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								MILES : An Introduction
							
							
						 
 							
								 Evaluation in Language 
  Ramification of demands 
  Centralised mechanism 
  Comprehensive database 
  Retrieval facility 
 
							
							India is blessed with one of the largest network*
							of languages in the world. As of now, these languages are used by more 
							than 1000 million people for their day to day communication; many 
							of  them are learnt by about 50 million students as a subject of 
							studyat  various levels of education. They are also adopted as 
							a medium of  instruction in about a million Institutions across 
							29 states and 6 UTs of the  country. Hence, knowledge of these 
							languages has become increasingly  significant for various purposes, 
							including the examinations meant for admission,  certification and 
							employment. In view of this enormity - both in terms  of number 
							of languages as well as users, it becomes imperative  that the 
							teaching & learning of Indian languages have acquired new  dimensions. 
							As a result, evaluation in language 
							 education too has  acquired a lot of importance with demands of different 
							 types pouring in (at the  CT&E of the institute) from different 
							 organizations of the country and  abroad.
						   
							
							As a result, the ramification of the issues 
							encountered by this centre also becomes exorbitant. It involves a 
							variety of languages (classical & modern); range of 
							content  inputs (informatory & extra-polatory); linguistic 
							usergroups (cognates  & non-cognates); levels of 
							educational progression (primary to  research), and the contexts 
							of learning (native / second / foreign  language). Some of these demands 
							are meant only for language; some of them  are for only 
							literature; and many of them are meant for both. There 
							are also demands for mechanism to maintain inter and intra 
							language comparability, and parity in academic quality 
							across the  courses of study. The other demands include the technology 
							transfer, training mechanism, consultancy needs, orientation 
							programmesand so  on, in addition to the preparation of materials for 
							instruction and also  for evaluation to meet a variety of 
							inhouse programmes.
						   
							
							As such, the issues are multidimensional in nature that have spread 
							across different  languages, different levels of education, different areas 
							of contents,  requiring different methods, to fulfill different purposes 
							within a timeframe  specified by the organisations under different 
							administrative controls. In  order to meet all such academic complexities 
							under a series of administrative constraints,  an exclusive section to under 
							take R & D at the Institute was felt  necessary, a couple of decades back. 
							Accordingly, an integrated R&D in  evaluation was initiated 
							with reference to language, literature,  & person 
							growth, in the context of teaching, learning and evaluation. 
							This has resulted in the evolution of centralised mechanism called 
							Multipurpose Indian Language  Evaluation System (MILES). It consists of two 
							major components viz., a comprehensive  database and a user friendly 
							retrieval facility.
						   
							
							The comprehensive database being created in each major 
							Indian language, consists of a variety of item resources covering 
							all  the dimensions associated with the components of language, literature, 
							and  person-growth as reflected in the respective General Frame of Reference 
							(GFR). Being  built up on inter-disciplinary concepts (linguistics, 
							education, psychology, mathematics, statistics, and  computer engineering, 
							etc.), every item incorporated here has utilised the item  frameand 
							technique that are considered as effectively  addressing the problems 
							concerning scholastic and non-scholastic areas. Based on 
							the factors being emphasised, all the associated information have been 
							categorised under contents, methods, and purposes of evaluation 
							and  are stored in an electronic database with the details entered in the 
							item  file card format along with computer number codes 
							assigned to each  one of the components of language and literature. The 
							question items included  have been provided with quality indices.
						   
							
							The retrieval facility developed, 
							is being extended to all the major Indian languages. On completion of 
							this massive work, it will help to have instant construction of 
							a variety of syllabi as well as instruments of 
							evaluation in equivalent forms, with sampling 
							error-free content coverage. The creation of MILES will 
							therefore be useful to fulfill the evaluation requirements concerning 
							any of the Indian language, for any purpose, any level of education, 
							and also for any length of time duration; it may also provide the 
							details of information pertaining to  various teachable and 
							testable units of language & literature  (such as major, 
							minor, and sub components) thereby paving a way for getting the 
							existing syllabi restructured ; further, it will also provide 
							an access to  get the background details of various scholars who could 
							be involved in the  formulation and implementation of a variety of 
							evaluation programmes. It will  be an user-friendly mechanism for 
							retrieving information either on knowing  the objects of education, or 
							on the particulars of item writer, or the aspects  of language / 
							literature / person growth, or the levels of education, or the indices 
							of item quality or a combination of all.
						   
 
							*1652 MTs (1 million & above), 15 languages of VIII schedule of the constitution of India are spoken 87% of the population; as per 100th amendment of the constitution, the number of languages 
							included in the VIII schedule is 22. They are Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Santhali, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu
						 
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