The Vedamani Manuel School of Education wish to bring out a commemorative volume of Jokes shared by N.V.M. as its first publication. Those who remember such narratives are requested to post it soon to the blog or send to bendict67@gmail.com. The contributions will be duely acknowledged and all possible credits will be made available. The narratives will be analysed and re-framed from an academic and integrated educational theory dimension before publication. Entries can be in any language-English, Malayalam, Tamil or Hindi. We wish to bring out the volume by the end of 2012.
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
FIRST VEDAMANI MANUEL AWARD FOR RESEARCH ON SOCIALLY CHALLENGED POPULATIONS PRESENTED TO DR. VIJAYALAKSHMI
The maiden Dr. N. Vedamani Manuel Award for Research on Socially Challenged Populations was presented to Dr. Vijayalakshmi, former principal of S.N.Training College, Nedunganta, Varkala by Padmasree Dr. K. Viswanathan of Mtihrnikehan Vellandu in the commemoration seminar of Dr. N. Vedamani Manuel held at the Department of Educaion , Universiy of Kerala yesterday the 22nd of May 2012. The award carries a Memento besides a cash prize. The seminar was inaugurated by Dr. A. Sukumaran Nair, former Vice Chancellor of M.G.University, Kottayam. The commemoration programme was part of the Dr. N.P.Pillai Centennial Celebraion. Many agencies like Council for Teacher Education (CTE) Kerala State Chapter, Sivadasan Pillai Foundation for Educational Research and Development (SPFERD), Vigyan International Foundation for Education, State Resource Centre and Department of Education collaborated in the organisation of the commemoration programme. Dr. K. R. Sivadasan, former Dean of Education, University of Kerala presided over the meeting. Dr. C. P. Sreekantan Nair, Chirman, CTE, Kerala Chapter launched the Blog - Vedamani Manuel School of Education (drnvedamanimanuel.bogspot.in) The theme of the seminar 'Education of Marginalised-Role of NGOs' was presented by Sri. Pratheesh from Mithranikethan. A gathering of over 100 comprising Students of Dr. N.V.Manuel, Academicians, Teachers, Research Scholars and Master Degree Scholars was part of the august assembly gathered to retreat the life and contributions of a rare specimen of a researcher par excellence of the contemporary history of India like Dr. Nathanael Vedamani Manuel. Dr. K. Viswanathan was also honoured in the occasion as a mark of respect to his contributions in the developmental education movement through Mithranikehan a fond area of Dr. Manuel's academic pursuit. - Benedict
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Sunday, 20 May 2012
A glimpse of the legendary life of Dr. N. Vedamani Manuel
Dr. N. Vedamani Mauel
Born(Ne) : 24 August 1923 at Sawyerpuram,
Tirunelveli District, Tamil Nadu
Designation : Retired Professor of
Education, University of Kerala
Date of Demise: 11.08.2008
Last Office Occupied :
Dean CETED
No 8, Soorya GardensSasthamangalamTrivandrum 695 010
Permanent Residential address at Trivandrum :
40 Kairalinagar, Kanchiramapara, Trivandrum 659 5030, Tel : 0471-2361965
Academic Qualification
B.A. (1942) Triple Second class; Chemistry main (III Part);
Madras University
M.Ed. (1946) First Class, First Rank, Thesis on Science curriculum, Madras
University
M.A. (1950) Second Class I Rank, Tamil Language & Literature, Madras
University
M.A. (1953) Second Class I Rank, Philosophy, Madras University
Certificate in French (1966), Alliance Francaise, Madras;
Lang lab course (1967) L.ADIF, Lyons
Diploma in German (1972) First Class I Rank; Kerala University
Diploma in Russian (1973) First Class II Rank; Kerala University
Attended hundreds of Extension Programmes for teachers for nearly five decades-
Highlights:
1. Bloom’s (First) Evaluation Workshop, Baroda, 1957 (Participant)
2. Summer Institute in Chemistry, CHEM
Study, Annamalai University (six weeks) with Californian team as
resource (Participant)
3. Attended several workshops and conferences in India and abroad in
education, psychology, literature, linguistics, science, development,
environment, habitat, music, musicology, cultural, history, philosophy etc.
