Downloads: 753
Preeti Singh
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5898 - 5902
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9629
Downloads: 192
Vijay D. Mangukiya
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5903 - 5910
Downloads: 145
P. Muthusamy
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5911 - 5917
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9631
Downloads: 154
Vijay D. Mangukiya
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5918 - 5925
Downloads: 250
Preeti Singh
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5926 - 5930
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9633
Downloads: 133
Hanae Errhouni
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5931 - 5936
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9634
Downloads: 142
Manish Kumar Maurya
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5937 - 5941
Downloads: 151
Indu Bala & Franky Rani
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5942 - 5954
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9636
Downloads: 157
Amit Kumar Tripathi & Mohmad Ehsan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5955 - 5967
Downloads: 176
Amanpreet Singh
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5968 - 5971
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9638
Downloads: 243
Ramesh M
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5972 - 5989
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9639
Downloads: 132
P. Paul Devanesan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5980 - 5985
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9640
Downloads: 142
Sangeeta Aggarwal & Miss Vrinda Aggarwal
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5986 - 5991
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9641
Downloads: 572
A. Selvan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5992 - 5998
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9642
Downloads: 136
Hanae Errhouni
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 5999 - 6004
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9643
Downloads: 10
Anup Kumar Singh & Vivek Vishwakarma
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6005 - 6014
Downloads: 129
Neelu Verma
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6015 - 6021
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9645
Downloads: 184
Sashi Bhushan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6022 - 6033
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9646
Downloads: 283
Sukhraj Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6034 - 6042
Downloads: 163
Omprakash & Seema Dhawan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6043 - 6055
Downloads: 147
Ms. Kanwajit Kaur & S. Pany
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6056 - 6071
Downloads: 137
M. Maruthavanan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6072 - 6076
Downloads: 188
Shobha & Seema Dhawan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6077 - 6085
Downloads: 145
Aasha Yadav & Praveen
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6086 - 6091
Downloads: 182
Shamrao J. Waghmare
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6092 - 6099
Downloads: 189
Khagendra Sethi & Tithi Ray
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6100 - 6107
Downloads: 139
Kuldeep Singh Katoch
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6108 - 6114
Downloads: 126
Bharati G Dhokrat
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6115 - 6118
Downloads: 617
Jayanta Kumar Dash & Ratnaprava Barik
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6119 - 6127
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9657
Downloads: 146
Bharati G Dhokrat
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6128 - 6132
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9658
Downloads: 196
Lalit Kumar & Kavita Batra
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6133 - 6138
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9659
Downloads: 157
Mr. Mohan. A. Vasave & U. V. Nile
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6139 - 6144
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9660
Downloads: 148
Mrs. Amrapali Amit Dumbre & Devanand V. Shinde
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6145 - 6151
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9661
Downloads: 178
Ramandeep Singh Sidhu & Deepak Kumar Chauhan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6152 - 6161
Downloads: 140
Jagdish Rathod
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6162 - 6165
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9663
Downloads: 179
T. Mohamed Saleem & Muneer. V
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6166 - 6171
Downloads: 150
Dharmendra Kumar Kumawat & Deepak Kumar
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6172 - 6177
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9707
Downloads: 149
Rimmy Singh
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6176 - 6180
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9708
Downloads: 216
Vini Sebastian
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6181 - 6187
Downloads: 242
Lubna J. Mansuri
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6188 - 6197
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9710
Downloads: 1
Inderjeet Pal Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6298 - 6302
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9760
Downloads: 1
Inderjeet Pal Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6303 - 6308
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9762
Downloads: 133
Seema Dhawan & Ruchika Verma
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6309 - 6319
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9763
Downloads: 158
Jagdish B. Rathod
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6320 - 6322
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9761
Downloads: 178
Vijay Kumar Kaushal & Rajesh Agrawal
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6323 - 6327
Downloads: 209
K. B. Patil
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6328 - 6332
Downloads: 284
Mangal Nagorav Markad & S. J. Bhoyar
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6333 - 6337
Downloads: 171
Sukhpreet Singh & Ravinder Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6338 - 6365
Downloads: 145
Vandana Maheshwari & Gauri P. Hardikar
