how do we create shared space of love, learn from existing spaces of caring and sharing, how to redefine cities, as places of connected communities and not alienated neighbourhood, how do we care for nature in cities
Stepssussexabcdefsept2409 090929085200-phpapp02 (1) manifesto for honey bee n...Dr Anil Gupta
it was shared at a meeting at IDS sussex, uk describes how does one move from abc to def in social innovation, grassroots technological solution to persistent problem
creativity and innovation by children at unicef innovation centre boston 2015...Dr Anil Gupta
can children creativity influence public policy?
yes indeed, children are not sink of sermons, but also source of ideas
Print 'Wash your hands' on every lunch box
when have we seen so much policy traction for an idea of knowledge-rich, economically poor girl child in our country? Thanks and congratulations to Ms Maneka Gandhi, Minister of women and child Welfare, Union Government, for appreciating the idea of Shireen and taking it up for urgent implementation at the highest level.
If there were more ministers paying attention to grassroots ideas and creativity, India can transform faster than ever before, hope PMO India is listening
This idea was spotted in a children's creativity workshop organised by Sristi Ahmedabad as a part of Festival of Innovation (FOIN) Rashtrapati Bhavan with the support of #UNICEF, National Innovation Foundation - India and #gian Honey Bee Network
IIM Ahmedabad Anamika Dey Chetan V Patel Techpedia.in : students, start-ups, society Innovations at Grassroots/ ICCIG @agakhanfoundation
This will also be processed in Ignite competition by National Innovation Foundation - India for #manak and Inspire program of DST
also see my new book new book on grassroots Innovation, Penguin Random House, New Delhi, 2016
http://www.amazon.in/Grassroots-Innovation-Minds-Margin-Marginal/dp/8184005873
Ieee ghtc 2014 anil gupta iima Empathetic innovations for closing the social ...Dr Anil Gupta
Empathetic innovations for closing the social & technological gap:
Empathetic innovations for closing the social technological gap: Honey Bee Network Model
Inclusion of bypassed spaces, sectors, skills and social segments in developmental agenda has rightly engaged the attention of world technology leaders. But this inclusion in the true sense, may not happen unless we begin to learn from grassroots innovators and communities and blend formal and informal S & T systems. This has been the mission pursued by The Honey Bee Network, a social movement for the last twenty five years. The heuristics of sustainable frugal innovation will not emerge from a jugaad (makeshift) mentality. These will require an empathetic understanding of affordability, accessibility, availability, rejuvenability, durability and circularity of products and services. Designing new solutions by building upon artefactual, metaphorical, heuristic and gestalt aspects of innovation will fertilise our imagination, enrich scientific inquiry and result in reciprocal, responsive, and responsible relationship with knowledge rich- economically poor, creative communities.
Choosing the right road engaging with knowledge rich, economically poor peop...Dr Anil Gupta
how do reduce ex ante and ex post transaction costs of grassroots green innovators to link them with investment and enterprise. what are the lessons for augmenting GRI and how do we learn form honey bee network experience. why reverse globalisation is necessary. how to link formal and informal sector of innovations. economically poor people are not at the bottom of all pyramids. they may in fact be at the top of the innovation, ethical and creativity pyramid, a facet which terms like BOP miss completely.
Conserving diversity of nature, culture, and institutions nbri 2013Dr Anil Gupta
how do we link cultural and biological diversity; what kind of institutions we create for conservation, how we forge link between formal and informal sector of science, technology and institutions for developing reciprocal, responsible and responsive relationships; frugal innovation, grassroots knowledge, traditional knowledge, benefit sharing
presentation at vallidolid, spain on how to create innovation ecosystem which provides opportunity to minorities, children, creative communities and individual innovators even from informal sector,
Stepssussexabcdefsept2409 090929085200-phpapp02 (1) manifesto for honey bee n...Dr Anil Gupta
it was shared at a meeting at IDS sussex, uk describes how does one move from abc to def in social innovation, grassroots technological solution to persistent problem
creativity and innovation by children at unicef innovation centre boston 2015...Dr Anil Gupta
can children creativity influence public policy?
yes indeed, children are not sink of sermons, but also source of ideas
Print 'Wash your hands' on every lunch box
when have we seen so much policy traction for an idea of knowledge-rich, economically poor girl child in our country? Thanks and congratulations to Ms Maneka Gandhi, Minister of women and child Welfare, Union Government, for appreciating the idea of Shireen and taking it up for urgent implementation at the highest level.