Experience
Demonstrator in Chemistry in Intermediate Colleges: 3 years
School Teacher: high school: 3 years; training school: 1 year
In Training Colleges: Lecturer 7 years; Professor; 5 years
In University Dept. of Education: Reader 4 ½ years, Professor 7 ½ years
Research Officer, South Indian Teacher’s Union Council of Research: 3 years
Research Officer, World Confederation of Organisations of Teaching Profession,
Delhi 1 year
UNESCO, Chief Technical Adviser (D1), National Teachers Institute, Nigeria, 1
year.
After
Superannuation, Founding Director Academic Staff College:
1 year
Director, Centre for Educational Research, Innovation, Development,
Mirtraniketan: 4 years
Held several nonformal positions of consultancy, of special lectureships,
guidance.
Now Peripatetic Participant Researcher Dean and Dean, CETED (Centre for
Technology for Development, Trivandum-10 (Tel:2726034)
Directed or served as resource person in several workshops-Highlights:
Stephen Corey’ Action Research workshop for teachers, Coimbatore-20 1959
Directed Curriculum Workshop with Marcella Lawler as resource person (Columbia
Uni) ‘60
While participating as resource person in scores of workshops organized by
NCERT/SCERT, attempted to make them democratic, interactive and relevant to
real issues on the ground wherever possible: In the early phase of Academic
Staff College work as Director and as Resource Persons tried out the
intersection of modern developments in processing deep and abstract concepts in
a form suitable to young mind and in disadvantaged settings focussing of the
structure of various disciplines (which could embrace and generate a mass of
content) The thrust in this approach is to use pedagogy and other processing/communication
disciplines in interaction with the content disciplines taught in colleges and
schools-rather than presenting content and method/pedagogy as separate inputs,
expecting them to get integrated in the trainee somehow: in environmental
approaches including the setting and the contexts too as interaction factors.
In this way interacted with the late 1960s experimental curriculum groups in
Chemistry presided by Dr. (Fr. Yeddnapalli (Loyala College, Madras)-
overall co-ordination and guidance by Dr CNR Rao, Bangalore; The latest in
this area is National
Chemistry Symposium (Chennai) 7-9: In physical education and sports interacted
with National Seminar on Trends and Challenges (University of Kannur)
February 2003.
The maximum of such pedagogy-discipline interaction was in Linguistics and
Language at International School of Dravidian Linguistics and in music with
Kalaimamani Dr. Vasantha Srinivasan, Tuticorin and her circle of distinguished
musicians and with Dr. A. Sukumaran Nair.
In 1990 master-minded and organized the workshop on Mapping of Educational
Innovations from Below at CERID, Mitraniketan with financial support from NCERT.
Held positions in apex bodies relating to Teacher Education:
Member, UGC Teacher Education Panel, 1973-76
Member of many committees of NCERT, particularly those dealing with teacher
education from about 1974-84. Member of Governing Board of NCERT 1982-85.
In research, guided about 100 Masters’ level theses and 35 Ph.D theses; most of
them were done from a teacher-like/participant stance, adding some new
theoretical contribution applicable in practice. The important areas are :
Science education, environmental education, music education, language
education, developmental education, education of the disadvantaged, philosophy,
cultural history, cultural variations and educational adaptations-especially
with the tribes and other ‘culturally different’ groups. Just now giving
more ‘grounding’ to the approaches with the collaboration of creative teachers,
and Kerala Sastra Parishat workers. It is also planned to direct Habitat
Education activities and tribal education research on these lines, Deep
constructs have been developed during the past four years at CETED in
educational integrations with tribals and forest personnel: facilitated by
Dr.C.V. Ananda Bose when he was principal secretary holding SC/ST and forest
portfolios.
Life Member: All India Association for Educational
Research, HQ
Buhubaneswar; Pondicherry Institute of Language and
Culture: Dravidian Linguistics Association (International School of
Dravidian Languages, Trivandrum;
“INDIS”, Trivandrum; Madras Philharmonic Society.)
Member : Libraries of British
Council, Alliance Francaise, Kerala University and
SCERT
Publications/Papers:
Published ten books/booklets, most of them relating to
education and research. Published or read in scholarly conferences about 150
papers. A few exemplars from the early, middle and the latest phases are given:
Early Phases : To major papers
The concept of dreams in early Tamil literature, Madras
Psychological Society, 1955.
