What's new

Meet Salman Khan, an Indo-Bangladeshi who wants to educate 450 Million Indian children

Riyad

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Jul 30, 2015
Messages
1,525
Reaction score
-5
Country
Bangladesh
Location
Bangladesh
His father is from Bangladesh, mother from India. So he is hybrid of India-Bangladesh. :p:

Salman Khan's Khan Academy comes to India, offers free online lessons to kids


sal-khan7.jpg


Sahil Mohan Gupta | Follow @DigitallyBones | New Delhi, December 3, 2015 | UPDATED 13:56 IST


On Thursday, non-profit online learning platform Khan Academy launched a Hindi portal for India. Brainchild of MIT graduate Salman Khan -- not to be confused with the Bollywood actor -- the launch of the Hindi portal of Khan Academy comes after Khan met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Silicon Valley, California, back in September this year.

"We're really excited -- we are a not-for-profit organisation with mission of bringing free education to the world," said Salman Khan. "A part of the world which could use this kind of resource and where my roots are from, is India," said Khan who was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana in the US.

Khan Academy is an online learning platform which offers free resources for both educators and students. Based in Mountain View, Khan Academy combines educational videos with world class software.

The Hindi portal, which is being launched in India, isn't a complete educational resource for school children. At the time of launch, it will have resources for grades 5-8, which is basically middle school. It also has around about 2,000 videos for mathematics lessons.

salman-khan_647_120315015624.jpg


For India, Khan Academy has also hired Sandeep Bapna as the country manager, which is first for the NGO.

Khan views the platform as a resource, which can supercharge the education of a student who is studying at a well-resourced educational institute, as well as fill in the gaps.

"If a student has access to a great school, Khan Academy can supercharge it. It should help a well-resourced school and if you don't have that, the Khan Academy can have even a bigger impact. But I don't see it as replacing the actual schools... we want to empower teachers and fill in the gaps," said Khan.

Khan Academy is already seeing a lot of organic traction in India. The NGO is anticipating a 3X growth in India, despite not having a particular focus on the market. In 2012, it had around 2.1 million users, and by the end of 2015 it estimates more than 8 million users in India. Globally, it estimates to cross 20 million users by the end of the month.

Khan Academy is working on aligning the curriculum with that of India. It already says that for mathematics, the NCERT curriculum in India is quite similar to the one in the United States.

The content too, the NGO claims is of a higher quality than of any free resource especially for a vernacular language found in India.
"The content that is available has been developed for a particular market, which is sterile. Khan Academy allows internalisation of the content and there are elements of gamification," said Ashish Dhawan, founder and chairman of the Central Square Foundation.
"If you try to find free resources, particularly in Hindi, and of a high quality, it is non-existent. That really makes Khan Academy different," he added.

It will also announce a partnership with the Tata Trust for some investment in its India operations. The entry into India comes with a realisation that it will not shake things up immediately considering the obstacles with regard to connectivity, power and language at play, claims the NGO. But over time, it plans on partnering with the telecom operators and other stake holders in India. "We look it as a long term play. The trend is that data is being used more and more, and so this is the right time," said Sandeep Bapna, its India country head.

With time Khan Academy hopes to piggy back on the exploding mobile market in India. "While the penetration of mobile is at around 15 per cent, it is exploding in India. It is about investing in the future," said Sandeep Bapna. Khan who is in India for the launch said that he will be meeting the education minister and also some entrepreneurs who could invest into the platform.



Read more at: Salman Khan's Khan Academy comes to India, offers free online lessons to kids : News, News - India Today
 
Anything is possible when Indians and Banglas join hands and work together...!!
 
His father is from Bangladesh, mother from India. So he is hybrid of India-Bangladesh. :p:

Salman Khan's Khan Academy comes to India, offers free online lessons to kids


sal-khan7.jpg


Sahil Mohan Gupta | Follow @DigitallyBones | New Delhi, December 3, 2015 | UPDATED 13:56 IST


On Thursday, non-profit online learning platform Khan Academy launched a Hindi portal for India. Brainchild of MIT graduate Salman Khan -- not to be confused with the Bollywood actor -- the launch of the Hindi portal of Khan Academy comes after Khan met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Silicon Valley, California, back in September this year.

"We're really excited -- we are a not-for-profit organisation with mission of bringing free education to the world," said Salman Khan. "A part of the world which could use this kind of resource and where my roots are from, is India," said Khan who was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana in the US.

Khan Academy is an online learning platform which offers free resources for both educators and students. Based in Mountain View, Khan Academy combines educational videos with world class software.

The Hindi portal, which is being launched in India, isn't a complete educational resource for school children. At the time of launch, it will have resources for grades 5-8, which is basically middle school. It also has around about 2,000 videos for mathematics lessons.

salman-khan_647_120315015624.jpg


For India, Khan Academy has also hired Sandeep Bapna as the country manager, which is first for the NGO.