If there were more ministers paying attention to grassroots ideas and creativity, India can transform faster than ever before, hope PMO India is listening
This idea was spotted in a children's creativity workshop organised by Sristi Ahmedabad as a part of Festival of Innovation (FOIN) Rashtrapati Bhavan with the support of #UNICEF, National Innovation Foundation - India and #gian Honey Bee Network
IIM Ahmedabad Anamika Dey Chetan V Patel Techpedia.in : students, start-ups, society Innovations at Grassroots/ ICCIG @agakhanfoundation
This will also be processed in Ignite competition by National Innovation Foundation - India for #manak and Inspire program of DST
also see my new book new book on grassroots Innovation, Penguin Random House, New Delhi, 2016
http://www.amazon.in/Grassroots-Innovation-Minds-Margin-Marginal/dp/8184005873
Ieee ghtc 2014 anil gupta iima Empathetic innovations for closing the social ...Dr Anil Gupta
Empathetic innovations for closing the social & technological gap:
Empathetic innovations for closing the social technological gap: Honey Bee Network Model
Inclusion of bypassed spaces, sectors, skills and social segments in developmental agenda has rightly engaged the attention of world technology leaders. But this inclusion in the true sense, may not happen unless we begin to learn from grassroots innovators and communities and blend formal and informal S & T systems. This has been the mission pursued by The Honey Bee Network, a social movement for the last twenty five years. The heuristics of sustainable frugal innovation will not emerge from a jugaad (makeshift) mentality. These will require an empathetic understanding of affordability, accessibility, availability, rejuvenability, durability and circularity of products and services. Designing new solutions by building upon artefactual, metaphorical, heuristic and gestalt aspects of innovation will fertilise our imagination, enrich scientific inquiry and result in reciprocal, responsive, and responsible relationship with knowledge rich- economically poor, creative communities.
Choosing the right road engaging with knowledge rich, economically poor peop...Dr Anil Gupta
how do reduce ex ante and ex post transaction costs of grassroots green innovators to link them with investment and enterprise. what are the lessons for augmenting GRI and how do we learn form honey bee network experience. why reverse globalisation is necessary. how to link formal and informal sector of innovations. economically poor people are not at the bottom of all pyramids. they may in fact be at the top of the innovation, ethical and creativity pyramid, a facet which terms like BOP miss completely.
Conserving diversity of nature, culture, and institutions nbri 2013Dr Anil Gupta
how do we link cultural and biological diversity; what kind of institutions we create for conservation, how we forge link between formal and informal sector of science, technology and institutions for developing reciprocal, responsible and responsive relationships; frugal innovation, grassroots knowledge, traditional knowledge, benefit sharing
presentation at vallidolid, spain on how to create innovation ecosystem which provides opportunity to minorities, children, creative communities and individual innovators even from informal sector,
Vallidolid spain presentation on creative communities, innovative individuals Dr Anil Gupta
this presentation based on a talk given on jan 18 draws upon several previous thoughts and ideas, comments are invited and usual disclaimers apply, feedback may be sent at anilgb @ gmail. com
Tensions in open innovation systems, honey bee network perspective akg 2014Dr Anil Gupta
