Saturday, October 24, 2015

ET AWARD............... CORPORATE CITIZEN


Making Science
and Maths More Fun


Two entities, Infosys Science Foundation and Infosys Foundation, USA,
both of recent vintage, are driving the CSR activities of Infosys into an
esoteric yet critical realm rarely explored by corporates -science and maths.
The company had steered its CSR initiatives through the Infosys Foundation
with its focus on traditional issues and challenges. They continue to remain
on the CSR radar, but what's galvanising Infosys is the new thrust on
evangelising science and maths across educational, social and professional
 hierarchies, across geographies.
The ET Awards jury was impressed with the `quality of its effort', coupled
with the scale. In 2014-15, Infosys spent `243 crore, or around 2% of its
profits, on CSR. The multifaceted approach is clearly catalysing an
ecosystem in overhauling the understanding, teaching and research in
these subjects.
Over the past year, academic and research campuses of all hues from the
elite TIFR and the IITs to simple assemblies of wideeyed school children
have attended lectures by some of the brightest minds in the world, mostly
jurors and awardees of the Infosys Prize, seeking to inspire and attract
youngsters into the scientific fold. The prize was set up with an endowment
of `100 crore.
An Infosys Prize awardee Manjul Bharg ava, professor at Princeton University
and winner of the 2014 Fields Medal, has been striving to resurrect interest
in the mathematical sciences here like never before. Bhargava, a number
theorist -and an accomplished tabla player -has a knack for blending
Sanskrit, music and magic while discussing maths with young audiences.
Another compatriot, Madhu Sudan, principal researcher at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US and winner of
the 2014 Infosys Prize, had also been doing the rounds of Indian institutions.
He would like to change the way maths is taught in India, by rote,
and thinks `mathematics deserves a better chance to come out of the
shadows'. The ISF is helping this to happen.
NR Narayana Murthy , a trustee of the ISF, is certain that solutions to
our developmental challenges can come only when youngsters think
critically . He says: “We need to train students to translate what they
 imbibe in the classroom into an understanding of the natural and
physical phenomena of science as well as of human behaviour.“
In September 2014, the Infosys Foundation identified Chennai
Mathematical Institute (CMI) as one of the few institutions that can
take the research agenda forward and constituted a corpus of `30 crore
 to enhance faculty compensation and support fellowships.
The Infosys Foundations' efforts at evangelising science and maths
transcend borders with its partnership with the International Mathematics
Union and the New York Academy of Sciences. In April, the Infosys
Foundation, USA, announced a programme with Code.org to expand
computer science education to students in the US. It includes professional
development of teachers, curriculum development and social outreach.
The initiative hopes to reach out to 350 middle and high school teachers
 in the US.
In India, the ISF has set up the Gnanadeepa workshops for similar
purposes. It has trained 680 middle school science and maths teachers
 in rural Karnataka .Evangelising mathematics is, therefore, not restricted
to higher learning institutes only .For the Infosys foundations,
it starts right at the grassroots -at the school levels.

ET19OCT15 

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