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  1. Oct 14, 2017 · Over the next five years Mitra progressed his hole in the wall experiment to focus on delivering more specific knowledge – by posing questions via the computer in the hole in the wall. One question he asked, for example, was ‘why does hair grow’?

    • Experiments

      The two-stage balloon rocket experiment is a useful...

    • Pedagogy

      In 1999 Sugata Mitra put a computer connected to the...

    • India

      Why was partitioning India deemed to be necessary? As a...

    • Education

      The Functionalist perspective on education – brief revision...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sugata_MitraSugata Mitra - Wikipedia

    Mitra claimed that children in the rural slums of India, many of whom had never seen a computer in their lives had, when left with computers in kiosks, taught themselves everything from "character mapping" to advanced topics such as "DNA replication" on their own, without adult assistance.

  3. Nov 2, 2023 · Mitra has conducted hole-in-the-wall experiments in over 20 countries around the world. His research has shown that children are capable of self-directed learning, especially when they are given access to the Internet. Mitra's work has been praised by educators and policymakers around the world.

  4. Beginnings. Dr. Sugata Mitra, Chief Scientist at NIIT, is credited with the discovery of Hole-in-the-Wall. As early as 1982, he had been toying with the idea of unsupervised learning and computers. Finally, in 1999, he decided to test his ideas in the field. On 26th January, Dr. Mitra's team carved a "hole in the wall" that separated the NIIT ...

  5. Using the Hole in the Wall setup with a single PC, children can learn to do most or all of the following tasks in approximately three months: 1. basic computer navigation functions, such as click, drag, open, close, resize, minimize and menu selection. 2. drawing and painting pictures on the computer. 3. loading and saving files.

  6. Nov 6, 2018 · Today, considered a specialist in education science, Sugata Mitra distinguishes himself thanks to his “Hole in the Wall” experiment which led him to believe that education is a system that self-organizes. In 1999, Sugata Mitra questioned the autonomous learning capacity of children.

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  8. Apr 25, 2024 · Mithraism, the worship of Mithra, the Iranian god of the sun, justice, contract, and war in pre-Zoroastrian Iran. Known as Mithras in the Roman Empire during the 2nd and 3rd centuries CE, this deity was honored as the patron of loyalty to the emperor.