why is open innovation philosophy becoming so important for public and private organizations? what are the lessons from honey bee network which was perhaps the first voice for open innovations twenty five years ago. How to make most O I platforms more symmetrical? why dont corporations realise that without sufficient reciprocity, they might kill the golden goose? how do we learn from creativity of children( ignite@nifindia.org) , tech students ( techpedia.in), informal sector ( nifindia.org and sristi.org , gian.org) and other streams of society. volunteers are welcome to contact and join the HBN info@sristi.org or anilg@sristi.org anilgb@gmail.com
India reimagined redefined reignited 2013 14 anil gupta iima Dr Anil Gupta
inclusive innovation ecosystem in india, national innovation foundation, honey bee network, ignite, techpedia.in , gian, sristi, ahmedabad, how doe sone learn from innovations, autopoesis model fo innovation, frugality, sustainable development, mind on margin are not marginal minds,
India reimagined redefined reignited 2013Anil Gupta
how do we learn from innovations by grassroots workers, children, tech students and professionals, four levels of learning, artefactual, metaphorical, heuristics, gestalt, fuve tensions such as autonomy vis a vis agency, open source standard of excellence, autopoesis model of innovation, honey bee network, grassroots innovations,
why does inertia persist for decades and centuries in technologies used by poor people particularly women? why despite millions spent on social innovation problems of poor remain unaddressed; how does honey bee network help bridge the gap
Engagement, involvement and immersion (EII): diaspora for developmentDr Anil Gupta
There is a huge upsurge in the mood of non-resident Indians to engage with developmental currents in the country. Many of them want to contribute toward building up a New India but don't know enough about how to go about it. The suggestions below may help all stakeholders in making this happen. I am also attaching 15 global inclusive innovation challenge which may be addressed by the diaspora in a very productive manner.Support—sporadic causes
Sustain -- ongoing initiatives of state, market, civil society, mentor, strengthen the existing programs
Spawn ---sow the seeds of new ideas, innovations
Scale up– help scale up upcoming start-ups, fledgling initiatives, small enterprises of women, disabled etc.,
Start-up– set up new enterprises for meeting the unmet social needs,
Stitch a gap: missing link in development value chain
Submit – immersion program for NRI youth in Indian reality, culture and voluntary work jointly with Indian youth
Mapping and Tapping hotspots of creativity: Learning from a resource in which...Dr Anil Gupta
Presentation made to UNDP Delhi team to persuade them as to why it is important to recognise, respect and reward creative individuals and communities at the grassroots level. The innovations for and from grassroots are both important but former get more attention than the latter. Dev programs should aim at giving voice visibility and velocity to frugal and sustainable solutions. grassroots innovations are not jugaad, they are borne aout of numeorus iterations of experiments and trials. The Honey Bee Network started 30 years ago is keen to support such efforts globally. it also seeks volunteers to join hands with us see sristi.org, gian.org,. nifindia.org anilg.sristi.org
Hbn experience 2019 shared with Namibian Innovation Conference feb 7 2019Dr Anil Gupta
how to build upon local knowledge, creativity and innovation in the #African context : why not mobilise students to search, spread, celebrate innovations and sense the #unmet #social
#needs #honeybeenetwork #gioan #sristi #nif
#creativity #
This presentation gives insight about honey bee network. An effort of Nif, Gian working for local entrpreneurs who are having less knowledge to promote their inventions and easrning monetary benefits through them.
Honey Bee Network is initiated by an IIM professor Anil Gupta with the help of NIF. It promotes local entreprenurs and their invention by commercialization of their inventions so that they can gain monetary benefits.
