- Nowadays-Preeti Shah
- p. Kangraj runs several courses for college students, through which students make short films, musical albums.
P. of Milnadu. Kanagaraj is a different clay man. He turned a failure in his life into a wonderful opportunity. His wish I.A.S. Was to be. It so happened that he passed the civil service exam and reached the interview twice, but did not succeed. Instead of trying again, he decided to use his knowledge to become an IAS officer. Will do to fulfill the dream of young people who want to be.
Kangraj was born to a farmer father in Kuruvadipatti in Thanjavur district of Tamil Nadu. Obtained MA, M.Phil and Ph.D in Political Science from Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi. Today he is the Chairman of the Department of Political Science at the Government College, Coimbatore. Some students asked him for help in preparing for the IAS exam, so in 2009 he started coaching eight students at home, which has now reached 400 students.
Twice a week he teaches from four to six-thirty in the evening after finishing college. On Sundays they coach the students for four and a half hours in a row i.e. from ten to two and a half in the morning and they do not charge a single penny for this. He is known everywhere as the ‘Free IAS Exam Coach’. More students could study together so they started sitting on the ground. They also provide online education to students living in other parts of the country.
P. Ask Kangraj how a coaching class works without taking a fee? So they would say the only problem is space. Thus, the corporation has set up a higher education center there and in this center, Kangraj has been given I.A.S. Coaching classes are also allowed, but Kangraj believes that if he gets a bigger space than this, two thousand students can take advantage of this coaching instead of four hundred.
Her alumni help her take classes. While some businessmen help in electricity bill, stationery and other expenses. So far he has helped more than ninety students pass the civil service exam. His students are IAS, IFS and IPS. Have become officers.
Impressed by his work, the then commissioner of Coimbatore requested the corporation to run a program for career guidance and higher education awareness for school children. They hold interview classes from December to April, inviting senior executives and retired officers to conduct mock interviews of students, so that students can understand how the interviews are conducted and increase confidence. Many students from different states of India come to give mock interviews.
He started a program called 'Empowering India's Future' for rural school children and tribals in the state. He believes that if this kind of understanding is developed from an early age, there is a lot of benefit. These two-three years are important for building a career. P. Kangraj runs several courses for his college students under the Skill Development Program, through which students make short films, musical albums. Also offers coaching in Tamil language. The Bank and the Tamil Nadu Public Service Commission prepare for the examination.
Forty-eight-year-old Kangraj believes that if he had found a good mentor, he could have moved on a lot in life. Therefore, he constantly strives to ensure that no decent and smart student misses out on becoming an officer due to lack of such training. An excellent example of how sincere a teacher is is p. Kangraj is.
Only eight Sundays he has not been able to take his class due to the death of a relative in the last eight years. His wife and children have fully cooperated in this work. They say they don't charge a fee so never need to ask their students to do something for them. If students want to do something, they do it for society.
Creation from destruction
Shriti says that we also use silica in this. Each wall can absorb three kilograms of carbon dioxide
Shriti, a resident of Go Rakhpur, studied in Delhi after 10th standard. After becoming a Civil Engineer, he did a Masters in Construction Management from New York University and returned to India. In 2012, I visited the villages of India under SBI's Youth Fellowship. She then went to Eastern Europe. After returning to India after learning some technology there, in 2014, Shriti Pandey set up a company called Structure Eco. This is the first make-in-India company in India to make a carbon negative product.
In northern India, farmers burn millions of tons of straw every year, polluting the air. Polluted air harms the health of the people and many people die of the disease. It costs an estimated 30 billion a year, but Shriti's company uses the agricultural waste to build a house or a hospital and to make furniture.
The waste is recycled and then compressed to form a panel. This panel is used in building walls and ceilings. Recycled paper is also used in making structure boards. Straw panels built in this way last for a hundred years.
Shriti says that we also use silica in this. Which makes the wall fireproof. Each wall can absorb three kilograms of carbon dioxide. All panels are naturally thermally insulated to prevent outside heat and keep the inside temperature cool.
Shriti Pandey built two Covid Care Hospitals near Patna and Jalandhar in Punjab using such techniques from agricultural waste. Shriti, a 6-year-old civil engineer, in collaboration with the Selco Foundation, built the Covid Care Hospital for Patna's 'Doctors for You' in less than eighty days. In April, the Selco Foundation awarded him a construction project in Masadhi village in Patna.
By July 2020, he had built a 6,000-square-foot hospital with a capacity of eight beds. Separate rooms were also arranged for patients who needed oxygen and a ventilator. The Salko Foundation was aware that there are many problems with electricity in Masadhi village. Electricity is indispensable in most treatments. So he installed solar panels on the sheets he had arranged on the roof so that the hospital would not have to depend on others for electricity.
The entire structure of the hospital was made up of fiber panels. M’s team has used a technique of lamination to make the floor below more durable. So that the floor is not damaged due to disinfection and sanitization. About sixty percent of the construction work has been completed in Shriti's workshop.
To make this work faster, we have used scissors and bolts instead of welding. Four hundred wall panels were installed in just five days. Lightweight items were used. Shriti and her team are working to create foldable and movable partitions for hospitals.
Such partitions can be used to develop affordable and sustainable health care in rural areas. This will enable farmers to get up to Rs 25,000 per acre of agricultural waste. On the other hand, air pollution is also reduced. About one hundred kilos of straw is used to make a ten by four foot panel. Thus in every way this is beneficial.
Shriti Pandey's work has also been praised by the United Nations. His name has been added to the Ecoing Green Climate Fellow in 2020 and he has been given a fund of ninety thousand dollars for his work. Forbes' list of 30 people under the age of 30 in 2021 includes him in the Industry, Manufacturing and Energy categories. He says there are very few women in the field. When she was studying in America, there were only twelve women out of forty in her class.
Comments
Post a Comment
What you think give us your idea about this article we publish your words on our site