Wednesday, June 20, 2007

As It Happened-2

Please Note:

Date: June 21, 2007
Time: 8-9pm (Your Time in the World)
Planned Action: Turn Off The Switch.

For details, please visit http://www.aidboston.org/LightsOffDay/

Am looking forward to spending the hour without consuming electricity in any form- no computer, no TV, no Mobile, no Microwave, no Light, no Fan, no A/C, no Heater, no Ipod! Since I cannot force my roommate to do the same, it'll be hard to stay indoors at that time. A walk around the area will help, perhaps.

Part 2 begins here...
Balaji's speech was on a Tuesday(May 22nd). I was kind of skeptical about how many people would turn up, considering that the speech was scheduled for 6:30pm, when most of the Qualcomm-ers would still be at work(about 70% Indians in San Diego must be working for Qualcomm, i think), and was pleasantly surprised to see about 30 people turn up before the clock had struck 6:30. By the time the speech started at 7pm, the auditorium which could seat about 60 plus had capacity crowd, and more.
I was awed the very moment i saw Balaji. He was very simple....so simple that he was wearing Hawaii slippers! He looked very much like a guy who gave up Communications and a heap of dollars for his country. Refreshments were served before the speech and it was Balaji all the way from the time he started the speech off by showing a video of a couple of village girls trying to read a paragraph in Tamil- one being reasonably fluent and the other struggling to read words.
His "Padippum Inikkum" campaign has created magic in the government schools in Tamilnadu. To give a sample statistic, "5th standard children who can read at least small sentences has increased from 58% to 85% in 5 months!" The campaign started off in five districts and having impressed the Tamilnadu government with its results, is now going to be extended to 10. The government wants to project it as its own idea, and it needs to be seen to believe Balaji's reaction to it. He says, "How does it matter? As long as things get done, let the government take all the credit". This essentially underlines the man's character. He is so selfless, generous and humble. He maintains that all his "Padippum Inikkum" campaign has done is to make some kids who had troubles reading to read fluently and that is all. When people like me, who have hardly done anything for the society, get to hear this- the effect is unbelievable.
He went in depth about the campaign. The program basically classifies children in third to fifth standards into five different levels, based on how well they can read. Each level has specific training tools to improve the children's reading skills in that level. The current goal of the program is not to make all children read equally well. The program understands that all children are not equal. Its goal is "only" to improve each kid's reading skills from what it was before starting the program. "Only" Balaji could have framed the previous sentence using the word "only"! He is so modest and is un-accepting of praise that it makes you want to adore him. In essence, each kid is compared only against itself. There is absolutely no pressure on the kid, given that the training tools are totally fun! It is designed in a way that it makes the children want to read! He collects different materials for his campaign wherever he goes. There are people all around the globe providing him with training materials.
The schools in each of these five districts are also classified into three types- A, B and C, based on how co-operative the staff in each of those schools are(most cases there's just one staff, for Tamil atleast!). A-schools are those where the staff were really co-operative and C-schools are the opposite. In C-schools, the staff would not allow "Padippum Inikkum" at all. Most of them felt that it belittled what they were doing and some of them were demanding a pay hike to allow the program be a part of the school curriculum! Given that A-schools would take care of themselves and C-schools had minimal scope, most attention was given to the B-schools(!!). There were volunteers who made rounds to each of these schools on a regular basis, monitoring how well the program was being implemented. The results were staggering, and that's how the Tamilnadu Government took note of the program. They wanted the program to be implemented in all 30 districts of Tamilnadu, but Balaji was very realistic about it and advocated that only 10 districts should be considered for now. He needs crores and crores of rupees to even make it work in 10 districts, and that was the prime motive of his visit to the US this time! He has no doubts that he'll get the required money as and when he needs it and that showed another dimension of the man- a quiet confidence and lots of optimism.
Here are some vital statistics about Padippum Inikkum:
* 4, 50, 000 children from 7300 schools benefitted from the campaign, which lasted from October 2006 to March 2007 in 5 districts.
* 92% of the children have improved their reading skills by at least one level within 5 months.
* Number of schools where more than 70% children can read went up from 78 to 2107!
The speech went until 8:45 pm or so and there were tens of questions and we had to forcefully end the program at 10pm.
We went to one of the volunteers' place to eat some home-cooked dinner and he continued from where he left and answered the questions we had for him through dinner. One of the volunteers, who's an American lady in her late fifties was left in awe hearing him talk. She confessed as much to him. She told him that the fact that he kept his feet firm on earth despite his achievements, and the fact that he's ready to give up all credits as long as things keep happening are things that she doesn't get to see in day to day life. He replied by saying that he felt she was placing him high on a pedestal and that what he was doing was very small. She said, "See. That's what I am talking about", and we all had to agree...
It was almost 1 am when i finally reached home that night. I was so excited by what i got to see and hear. There was an exclusive meeting for the volunteers that evening and I couldn't wait for it to get started. There was also this party my company had organized that day in celebration of the successful launch of the product that my team was working on. That was at "Dave & Busters" at 3pm and the meet with Balaji was at 6:30pm. So, a busy day was awaiting me and it hardly took me a minute to goto sleep after i went to bed that night...
More about the informal talk with Balaji, HH Sri Sri Tridandi Srimannarayana Ramanuja Chinna Jeeyar Swamiji's talk about Vedas, Mantras and Meditation, my trip to the Rocky Mountain National Park, Dr. Menon's talk and Ravi and Aravinda's visit in my upcoming blog entries!