Vallidolid spain presentation on creative communities, innovative individuals Dr Anil Gupta
this presentation based on a talk given on jan 18 draws upon several previous thoughts and ideas, comments are invited and usual disclaimers apply, feedback may be sent at anilgb @ gmail. com
Tensions in open innovation systems, honey bee network perspective akg 2014Dr Anil Gupta
why is open innovation philosophy becoming so important for public and private organizations? what are the lessons from honey bee network which was perhaps the first voice for open innovations twenty five years ago. How to make most O I platforms more symmetrical? why dont corporations realise that without sufficient reciprocity, they might kill the golden goose? how do we learn from creativity of children( ignite@nifindia.org) , tech students ( techpedia.in), informal sector ( nifindia.org and sristi.org , gian.org) and other streams of society. volunteers are welcome to contact and join the HBN info@sristi.org or anilg@sristi.org anilgb@gmail.com
India reimagined redefined reignited 2013 14 anil gupta iima Dr Anil Gupta
inclusive innovation ecosystem in india, national innovation foundation, honey bee network, ignite, techpedia.in , gian, sristi, ahmedabad, how doe sone learn from innovations, autopoesis model fo innovation, frugality, sustainable development, mind on margin are not marginal minds,
India reimagined redefined reignited 2013Anil Gupta
how do we learn from innovations by grassroots workers, children, tech students and professionals, four levels of learning, artefactual, metaphorical, heuristics, gestalt, fuve tensions such as autonomy vis a vis agency, open source standard of excellence, autopoesis model of innovation, honey bee network, grassroots innovations,
why does inertia persist for decades and centuries in technologies used by poor people particularly women? why despite millions spent on social innovation problems of poor remain unaddressed; how does honey bee network help bridge the gap
Engagement, involvement and immersion (EII): diaspora for developmentDr Anil Gupta
There is a huge upsurge in the mood of non-resident Indians to engage with developmental currents in the country. Many of them want to contribute toward building up a New India but don't know enough about how to go about it. The suggestions below may help all stakeholders in making this happen. I am also attaching 15 global inclusive innovation challenge which may be addressed by the diaspora in a very productive manner.Support—sporadic causes
Sustain -- ongoing initiatives of state, market, civil society, mentor, strengthen the existing programs
Spawn ---sow the seeds of new ideas, innovations
Scale up– help scale up upcoming start-ups, fledgling initiatives, small enterprises of women, disabled etc.,
Start-up– set up new enterprises for meeting the unmet social needs,
Stitch a gap: missing link in development value chain
Submit – immersion program for NRI youth in Indian reality, culture and voluntary work jointly with Indian youth
Mapping and Tapping hotspots of creativity: Learning from a resource in which...Dr Anil Gupta
Presentation made to UNDP Delhi team to persuade them as to why it is important to recognise, respect and reward creative individuals and communities at the grassroots level. The innovations for and from grassroots are both important but former get more attention than the latter. Dev programs should aim at giving voice visibility and velocity to frugal and sustainable solutions. grassroots innovations are not jugaad, they are borne aout of numeorus iterations of experiments and trials. The Honey Bee Network started 30 years ago is keen to support such efforts globally. it also seeks volunteers to join hands with us see sristi.org, gian.org,. nifindia.org anilg.sristi.org
Hbn experience 2019 shared with Namibian Innovation Conference feb 7 2019Dr Anil Gupta
how to build upon local knowledge, creativity and innovation in the #African context : why not mobilise students to search, spread, celebrate innovations and sense the #unmet #social
#needs #honeybeenetwork #gioan #sristi #nif
#creativity #
This presentation gives insight about honey bee network. An effort of Nif, Gian working for local entrpreneurs who are having less knowledge to promote their inventions and easrning monetary benefits through them.
Honey Bee Network is initiated by an IIM professor Anil Gupta with the help of NIF. It promotes local entreprenurs and their invention by commercialization of their inventions so that they can gain monetary benefits.
Smart cities journal of development management & communication jdmc, jaip...Vibhuti Patel
City development often revolves around physical components primarily on
beautification drives to enhance aesthetic look of a city landscape. Therefore, a debate
on city development essentially focuses on wide smooth roads, fast vehicle mobility,
high rise buildings, shopping malls, entertainment paradises etc. Shifting slums to
reclaim land and removing vendors for widening or beautification of roads are part of
urban development process, which might prove profit earning venture for some while
depriving many others of daily livelihood. There would be some urban theorists who
may argue that poor should be moved to peripheral rustic settlements rather than live
in the city centre. An objective analysis of this view, however, would reveal a hidden
market force interested in consumers who can generate more profits. What is the focal
point for city-development planning then? Do the people at large are not the key point
of urban development?
