost’s successful soft-landing, Firefly Aerospace has become only the first private company ever to have a lunar probe intact on the lunar surface.

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The Blue Ghost's shadow looms over the foreground in the image | Credit: NASA/Firefly Aerospace

On March 2, NASA confirmed the first ever successful soft-landing attempt by a private company. Firefly Aerospace’s lunar lander, the Blue Ghost Mission 1 (named after a rare species of fireflies thought native to the United States), touched down at precisely 2.04 p.m. IST, near Mons Latrielle at Mare Crisium on the moon’s near side. Firefly Aerospace issued a press release shortly thereafter.

The soft-landing comes after another US-based private company, Intuitive Machines, attempted one a year ago. On that occasion however, the lander, known as Odyssey, bounced off hard on the lunar surface at touchdown, following a steep descent. It rested titled with a stray lunar rock to offer a shoulder. In contrast, Blue Ghost which stuck both an upright landing, and its payloads intact.

The landing was the culmination of a 45 day trip that began early this year. On January 15, Blue Ghost blasted to space aboard a SpaceX’s Falcon 9 Block 5 from NASA’s Kennedy Space Centre, Florida. Sharing space during the launch was yet another commercial lunar lander, the Hakuto-R Mission 2  – built and operated by the Japanese space technology company, ispace. However, Hakuto-R has a projected landing date on the moon sometime in April, owing to a different arrival approach.

Firefly had released pictures of the lunar terrain, the Blue Ghost‘s photographed from its landing site. One of them shows a rugged gray dusty terrain, with a portion of the lander’s chassis in view in the foreground. Whereas a second one showed a desolate terrain with the earth reflecting sunlight above the horizon. Blue Ghost‘s shadow looms in the foreground in the image.

This site located close to Mons Latrielle, is what scientists think is an ancient basin formed upon a rogue asteroid impact eons ago. More than 500 km wide, Mare Crisium, as the basin is known by, is believed to have been flooded by lava in volcanic eruptions dating to some 4 billion years ago.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that carried Firefly Aerospace’s lunar lander, Blue Ghost Mission 1, is seen stationed here at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, Florida | Credit: NASA

Laying groundwork for NASA’s Artemis

“Firefly is literally and figuratively over the Moon,” Jason Kim, CEO of Firefly Aerospace, said shortly after the landing, in a press release.  “Our Blue Ghost lunar lander now has a permanent home on the lunar surface with 10 NASA payloads and a plaque with every Firefly employee’s name. This bold, unstoppable team has proven we’re well equipped to deliver reliable, affordable access to the Moon, and we won’t stop there. With annual lunar missions, Firefly is paving the way for a lasting lunar presence that will help unlock access to the rest of the solar system for our nations, our partners, and the world.”

In 2023, Firefly Aerospace ferried the instruments as part of a $93.3 million contract signed with NASA as part of the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program. The CLPS program is Nasa’s attempt at driving private participation on future lunar missions. But the payloads help set stage for NASA’s Artemis program, which would mark their first attempt since the Apollo program, to land astronauts on the lunar surface.

Some of the payloads reflect the new engineering demands for such long-term lunar missions. To streamline tracking lander and rovers on the moon, NASA supplied the Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment (LuGRE). It is a GNSS receiver to help earth-orbiting satellite constellations, including GPS and the Galileo, track the lunar lander with high accuracy in real-time. Another one is the Regolith Adherence Characterization (RAC) that investigates possible soil degradation left behind in the wake of a typical lunar mission soft-landing.

Other payloads were designed to explore various science objectives. Research institutes and universities across the United States contributed to a variety of instruments. They included laser retro reflectors to measure distances, an x-ray imaging device to study how the solar wind affects space weather on earth; a probe which can inject itself into the moon’s sub-surface to measure heat dissipation.

In a press release applauding Blue Ghost’s successful soft-landing attempt, NASA’s acting administrator, Janet Petro, said, “This incredible achievement demonstrates how Nasa and American companies are leading the way in space exploration for the benefit of all … We have already learned many lessons – and the technological and science demonstrations onboard Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 will improve our ability to not only discover more science, but to ensure the safety of our spacecraft instruments for future human exploration – both in the short term and long term.”

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EDUNEWS & VIEWS

Indian kids use different math skills at work vs. school

The research, which involved over 200 children, compared the performances of children engaged in market work with those focused solely on their studies

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Image by Rajesh Balouria from Pixabay

A recent study conducted in Delhi sheds light on the contrasting mathematical abilities of children who work in markets versus those who attend school, raising questions about how educational systems can better address these disparities. The research, which involved over 200 children, compared the performances of children engaged in market work with those focused solely on their studies.

In the study, children were tasked with solving math problems under various conditions. Remarkably, 85 percent of children with market jobs were able to answer a complex market transaction problem correctly, while only 10 percent of their school-going counterparts succeeded in solving a similar question. However, when the same group was given simple division and subtraction problems, with pencil and paper for assistance, the results shifted. Fifty-nine percent of school kids solved the problems correctly, while only 45 percent of market-working children did.

The researchers also introduced a word problem involving a boy buying vegetables at the market. One-third of market-working children successfully solved the problem without any aid, whereas fewer than 1 percent of schoolchildren were able to do the same. This stark difference in performance highlights the potential benefits that practical, real-world experience in the marketplace can offer.

Why, then, do nonworking students seem to struggle more under market conditions?

“They learned an algorithm but didn’t understand it,” said researcher Abhijit Banerjee, explaining the phenomenon. On the other hand, market-working children appeared to have developed useful strategies for managing transactions. One notable example was their use of rounding to simplify calculations. For instance, when faced with multiplying 43 by 11, many market kids would round 43 to 40, multiply by 10, and then add 43 to get the correct result of 473—an intuitive trick that seemed to help them tackle problems more efficiently.

“The market kids are able to exploit base 10, so they do better on base 10 problems,” said Esther Duflo, co-author of the study. “The school kids have no idea. It makes no difference to them.” Conversely, the schoolchildren demonstrated a better understanding of formal written methods for division and subtraction.

The findings raise an important issue: while market-working children excel in solving real-world problems quickly, they may be missing out on the formal education necessary for long-term academic success. “It would likely be better for the long-term futures if they also did well in school and wound up with a high school degree or better,” Banerjee said.

The divide between the intuitive problem-solving skills of market kids and the formal methods taught in school suggests that a new approach could be beneficial in the classroom. Banerjee suspects that traditional teaching methods, which often prioritize a single, formal approach to solving problems, may be limiting. He advocates for encouraging students to reason their way toward an approximation of the correct answer, a method that aligns more closely with the informal strategies used by market-working children.

Despite these concerns, Duflo emphasized, “We don’t want to blame the teachers. It’s not their fault. They are given a strict curriculum to follow, and strict methods to follow.”

The question remains: how can schools adjust their teaching methods to better support students’ diverse problem-solving strategies? The research team is actively exploring new experiments to address this issue, with the goal of creating a more inclusive and effective educational system.

“These findings highlight the importance of educational curricula that bridge the gap between intuitive and formal mathematics,” the authors concluded.

The study was supported by the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab’s Post-Primary Education Initiative, the Foundation Blaise Pascal, and the AXA Research Fund.

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