16 comments:

Gads said...

Its 4pm in Chennai and I will not use electricity from 7-8pm. :)

I registerd in the link you gave and I see only 194 participants before me. If this is the first time such thing is being done, its a good start.

Anonymous said...

Hi Ram,
Thanks for the update. :-)

Gads said...

I did it! :D One hour no mobile, no fan, no light, no comp!! :D

Anonymous said...

@ Gads: It certainly is a miracle dat u did it :P

Gads said...

@Vijayaraghavan: Miracles do happen! ;)

Ram said...

Gads- good job! :) - i saw the registration thing myself only after you mentioned it. I think people must have missed it. But as both of us will agree, numbers don't matter here :)

Heretic- you are welcome!

Siva said...

yeah. got the same feeling when I met Balaji in UC. so simple and down to earth. He was ranked 3rd in IIT and after finishing his bachelors finished his Phd from UMCP (if my memory is not wrong). the trials and tribulations he faced at home to convince them as well as himself was just some feeling, when he shared them to us. His 100 block plan was also one of the most successful launches in TN but not so successful in bihar. wish I could get back to AID sometime...

Ram said...

Siva- yupp. yeah, you should!

Labakku Das said...

As an aside to the switch off campaign, I would like you to read a very pertinent article called "CEO and the wealth of notions" in The Hindu editorial a couple of weeks back.

Labakku Das said...

Found it ! :)
http://www.hindu.com/2007/06/12/stories/2007061201821000.htm

Labakku Das said...

Directly read the 8-9-10 paras for pertinent stuff :P

Ram said...

hey Rajeev- thanks for that! although it was not totally surprising, some of the stats were quite an eye-opener. A small sacrifice by each of us will go a long way in wiping poverty off the face of the earth. Thanks again! :)

Ram said...

I don't think poverty is going anywhere from the face of the earth.
It is here to stay:).
i guess poverty has always been around. as have all kinds of things.

when i read that link, i decided i would not do any such thing. I will use all the energy i need and pay as much as i owe for it. period. if getting me that energy is not sustainable, let the energy company come up with better technology.

Ram said...

Namesake- it's all about priorities and perspectives, isn't it? the only mantra in life, as i see it, is that each of us have to live our life the way it makes/keeps us happy. Have fun blasting your A/C and boombox! People like the ones who registered in that website will do the worrying for you :)

you'll probably never know what it is to be poor until your time ends, but atleast a fraction of the people below the poverty line will get to know what it is to have three meals a day before my time ends :)

Ram said...

hey i submitted a comment but it did not appear!!
any way, thats a bad assumption .. i have been through far worse times than one would imagine, looking at me now. :) But thats beside the point.

in general these things are like Bill Gates' argument. "to reduce the number of preventable deaths, get business interested, show them profit in saving lives"

That is unfortunate, as long as we live off the assumption that some people need a reason to save a life, and get profit doing it, we will continue to have people dying.
some fine day id like to bring this up for discussion.

-Ram

Ram said...

aah, it was you! i thought it was some other Ram!