Live
- Siddaramaiah has special love for Muslims: BJP
- We can’t afford spending less than 6% of GDP on healthcare
- Guinness World Record for continuous Hanuman Chalisa chanting
- REMOTE TRIBAL AREA TO GET NEW BRIDGE
- Dr LB College, Woxsen teams win in Climate Tank Accelerator event
- CM Revanth petitions for change in Paleru rly line
- Udupi MP seeks more key highways on top priority
- New diet plan rolled out at welfare hostels
- HRF demands for nation-wide caste census
- SP launches Medicover family health card
Just In
Government has advanced the deadline for making 52.5 lakh people digitally literate, under National Digital Literacy Mission, by a year to 2016 than end of 2017 fixed earlier.
New Delhi: Government has advanced the deadline for making 52.5 lakh people digitally literate, under National Digital Literacy Mission, by a year to 2016 than end of 2017 fixed earlier.
"We target to make 52.5 lakh people digitally literate by 2017 under National Digital Literacy Mission. Now, we are looking at meeting this target by 2016. Already, we have certified 10 lakh people and next 8 lakh are in process," said Ajay Kumar, Additional Secretary, Department of Electronics and IT, at a Nasscom event.
The Digital Saksharta Abhiyan (DISHA) or National Digital Literacy Mission (NDLM) Scheme has been formulated to impart IT training to 52.5 lakh persons, including Anganwadi and ASHA workers and authorised ration dealers in all states/UTs across the country so that the non-IT literate citizens are trained to become IT literate.
Kumar said over 1 lakh common service centres are imparting digital training under government's mission to make every member of family digitally literate by 2020 and industry is also actively participating in the mission. At the event, Nasscom Foundation and business software firm SAP announced partnership for opening 25 NDLM centres.
"At Nasscom Foundation, we had target to open 100 NDLM centres. With SAP partnering us we will have 125 centres by end of this fiscal. Together these centres will train 1,000 people every year," Nasscom Foundation Chairman Ganesh Natarajan said.
Nasscom Foundation has 75 centres as of now. "The Foundation is well on its way to achieve digital literacy for five lakh citizens as earmarked by the government and this partnership gives us enough confidence to aim towards doubling the number. The level 1 course is imparted free of cost to people," Nasscom Foundation CEO Shrikant Sinha said. He said the foundation is also launching a nationwide digital literacy volunteering campaign wherein each volunteer will train at least two individuals on digital literacy skills through the newly created NDLM-MyKartavya mobile app.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com