Wonderful, Wonderful.
Such courage, such a fighting spirit is a sine qua non a dignified life despite 
blindness.

My heartiest applauses to him.

One thing, though, I would like to know for sure.
Whether the boy has some residual sight which he may use with low vision 
devices or otherwise.
I want to know it because I have realized there is a vast difference between 
limits of total blindness and partial sight.  the people we dub under the 
category of visually challenged, do have varying amounts of sight or no sight, 
and it makes huge difference in their capabilities to move around, work study 
and so on.

So any information, please.

All said and done, I do not want to undermine his achievement and positive 
signals it would send about the blind persons in general.

Regards


Rajesh Asudani

Assistant General Manager (PPS),
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
09420397185
O: 0712 2806676
Res: 0712 2591349
Doth God exact day-labour, light denied?"
John Milton


-----Original Message-----
From: accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in 
[mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of Saravanan Ramadoss
Sent: Tuesday, July 07, 2009 8:21 PM
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: [AI] A visually-challenged student makes it to MIT


'Nothing is impossible' is his message
A visually-challenged student makes it to MIT
A staunch believer in hard work and perseverance, this 17-year-old with his 
excellent command over English might seem like any other teenage. But, for B. 
Srikanth, a visually-challenged student, nothing in life came easily. Not even 
the admission into Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with a full fee 
waiver. Hailing from Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh, this son of a farmer 
completed his schooling from Devnar School for Blind.
When he approached an Intermediate college to pursue his plus two in sciences, 
he was told he couldn't do that. However, with the help of his mentors from 
school, he managed to enrol himself in M.P.C in Royal Junior College and 
finished his Intermediate with an impressive 92.5 per cent.
The success in Intermediate didn't come easily. "There was no Braille in 
Intermediate. My teacher Swarnalatha helped me a lot by recording the entire 
syllabus onto audio tapes," he says. "I took tuition only for mathematics as it 
is not easy to learn this with the help of tapes."
"Nothing in this life is impossible," says this die-hard optimist, "We are not 
'disabled'; we are 'challenged'. So we have to take this as a challenge and 
fight back," he says.
Srikanth's zeal to learn and reach for the stars was noticed by Ravi 
Kondapalli, an NRI, at a conference 'Ignite the genius within you,' held in 
Indian School of Business, Hyderabad. "I had expressed my dream of studying in 
the U.S. to Mr.Ravi and he took up the challenge to fulfil my dream," says 
Srikanth. With the help of support from Valmiki Foundation, an NGO, his 
applications were sent to the top-notch universities in the U. S. Soon, his 
application was accepted by MIT which not only gave him admission but also 
waived the entire fee amount of over 56,000 dollars.
Srikanth hopes to set his own software firm to employ skilled rural youth. "The 
biggest hurdle for us rural youngsters is the lack of proper education," he 
says. "Primary education is a constitutional right but we are unable to give 
value to that right," he adds.
D.V.L. PADMA PRIYA




'Nothing is impossible' is his message
A visually-challenged student makes it to MIT
A staunch believer in hard work and perseverance, this 17-year-old with his 
excellent command over English might seem like any other teenage. But, for B. 
Srikanth, a visually-challenged student, nothing in life came easily. Not even 
the admission into Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with a full fee 
waiver. Hailing from Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh, this son of a farmer 
completed his schooling from Devnar School for Blind.
When he approached an Intermediate college to pursue his plus two in sciences, 
he was told he couldn't do that. However, with the help of his mentors from 
school, he managed to enrol himself in M.P.C in Royal Junior College and 
finished his Intermediate with an impressive 92.5 per cent.
The success in Intermediate didn't come easily. "There was no Braille in 
Intermediate. My teacher Swarnalatha helped me a lot by recording the entire 
syllabus onto audio tapes," he says. "I took tuition only for mathematics as it 
is not easy to learn this with the help of tapes."
"Nothing in this life is impossible," says this die-hard optimist, "We are not 
'disabled'; we are 'challenged'. So we have to take this as a challenge and 
fight back," he says.
Srikanth's zeal to learn and reach for the stars was noticed by Ravi 
Kondapalli, an NRI, at a conference 'Ignite the genius within you,' held in 
Indian School of Business, Hyderabad. "I had expressed my dream of studying in 
the U.S. to Mr.Ravi and he took up the challenge to fulfil my dream," says 
Srikanth. With the help of support from Valmiki Foundation, an NGO, his 
applications were sent to the top-notch universities in the U. S. Soon, his 
application was accepted by MIT which not only gave him admission but also 
waived the entire fee amount of over 56,000 dollars.
Srikanth hopes to set his own software firm to employ skilled rural youth. "The 
biggest hurdle for us rural youngsters is the lack of proper education," he 
says. "Primary education is a constitutional right but we are unable to give 
value to that right," he adds.
________
D.V.L. PADMA PRIYA
Please excuse me if its already posted here.
Source  taken from
The Hindu Education plus.
######
Adieu.
Saravanan.R
______
I would like to learn a lot from you all. Please feel free to share your 
comments, feedbacks and new ideas!
(saravanan.ramado...@gmail.com / saravanan_2...@hotmail.com)
*******
Alone we can do so little, together we can do so much - Helen Keller.
The greatest test of courage on earth is to bear defeat without losing heart - 
R.G. Ingersoll.
 ******





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