Khan views the platform as a resource, which can supercharge the education of a student who is studying at a well-resourced educational institute, as well as fill in the gaps.

"If a student has access to a great school, Khan Academy can supercharge it. It should help a well-resourced school and if you don't have that, the Khan Academy can have even a bigger impact. But I don't see it as replacing the actual schools... we want to empower teachers and fill in the gaps," said Khan.

Khan Academy is already seeing a lot of organic traction in India. The NGO is anticipating a 3X growth in India, despite not having a particular focus on the market. In 2012, it had around 2.1 million users, and by the end of 2015 it estimates more than 8 million users in India. Globally, it estimates to cross 20 million users by the end of the month.

Khan Academy is working on aligning the curriculum with that of India. It already says that for mathematics, the NCERT curriculum in India is quite similar to the one in the United States.

The content too, the NGO claims is of a higher quality than of any free resource especially for a vernacular language found in India.
"The content that is available has been developed for a particular market, which is sterile. Khan Academy allows internalisation of the content and there are elements of gamification," said Ashish Dhawan, founder and chairman of the Central Square Foundation.
"If you try to find free resources, particularly in Hindi, and of a high quality, it is non-existent. That really makes Khan Academy different," he added.

It will also announce a partnership with the Tata Trust for some investment in its India operations. The entry into India comes with a realisation that it will not shake things up immediately considering the obstacles with regard to connectivity, power and language at play, claims the NGO. But over time, it plans on partnering with the telecom operators and other stake holders in India. "We look it as a long term play. The trend is that data is being used more and more, and so this is the right time," said Sandeep Bapna, its India country head.

With time Khan Academy hopes to piggy back on the exploding mobile market in India. "While the penetration of mobile is at around 15 per cent, it is exploding in India. It is about investing in the future," said Sandeep Bapna. Khan who is in India for the launch said that he will be meeting the education minister and also some entrepreneurs who could invest into the platform.



Read more at: Salman Khan's Khan Academy comes to India, offers free online lessons to kids : News, News - India Today
Respect for the man
 
I don't think 450M childeren India are uneducated.
 
I don't think 450M childeren India are uneducated.

Where in the article does it say that 450m in india are uneducated? The Khan Academy is a online teaching resource, targeted toward young people in the US, and now with the availability of high speed internet, they will be making those resources and new indian specific courses to the 450m students in india.
 
lofty goal or tall claim but thumbs up for good intention :tup:. We need such brave optimists who want to share knowledge and improve ppls life. They are always :welcome:.
 
Great initiave...And even my son use this website for his Maths...Its an awesome site....And guys you know..how much it pays for director level role?...It pays around 50-55 lakhs PA...and a bungalow which costs around 80-90k of rent in city like Hyd....One of my friend has joined it directly from Europe...
 
His father is from Bangladesh, mother from India. So he is hybrid of India-Bangladesh.

Yet he says:

"A part of the world which could use this kind of resource and where my roots are from, is India," said Khan who was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana in the US.

Has he done anything similar in Bangladesh...or plans to?

@waz Please move to proper forum...thanks!
 
Last edited:
Yet he says:



Has he done anything similar in Bangladesh...or plans to?

@waz Please move to proper forum...thanks!

Yes there are ongoing talks between his organisation and Grameen to see what projects are suitable for Bangladesh. Right now the Bangladesh government is working with the Chinese private sector to build one of the largest data centres, in Bangladesh...once thats done you'll see massive jump in online start ups and virtual education....

@damiendehorn GoI has been already working on such projects, both in India and Bangladesh.

The Khan Academy has far greater experience in delivering these solution then any governments can provide. In Bangladesh I think the KA/Grameen project has better chance of success, as Grameen already has the infrastructure (Grameen own the biggest mobile network, is one of the worlds largest NGO, and respected brand) while TKA has the content.
 
Yet he says:

He is selling it in India so showing his Indian root. He will do same type promoting in BD too. But now BD online education sector is very limited as its only growing high speed internet recently.

Btw these newbie forumars are too much.
 
The Khan Academy has far greater experience in delivering these solution then any governments can provide. In Bangladesh I think the KA/Grameen project has better chance of success, as Grameen already has the infrastructure (Grameen own the biggest mobile network, is one of the worlds largest NGO, and respected brand) while TKA has the content.
Don't lie. :nono: They are even.behind small Indian firms, leave alone GoI.
I can understand because it is a big achievemt of pride for Bangladesh. But you shou not defy reality. Khan's can manage to compete for education in countries like pakistan and Nepal but impossible in India. They will have t aid from GoI to reach standards.
 
Back
Top Bottom