All posts tagged: Rethinking

Beyond degrees: Rethinking higher education for the age of AI and uncertainty

Beyond degrees: Rethinking higher education for the age of AI and uncertainty

Higher education is undergoing one of the biggest transformations in its history. Across the world, Artificial Intelligence is reshaping industries, new technologies are emerging at unprecedented speed, and careers are becoming more dynamic than ever before. Prof. Nagaraj Ramrao, Vice Chancellor, KIET Deemed to be University, shares insights on how higher education must evolve to prepare students for an AI-driven future. For students entering college today, the future no longer follows a single predictable path — and that, increasingly, is becoming an opportunity rather than a limitation. Universities today are not just preparing students for jobs. They are preparing them for adaptability, innovation, entrepreneurship and lifelong growth. At KIET Deemed to be University, that changing reality is shaping the university’s approach toward education, student development and industry readiness. In a recent conversation with Mint, Professor Nagaraj Ramrao, Vice Chancellor of KIET Deemed to be University, spoke about the future of higher education, the growing importance of interdisciplinary learning, startup culture, emotional resilience and why universities today must focus on building not only skilled professionals, but …

Ananya Birla Launches Birla Studios With The Promise Of Rethinking Indian Cinema

Ananya Birla Launches Birla Studios With The Promise Of Rethinking Indian Cinema

Ananya Birla Launches Birla Studios (Photo Credit: Instagram) Indian entrepreneur Ananya Birla has launched Birla Studios with the intent to rediscover commercial cinema in a new light. The newly established production house will focus on stories that seamlessly marry artistic distinction with the wants of the audience. This includes a conscious effort to champion culturally relevant narratives and rethink storytelling from an Indian perspective. Rooted in Ananya Birla’s belief in cinema as a medium of expression, the studio is committed to curating films that create an immediate emotional connection while leaving an indelible mark on viewers. With a strong emphasis on balancing creative ambition and commercial viability, Birla Studios aims to shape films that are both meaningful and widely engaging. Birla Studios Aims To Rediscover Commercial Appeal Birla Studios intends to do something very few production houses in India have attempted before. They want artistic expressions of directors to reach a wider audience. That puts them in a unique spot in the Indian film industry. “We are all stories. Cinema is one of the most …

Rethinking political cartooning in India | News Today News

Rethinking political cartooning in India | News Today News

At a time when the space for political cartoons seems to be steadily shrinking in most Indian newspapers, the panel discussion Political Cartooning in India Today, held alongside the exhibition “Please Touch Gently: A Colloquium on Zines, Comics, Ephemera” at the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, last week, opened with a deceptively simple question. Moderator Neha Khurana asked the audience, “How many of you still get newspapers at home today?” and whether they missed the cartoons that once dominated front pages. The framing was deliberate. “This panel basically tries to answer the question: what happened to political cartooning in India?” she said. The session featured EP Unny, chief political cartoonist at The Indian Express, and Unnamati Syama Sundar, who describes himself as an anti-caste cartoonist. The conversation moved from the origins of Indian cartooning to its fraught present, returning repeatedly to questions of dissent, archives and democratic space. Khurana added that the present could not be understood without history. Unny began by situating the origins of political cartoons in India within the 18th and 19th …

Rethinking addiction as a chronic brain disease | Health News

The message emblazoned on a walkway window at the airport in Burlington, Vermont, is a startling departure from the usual tourism posters and welcome banners: “Addiction is not a choice. It’s a disease that can happen to anyone.” The statement, part of a public service campaign in a community assailed by drug use, is intended to reduce stigma and encourage treatment. For decades, medical science has classified addiction as a chronic brain disease, but the concept has always been something of a hard sell to a skeptical public. That is because, unlike diseases such as Alzheimer’s, bone cancer or COVID, personal choice does play a role, both in starting and ending drug use. The idea that those who use drugs are themselves at fault has recently been gaining fresh traction, driving efforts to toughen criminal penalties for drug possession and to cut funding for syringe-exchange programs. But now, even some in the treatment and scientific communities have been rethinking the label of chronic brain disease. In July, behavior researchers published a critique of the classification, …