Smart cities journal of development management & communication jdmc, jaip...VIBHUTI PATEL
Abstract
Urbanisation often goes hand in hand with a rise in urban violence and crime that manifests in terms of street harassment of women and girls, stalking, sexual violence, blackmailing and extortion rackets. Children and women are seen as soft spots who can be victimized by predators. One such incident in the city is enough and the feeling of insecurity is spread like wild fire. It not only frightens girls and women, it controls every act they consider doing then onwards (UN Women, 2015).
Smart cities have to be Safe cities. Town planners, policy makers and budget experts need to do gender budgeting to ensure women-friendly civic infrastructure- water, sanitation, health care, safe transport, public toilets, helplines, skill development for crisis management and, safety at work place. While making budgets for social defense services, consideration must be given to safety of girls and women in schools and colleges in terms of prevention of child sexual abuse through public education and counselling facilities, separate toilets for girls and boys in schools, legal literacy on POCSO Act, 2012 and Prevention of Sexual Harassment Workplace Act, 2013. Provision must be made to have special cells in the police department to take action against display of pornographic images, SMS messages, cybercrimes that victimize young girls at public places or in public transport- buses, local trains, rickshaws and taxis.
Acronyms/Abbreviations
POCSO: Protection of Children from Sexual Offence, NGO: Non-Governmental Organization, PMSSY: Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana, NUHM: National urban Health Mission, PA: Participatory Appraisal, SAP: Structural Adjustment Programme, PDS: Public Distribution System, LSG: Local Self Government, PCPNDT: Preconception & Prenatal Diagonstic Techniques, DV Act: Domestic Violence Act, MWCD: Ministry of Woman & Child Development
Meet Hai Dai in Virtual Reality! Special engagements with WOW Bali's founder; Creative Director of a sustainable and regenerative NGO, operating in Indonesia and South East Asia. Hear his thoughts and research on an ecosystem design thinking; regenerative frameworks for the digital frontier to reshape the human conditions.
Learn how integrate local wisdom (ancient and indigenous cultures) and native intelligences and modalities (healing arts and other creative culture processes) via a social emotional matrix that can be integrated within technology developments and within an ecosystem design thinking framework for optimal dynamics in everyday living and learning. In short, local wisdom and modern methodologies for a more lean culture.
Action Research: Learning Exchange Modules are done in AltspaceVR and Minecraft at Disorient Camp at BRCvr, the official virtual Burningman in VR space.
Hai Dai can be reach directly on AltSpaceVR and/or Discord at 9haidai9.
The Academy of Grassroots Studies and Research of India (AGRASRI) is a registered professional NGO, being headquartered at Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, India. The AGRASRI was established by the social activists couple Dr. D. Sundar Ram and Mrs. D. Bharathi Sundar, in the year 2001.
Innovative transformation of our society conceptual framework anil iciigDr Anil Gupta
grassroots innovations by creative communities when coupled with open, reciprocal and responsible innovations by corporations can lead to inclusive development. it will help overcome five kinds of exclusion, spatial, sectoral, social, skill and seasonal
see honey bee network experience and also my new book on the subject, grassroots innovations , amazon penguin random house, 2016
https://www.amazon.com/Grassroots-Innovation-Minds-Margin-Marginal/dp/8184005873
Chief Information Officers in different companies face a challenge to redefine their role as Chief Innovation Officer. How do they blend inside-out strategies of open innovation with outside-in, the dominant sponge model of open innovation is discussed here. lessons from How David Beats Goliath - The New Yorker
www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/05/11/090511fa_fact_gladwell? are used to close the discussio. It is suggested that what Indian IT techie vivek ranadive did by training his daughter's team very differently in basketball is a mantra that may help many smaller companies and also big companies to transform their strategies. The BGBD model ( bada dimag, bada dil) stressing large heart-large mind model to share both ways is the way to go, a lesson from honey bee network
this is a template in which we want photographers to take photos of other innovations. Mansukhbhai has received national award by National Innovation Foundation at Presidential award function. Idea is to develop photo essays of innovators who have helped in eliminating child labour or enhancing income of their parents so that children are sent to school and not work. We are aware that technologies alone may not eliminate child labour but they can facilitate the conditions for that to happen, and in some cases help in elimination, as it happened in the present case. sristi invited photographers who wish to join hands in this effort.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Chapter 3 - Islamic Banking Products and Services.pptx
Landscapesofloveforslideshare 131017144016-phpapp02 landscapes of love
1. Honey
Bee
Network
Landscapes of Love, Sharing and Co-Creation
Anil K Gupta, Marianne Esders, Chetan Patel, Unni Nair, R. Baskaran
Honey Bee Network, SRISTI & IIMA
2. Honey
Bee
Network
Ladakh
Why wouldn’t many architects learn from the communities
which have tried to integrate nature?