Indian Psychology as Revealed in early Tamil literature
(Indian Science Congress, Agra, 1956)
Some major landmark papers in education from 1972 to 1999:
National Lectures in Education (UGC-sponsored) 1980-81:
Reconstructive approaches to education in the context of an
ancient heritage
Environmental approaches to education: a means of enlivening
formal and nonformal education.
Tapping the hidden curricula in work experience and folk art
forms: a way of positive intervention, favouring the very disadvantaged groups.
Innovation, diffusion and distortion in education.
Education as dialogue: an analysis of multiple forms in
formal and nonformal education.
Models of adaptation of education in multilingual and
multicultural contexts.
The relevance of Piaget in the modern educational context.
Other important papers in this period:
1. Some aspects of the theory of communication and teaching
in Tamil literature, First All India Dravidian Linguistics Conference,
Trivandrum 1972.
2. Research in Textbooks, National Seminar on Research,
NCERT, 1973.
3. Trend Report on Research in Philosophy of Education. In
Buch (ed) Survey of Research in Education, Vol. I &II, 1974, 1978
4. Sociology of Knowledge as Revealed from Malayalam
Sources, World Malayalam Conference, 1977.
5. A comparison of English syntax and Tamil-Malayalam syntax
from the reference point of scientific and mathematical syntax, and its
implication for teaching, world Malayalam conference, 1977.
6. Professionalism as an input in Teacher Education. Paper
commissioned by Research Cell of National Commission for teachers 1, December
1983.
7. (a) Formative use of intelligence tests for the
culturally disadvantaged ; (b) Constructs for culture-fair measurement of
intelligence in a multilingual society. National Seminar on Intelligence
Testing , NCERT, 1984
8. Teacher’s and Mental health professionals’ Collaboration.
Dialogue paper, National Institute for Mental Health and Neurosciences,
(NIMHANS) Bangalore 1985
9. Sikhamen paryavaran-upagame:aupacharik aur anaupacharik
siksha men nava jivan sanchar ka sadan (Hindi version of paper on Environmental
Education as means of enlivening formal and nonformal education), NCERT Silver
Jubilee Souvenir, 1986.
10. Education in the Sangam Age, Dravidian Encyclopaedia,
Vol. I. International School of Dravidian Linguistics 1990
11. Innovations in Integrated Education developed at Centre
for Educational Research, Innovation and Development, Conference on Mapping of
Educational Innovation, CERID and NCERT, Trivandrum, 1990.
12. Educational Research in the 21st Century: A
Reconstructionistic and Transdisciplinary View, Golden Jubilee of Entering
Service Seminar, Trivandrum, 1992.
13. Reconstructionistic analysis of the social and
productive context of Mitraniketan as a learning environment for science and
mathematics (CASTME award paper, Manchester, UK) 1992.
14. The Naturalistic-Amoristic Philosophy Reflected in Early
Sangam Literature and its Educational Implications. Indian Philosophy Congress,
Trivandrum, 1993. (Published in PILC Journal of Dravidic Studies 8:2, July
1998, Pondicherry)
15. Reconstructionistic and hermeneutic approaches to
educational history with special reference to Kerala. International Conference
on Kerala Studies , A.K.G. Centre, Trivandrum
Saturday, 19 May 2012
A Professor Who Lived Until His Last Breath!
A FOND
REMEBERANCE BY DR. RAVI SANKAR S. NAIR (March2010)
Prof. N. Vedamani Manuel who served the Department of Education,
the University of Kerala for over twenty years was the quintessential professor
of Education for a generation of students. His immense erudition, ability to
apply pedagogical principles to a variety of subjects ranging from Chemistry to
Musicology, uncanny knack for establishing conceptual links between subjects as
different as Mathematics and Literature and his constant quest for novel
and unorthodox approaches to educational practices made him stand out among the
academics of his generation. True to the adage that a teacher never
retires, the fascination for classroom teaching never left him. After his
retirement from the University, he taught at many schools in Waynad and Palghat
districts, on a voluntary basis, to help low-achieving students. Prof. Manuel
was a true polymath whose scholarship in education, philosophy, psychology,
Sangam literature, English literature, Biblical studies and musicology had
amazed many. He had an admirable command on/over Russian, French and German, in
addition to a reading knowledge of Greek, Latin, Hindi and Kannada. Another
consuming passion in his life was music. He was a competent violinist and was
well versed with the Carnatic and Western musical systems. A passionate teacher
and research guide, Prof. Manuel left a deep impression on his students.