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6366 - 6374
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9894
Downloads: 178
Smt. Sushmita Patro
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6375 - 6383
https://doi.org/10.21922/srjhsel.v4i23.9895
Downloads: 143
Ms. Sheetal M. Zalte & Ms. Sushmita Patro
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6384 - 6387
Downloads: 141
Smt. Sushmita Patro & Swarnalata Harichandan
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6388 - 6393
Downloads: 150
Himanshu Tripathi
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6394 - 6400
Downloads: 172
Batool Fatima Khaleel, K B Glory & G. Mohana Charyulu
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6401 - 6406
Downloads: 210
Vandana Singh
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6407 - 6415
Downloads: 251
Rajwinder Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6415 - 6423
Downloads: 154
Rajwinder Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6424 - 6435
Downloads: 147
Ranjana Gupta
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6436 - 6440
Downloads: 241
Gunwant Sonone
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6441 - 6446
Downloads: 164
Gunwant Sonone
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6447 - 6453
Downloads: 191
Sabahat Aslam
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6454 - 6468
Downloads: 733
Javeed Ahmad Raina
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6469 - 6474
Downloads: 163
Minakshi Biswal
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6470 - 6479
Downloads: 186
Rajesh Purohit
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6480 - 6485
Downloads: 161
Vishwasrao Sharad Hari
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6486 - 6494
Downloads: 170
Poonam Gupta
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6486 - 6496
Downloads: 153
Sushil Kumar Dadhwal
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6497 - 6503
Downloads: 179
Harmeet Kaur
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6504 - 6510
Downloads: 158
Vandana Saraswat
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6511 - 6516
Downloads: 934
Wayal Navnath Laxman
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6517 - 6524
Downloads: 135
Vindeshwari Pawar & Rajesh Verma
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6525 - 6535
Downloads: 221
Mangesh Jagdhane & Bansode Balasaheb
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6536 - 6563
Downloads: 146
Anu Malhotra
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6564 - 6571
Downloads: 124
Neerja Asthana
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6572 - 6575
Downloads: 261
Vasiraju Rajyalakshmi
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6576 - 6583
Downloads: 150
Pradip Debnath
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6584 - 6589
Downloads: 195
Ramesh Bhavisetti
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6590 - 6597
Downloads: 155
Khushal Limbraj Mundhe
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6598 - 6601
Downloads: 143
Sumitra
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6602 - 6608
Downloads: 115
Khushal Limbraj Mundhe
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6606 - 6612
Downloads: 194
Madhuri Isave
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6612 - 6617
Downloads: 21
Krishna Shukla
Received Date: 08/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6618 - 6623
Downloads: 210
E. Prashanthi & Dr. G. Samba Siva Rao
Received Date: 25/09/2017 | Accepted Date: 30/09/2017 | Published Date: 01/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6624 - 6635
According to the central government’s estimates, part of its response to a petition filed by activists Anjali Bhardwaj and Harsh Mander in the Supreme Court, around 1.03 million people are residing in relief camps. But this might be an underestimation because the information was not captured from all the shelter homes. Additionally, at least 1.5 million workers are being provided shelter by employers across the country. “Workers in the unorganised sector, which is about 90 per cent of our workforce, have been left in the lurch because they have lost their source of income as businesses have come to a halt. Their savings are meagre and the companies cannot step in to help as they have also been impacted. The government should provide a helping help to them by transferring them minimum wages,” Bhardwaj said. They travelled miles on foot to reach their villages. Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers are still living in shelter homes set up by various state governments in India, while the rest are under quarantine facility before they are allowed to meet their families. The growth of slums can also be attributed to absence of effective urban
planning and failure of urban governance, often accentuated by interference by local
and influential leaders. In order to help administration to have better understanding
of the problem of slums in its entirety and enable the authorities to initiate
appropriate steps to mitigate the hardships of the slum dwellers. Data on various
aspects of slums is collected by the National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO)
and the Registrar General of India and the Census Commissioner of India. National
Building Organization (NBO) is the nodal agency that develops a statistical system
on housing, slums and urban poverty. In this paper lights through upon migrants characters of slum women dwellers a sociological perspectives.
Key words: Migrants, Slums, Urbanization, Women slum dwellers characters
Downloads: 233
Dr. Janaiah Saggurthi
Received Date: 10/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 20/09/2017 | Published Date: 01/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6645 - 6652
Downloads: 277
ASIA
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6653 - 6661
Youth who are blind or partially sighted typically attend secondary school with their sighted peers in preparation for assuming adult responsibilities. Or, they may attend a specialized school that provides both core academic courses and disability-specific skills training. Whether they attend a local school with their sighted peers or a special school, when they complete their primary school studies they will be expected to have mastered their basic literacy skills and be able to apply those skills in more advanced classes.