3. Honey
Bee
Network
Bowing before nature- Ahmedabad, Gujarat
In Ahmedabad, we have sacred trees being worshipped by the people
who tie a fragile thread around a strong trunk of tree seeking solace, safety and strength.
6. Honey
Bee
Network
Fragility is the foundation of love.
Without being vulnerable, we are seldom able to access feelings
in our own inner recess.
Authenticity,
so fundamental to make a breakthrough,
requires a little schizophrenia
between the inner and the outer of our being.
The built environment, urban landscape, narrow corridors,
common spaces and intertwining of nature and human
habitations call in question our authenticity.
7. Honey
Bee
Network
Corridors of intimacy.
One of the many “secret” shortcuts in Ahmedabad’s old part of the city.
8. The focus of the Honey Bee Network has been primarily
rural, but for the last few years, effort has been made to
look at urban common property management, innovations,
institutions and educational networks to leverage their
resourcefulness while connecting them with material
resource inadequacies of the rural areas.
9. Honey
Bee
Network
Honey
Bee
Network
founded
in
1987-‐1988
A
nameless,
faceless
innovator
or
tradi>onal
knowledge
holder
comes
into
contact
with
the
Network
and
gets
an
iden>ty,
voice,
visibility
and
viability
of
its
sustainable
vision
.
10. Honey
Bee
Network
Purulia, West Bengal
The local people believe that the breeze triggered by the fluttering of
the wings of the pigeons is very healthy for the people living there.
11. Honey
Bee
Network
In Gujarat, we have found hundreds of villages and also
some urban settlements having bird feeding platforms.
Many communities in dry regions brought their values of
animal care to the urban settlements.
The regions prone to drought and thus having periodic
scarcity of grains have invariably been found to have more
places for feeding birds than the more developed regions.
The less you have,
the more you share.
And not just with human beings but also with the nonhuman sentient beings.
16. Honey
Bee
Network
I take students for an urban walk to
observe, listen, learn
and share the spirit
with roadside vendors, fabricators, service providers and
children.
I also encourage students to join a Shodhyatra
– learning walk –
in the Himalayas.
19. Honey
Bee
Network
At 15.000 feet, Leh, Ladakh
We learn from four teachers: from within, among peers, from nature and from common people.
20. Honey
Bee
Network
Three pillars of sustainability – technology, institutions, culture - Cherapunji, Megalaya
The double decker bridge grown from tree roots drawn from the two sides of the river in
Cherapunji, Megalaya is an ultimate testimony of sustainability, renewability and collective action.
If people did not cooperate, the technology would not work.
Its institutional context provides continuity.
21. Honey
Bee
Network
Creating public open source standards of excellence.
22. Honey
Bee
Network
AnantNag., Jammu & Kashmir
Recognising the traditions of excellence – an eye for detail!
Leadership is to look for excellence in every day life, all around, even on roadsides.
23. Honey
Bee
Network
Creativity abound.
Saidullah developed an amphibious bicycle.
http://www.youtube.com/user/hbncon
24. Honey
Bee
Network
There is no place in the world,
which does not have some institutions.
The challenge is to discover them and build upon them.
Our job is not to make people innovative.
Our challenge is to build upon
the creative and innovative spirit
That every child is born with.