Vedamani Maunel was born on 24th August 1923 at Sawyerpuram,
Tirunelveli District, Tamil Nadu. He took his bachelor’s degree, B A, in 1942
from the Madras University with a triple second class (Chemistry Main (III
Part) and took three master’s degrees, one in Tamil language and literature and
the other in Philosophy from Madras University in 1950 and 1953 respectively
with a second class I Rank and also a Master of Education from the Madras
University on the subject ‘Thesis of Science curriculum’ with first class and
first rank in 1946. He has to his credit, a certificate in French (1966),
[Alliance Francaise, Madras], Language lab course (1967) [L.ADIF, Lyons],
Diploma in German (1972) [First Class, Second Rank; Kerala University] and
Diploma in Russian (1973) [First Class Second Rank; Kerala University].
He worked as a Demonstrator in Chemistry in the Intermediate Colleges for 3
years, as a School Teacher at high school level for 3 years and at a training
school for 1 year. He also made his footprints in Training Colleges as Lecturer
for 7 years, Professor for 5 years and in the University Dept. of Education as
Reader for nearly 5 years, Professor for nearly 8 years. Prof. Vedamani
also worked as a Research Officer in the South Indian Teacher’s Union Council
of Research for 3 years, as a Research Officer in the World Confederation of
Organizations of Teaching Profession, Delhi for 1 year. He was the Chief
Technical Adviser (D1), UNESCO, National Teachers Institute, Nigeria for one
year, Founding Director, Academic Staff College after Superannuation for 1 year
and Director, Centre for Educational Research, Innovation, Development,
Mirtraniketan for 4 years. He also held several non-formal positions as
consultant, special lecturer and research guide. He served as Dean,
Centre for Technology for Development, Trivandum, (CETED). He held
several positions in the apex bodies relating to Teacher Education. He
was a Member, UGC Teacher Education Panel, for a period from 1973 to ‘76.
It was the Department of education, the University of
Kerala that provided the ideal setting for him to bloom as an educationist,
researcher and teacher. The department was headed by Dr. N. P. Pillai and was,
at that time, a beehive of activities. It had a research forum called Forum of
Educational research and studies, Kerala (FERSK) and used to bring out a
journal of its own. Dr. Manuel had as his colleagues, eminent academicians like
Prof. Pushpita John, Dr. Mohan Mathew (who took the first Ph.D. in education
from the University of Kerala) Dr. A. Sukumaran Nair (later Pro-Vice Chancellor
of the University and then Vice-Chancellor of the Mahatma Gandhi University,
Kottayam) and Dr. K. Sivadasan Pillai (a leading figure in non-formal
education). Teaching, research and academic collaborations that took place
during this period was crucial to the educationist in Dr. Manuel coming of age
and he in turn had much to offer to his colleagues. His scholarship and variegated
interests left a mark on the activities of the Department and his
colleagues.
As a teacher, he impressed the students through his deep
scholarship, but he was not a good communicator. One reason for this was that
he was always brimming with ideas from too many subjects and would jump from
one point to another and sometimes even wander away from his original point to
many other subjects. Students who had knowledge and interest in one or two
related areas might not have had much interest in the examples he drew from
totally different fields. He was prone to explain a concept in Chemistry or
Mathematics using analogies drawn from Music or Linguistics. For students who
did not like to wander away from the conventional boundaries of their chosen
subject, this certainly might have been something of a dampener. They would
very often get the feeling that his classroom presentations were disordered and
not systematic! In reality, his lectures contained a wealth of ideas for anyone
prepared to make the effort to listen. The analogies he drew from different
subjects were particularly striking for those students with a wider
perspective. To explain the octet rule in chemistry, Prof. Manuel always made
use of the musical scale. He would explore poetic metre through the musical
concept of Tala. He would frequently
make use of the concept of etic and emic units in Linguistics to delineate
concepts in Education or Sociology. He always threw in a good dose of humour,
especially verbal humour drawn from a variety of languages. The high speed
shuttling between different domains of knowledge and the sheer depth of the
ideas that he attempted to convey had the effect of making his lectures veer
away from neat, highly organized and pointed presentations that most students got
used to in usual classrooms. His favourite subjects were philosophy and
sociology of education, comparative education, science education and history of
education. But, anyone who had the opportunity of knowing him even for a short
time would have found out that he had a fine grasp of almost all areas of
education and related disciplines. He had certain ‘models of education’ for
which he used humourous names like EVP model (Enikkum Venam Paayasam) or Subrahmanya Model
(Name drawn from the story of a quarrel between Ganapati and Subrahmanya).