Effective study skills must be practiced in order for you to improve. It is not enough to simply "think about" studying; you have to actually do it, and in the process use information from what you do to get better. This is the central idea of this page. All that follows depends on this single concept. There is a saying that goes like this: "Practice doesn't make perfect; perfect practice makes perfect." If you want to be an achiever, take this saying to heart.
Downloads: 85
P. China Hanumantha Rao & Bysani V Ramakrishna
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6663 - 6668
The purpose of this investigation was to assess the mental health of adolescent students. A stratified random sampling technique was used to pick 200 adolescent students from the 9th and 10th classes, ages 14 to 16, who were enrolled in government and private secondary schools in Ongole town. The Mental Health Inventory developed by Jagadish and Srivastava in 2014 was used. The reliability of the scale is established through the test-retest method, which yielded a reliability score of 0.73. The findings of the study revealed that there is a significant difference in the mental health of adolescent students with respect to their gender. Male adolescent students have better mental health than the female students. There is no significant difference in the mental health of adolescent students with respect to their locality, management, and medium of instruction.
Downloads: 80
Dr Shanthamma TR & Dr Krishnamurthy NP
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6669 - 6672
Downloads: 87
John Kanaparthy & Dr. Pakala Naga Suresh Kumar
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6673 - 6681
The present research article aims to examine the level of environmental ethics of prospective teachers. To carry out this research, the investigator utilized a descriptive survey method, and the sample was chosen through a stratified random sampling method. This research involved 120 prospective teachers registered in the B.Ed. Programme at particular selected teacher education institutions in Guntur City, located in Guntur District of Andhra Pradesh. The data was gathered using the Environmental Ethics Scale, which was developed by Haseen Taj in 2001. The mean, standard deviation, and "t" test were used in the statistical analysis of the data. The results show that 21% of the prospective teachers possess low environmental ethics, 64% of prospective teachers possess average environmental ethics, and 15% of prospective teachers possess high environmental ethics. Overall, the study indicates that prospective teachers exhibit average environmental ethics. It was also found that there exists a significant difference in the environmental ethics of prospective teachers based on their gender. The environmental ethics displayed by female prospective teachers are superior to those of their male counterparts. There exists no significant difference in the environmental ethics of prospective teachers from rural and urban areas concerning their locality. There exists no significant difference in the environmental ethics of prospective teachers from government and private sectors regarding their management practices. There exists a significant difference in the environmental ethics of prospective teachers in the fields of arts and science concerning their respective subjects. Prospective teachers in science exhibited superior environmental ethics compared to their counterparts in arts.
Downloads: 26
Nagaraju Musiboina & Rambabu Kalla
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6682 - 6691
Teacher professional development (TPD) plays a crucial role in enhancing educational effectiveness and improving student learning outcomes. In the context of rapidly changing educational environments, teachers are required to continuously update their knowledge, pedagogical skills, and technological competencies. This theoretical paper examines the concept of teacher professional development and its relationship with educational effectiveness. It highlights key dimensions of professional development, including pre-service and in-service training, reflective practice, collaborative learning, and continuous professional growth. The paper also discusses challenges such as inadequate training opportunities, lack of resources, and resistance to change. Finally, it emphasizes the need for structured, sustained, and need-based professional development programs to improve teaching quality and educational outcomes.
Downloads: 38
U. Siva Lakshmi
Received Date: 09/08/2017 | Accepted Date: 26/09/2017 | Published Date: 04/10/2017
Issue: Aug-Sep, 2017 | Volume/Issue:4/23 | Page No.: 6692 - 6704
Educational psychology is essential for understanding learning and improving educational practices. This paper examines contemporary issues in educational psychology, including learner diversity, academic motivation, mental health, inclusive education, and technology integration. It also highlights emerging trends such as learner-centred learning, self-regulated learning, and social-emotional development. The paper discusses key challenges faced by educators and explores future perspectives focused on evidence-based practices, psychological support services, and technology-enhanced learning. The study concludes that educational psychology continues to play a vital role in promoting effective teaching, meaningful learning, and holistic learner development.