In the process of growing up, we cover this spirit with so many layers of
habits and etiquettes that even we do not know that we have this capability.
Unfolding the creative potential of society is
uncovering the nature within
so that resonance with the nature outside can be forged.
25. Honey
Bee
Network
Creepers finding their way, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Nature is not only crafting spaces of conservation. It is grafting the values of conservation.
26. Honey
Bee
Network
Autopoiesis at grassroots for inclusive development. crea%vity,
compassion,
communica%on
and
collabora%on
27. Honey
Bee
Network
During the period of economic transition
from material to knowledge-based economy,
the education systems became far more fragmented,
quantitative in their treatment of subjects
and much more divorced from real life conditions.
Countability or measurability became important.
Any thing that could not be measured,
was considered not worth the effort.
A change not monitored, is a change not desired.
Variance was sought to be explained
only by what was measured.
28. Honey
Bee
Network
IGNITE
Recognising creativity of children and nurturing their dreams.
Thank God, children are much less patient with inertia than we are.
29. Honey
Bee
Network
Inverted Model of Innovation
Children invent, engineers and designers fabricate, companies deliver.
Harnessing the creative energy of individuals, communities of children, students, farmers artisans, etc.
30. Honey
Bee
Network
Wei Zhi Chuan (Class 10) started playing ping pong at the age of six.
After a lot of practice in the day, his shoes became wet due to seat and left an uncomfortable feeling.
He thought of inventing a “bacterial shoe hanging machine”.
When the shoes are put on hooks in the shoe hanging machine, ultra violet rays and hot air start freshening the shoe
and the dampness and odour are removed leaving the shoes fresh.
31. Honey
Bee
Network
Nisha Chaube from NOIDA invented a bag with a folding seat.
32. Honey
Bee
Network
Arnab Chakraborty, Class 12, from Kolkatta invented a copedal for bicycle rickshaws.
33. Honey
Bee
Network
Mohammed Usman Hanif Patel, Class 2, from Jalgaon, Maharashtra invented a windmill powered fan.
34. Honey
Bee
Network
Shanu Sharma, Vardan, IITK developed a manual stair climbing wheel chair.
www.techpedia.in
35. Honey
Bee
Network
Image, Speech Recognition and Speech Synthesis
for people with hearing and speaking disabilities.
Saurabh Saket and Rahul Ranjan from Bhutta College of Engineering & Technology, Ludhiana.
www.techpedia.in
37. Honey
Bee
Network
Trust, reciprocity and third part
External regulation
commoditization of
resources, stored,
Social capital
Natural
capital
sold, exchanged,
controlled
Intellectual
capital
sanctions
Intellectual property
( that part of ic from the
commercial applications of which,
one can exclude others for a given
period of time)
Ethical Capital
(internal regulations)
Source: Gupta, 2001
38. Honey
Bee
Network
Let parrots have their way -, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
How to measure the look and feel of parrot feeding hangers in a balcony.
39. Honey
Bee
Network
Ranchhodbhai, - sanctuary of love - Ahmedabad, Gujarat
How to measure the feeling that motivates a person to collect food and milk to feed the dogs?
40. Honey
Bee
Network
How many people have been misled by the Maslowian philosophy
to assume that one could aspire for higher order goals only after meeting basic needs.
How wrong.
A creative soul,
even if not assured of the next bread,
would not abandon pursuit of enlightenment.
How could she … would not breath then become burden?
41. Honey
Bee
Network
Bhabi Mahato – a speaking canvas, Purulia, West Bengal
Almost in every Shodhyatra,
we discover unique nuances of cultural expressions of different coping strategies.
42. Honey
Bee
Network
Bhabi Mahato – a speaking canvas, Purulia, West Bengal
43. Honey
Bee
Network
Daring colours - Jam Singh Jhiri’s, Nandor, Madhya Pradesh
A wall full of colour can make any one passing by
stop and pause, reflect and reposition one’s compass of creativity.
44. Honey
Bee
Network
There are deep-rooted institutional structures,
which have created habits of thought and action.