Beneath the humorous tags, the models enshrine deeply significant principles of
education.
Though well versed in quantitative research methodologies, Prof.
Manuel showed a preference for qualitative methods in the doctoral and
post-graduate dissertations that he supervised. He was fascinated by the
educational ideas and principles latent in our traditional culture. Pedagogy of
Indian Music was another pet theme. Under his guidance, students like S.
Venugopu and Vasantha Sreenivasan carried out significant studies in this area.
The language of science in Malayalam is analyzed from the combined perspectives
of Linguistics and Education in the study carried out by Dr. Radhamony, another
Ph.D. student of Prof. Manuel. He guided over 38 Ph.D. theses in the
areas of Science education, environmental education, music education, language
education, developmental education, education of the disadvantaged, philosophy,
cultural history, cultural variations and educational adaptations–especially
with the tribes and other ‘culturally different’ groups. In 1990, he
master-minded and organized the workshop on Mapping of Educational Innovations
from Below at CERID, Mitraniketan with financial support from NCERT. He
was also the member of many committees of NCERT, particularly those dealing
with teacher education from about 1974-84 and was a member of the Governing
Board of NCERT from 1982-85. He was a Life Member of All India
Association for Educational Research, Pondicherry Institute of Language and
Culture: Dravidian Linguistics Association, “INDIS”, Trivandrum; and Madras
Philharmonic Society.
While participating as a resource person in scores of workshops
organized by NCERT/SCERT, he attempted to make them democratic, interactive and
relevant to the real issues on the ground wherever possible. In the early phase
of Academic Staff College, working as Director and Resource Person, he tried
out the intersection of modern developments in processing deep and abstract
concepts in a form suitable to young minds. The thrust in this approach was to
use pedagogy and other processing/communication disciplines in interaction with
the content disciplines taught in colleges and schools-rather than presenting
content and methodology as separate inputs, expecting them to get integrated by
the trainee, somehow.
Prof. Manuel was popular in the University circles for some
other reasons also. He was known as the ‘Professor who rides a bicycle’. From
the time he joined the University, he commuted by a bicycle. He never owned a
car. He never cared for power or position. While he was teaching in some
schools on a voluntary basis, Prof. Manuel would spend lavishly to buy books,
music instruments and sweets for poor students. Students have fond memories of
this ‘strange man’ who came to teach them with sweets and gifts, and spoke in a
mixed language of Tamil and Malayalam. (In spite of his phenomenal linguistic
abilities, he could never come to grips with spoken Malayalam even after more
than forty years of life in Thiruvananthapuram!)
Friday, 18 May 2012
Commemoration seminar on 4th anniversary of demise
DR. N. VEDAMANI MANUEL COMMEMORATION SEMINAR ON 'EDUCATION OF MARGINALISED SOCIETY: ROE OF NGOs' AT DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, UNIVERSITY OF KERALA AS PAR OF DR. N. P. PILLAI CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION-MONTHLY EVENT OF MAY 2012
22ND AT 2012 AT DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION HALL 10 AM TO 3.30 PM
Monday, 14 May 2012
Department of Education, University of Kerala paid tribute to Dr. N. Vedamani Manuel
The august gathering assembled on the occasion of open defence of the Ph.D. thesis of Sm. Jayasree of G C T E, Thycadu, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala paid tribute to the everlasting memory of the veteran reductionist of India Dr. N. Vedamani Manuel on the fourth anniversary of his heavenly assumption on 11th May 2012 at the Kerala University, Department of Education Auditorium.
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