One cannot bring about change
without identifying these habits
and stressing the need to overcome them.
Urban spaces have ignored commons at the cost
of individual privileges.
Cycle and pedestrian lanes are missing in India
but about 25 per cent growth of the auto sector during the last decade
has mesmerised growth planners about dispensability
of what a common person needs:
A little space to walk, a safe lane for a child to go to school.
46. Honey
Bee
Network
The urban areas have become the suction pumps for the rural talent.
With the increasing rate of urbanisation,
migration of youth is inevitable.
The more accomplished a rural youth is,
the higher is the chance that he would not stay in a village.
Unless we create sufficiently inclusive opportunities for them,
the scope for experimentation and innovation may come down.
Distributed facilities for
in-situ incubation of ideas are necessary.
The concept of incubation itself needs to undergo a shift.
One may need a sanctuary model.
Where do street children figure in our vision of order and beauty?
47. Honey
Bee
Network
Pressure cooker based coffee maker - frugal innovation by Mohammed Rozadeen, Bihar
48. Honey
Bee
Network
Urban renewal and rejuvenation requires synergy among
technology, institution, culture and educational processes.
People who are disadvantaged in terms of material resources,
invariably leverage the resources in which they are rich,
i.e., knowledge, values, and institutional networks.
Many of them don’t share their ideas with outsiders. But some do.
A frugal, flexible, friendly innovation conveys
what grassroots innovation is all about.
49. Honey
Bee
Network
Rider Induced bicycle
Mr. Kanak Das, Assam
Bamboo bicycle
Mr. Dodhi Pathak, Assam
Bicycle based portable Pump
Mr. Nasiruddin Gayen, WB
Bicycle based sprayer
Mr. Mansukhbhai Jagani, Gujarat
Bicycle with gear
Mr. Jayanti J Patel,Gujarat
Bicycle operated pump
Mr. Vikram Rathore, AP
Amphibious Bicycle
Mohd. Saidullah, Bihar
Bicycle based mobile spray pump
Subhas Vasantrao Jagtap, Maharastra
Multipurpose Bicycle
Md. Kamruddin, Rajasthan
50. Honey
Bee
Network
blending
passion, purpose, persistence, performance
through
platforms
SRISTI, GIAN, NIF, Techpedia.in
creating
open source multimedia multi-language content
for children, cultural creativity and innovations in governance
51. Honey
Bee
Network
Sustainable alternatives will require collective action
without squeezing space for individual entrepreneurial and empathetic creativity.
The paradox of individual aspirations being met through collective consent can be resolved
through creation of new meeting ground between formal and informal sector.
Open innovation platforms are a means in this direction.
Landscapes of love require
lighthouses of a shared spirit.
Then the waves of collaboration will deliver various boats to their sought out shores.
Urban regions can aggregate intimate spaces through a collaborative and creative spirit for an
inclusive future.
52. Honey
Bee
Network
in
Inclusive
Trade-‐offs
evelopment
D
accuracy
be
Should
traded
off
with
Should
affordability?
design overtake durability?
53. Honey
Bee
Network
Your Time Club
First meeting of people who had all the time during 2009 economic crisis, redundancy and lay off.
Prayas.in, Bangalore
55. Honey
Bee
Network
“Minds on the margin are not marginal minds.”
The mind to market journey needs new meanings.
56. Honey
Bee
Network
“Minds on the margin are not marginal minds.”
Without risk capital for small innovations,
social venture funds for revitalising urban spaces,
new opportunities for generating jobs and expanding economic, social and ethical markets
may not arise.
57. Honey
Bee
Network
* Open Innovation Platforms.
* Social Open Innovation Funds to create public goods.
* Pooling of IP and open source technologies for commercial uptake.
* Public pool of private IP acquired through funds – GTIAF.
* Network of community fab labs for designing local solutions.
* Innovation Clubs to search, spread, sense and celebrate innovations.
What next …
58. Honey
Bee
Network
Rewarding ingenious creativity and innovation.
Join the Honey Bee Network!
anilgb@gmail.com
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