The
ParentEye app enables teachers and parents to connect with each
other. The students' performance can be evaluated over the year and
their daily movements can be monitored
Illustration by Shuvojit Dey; the team of Scientia Innovation
By
Shevlin Sebastian
It
was 5 p.m. on a Saturday. Renuka Menon was relaxing at her home at
Kozhikode. In normal circumstances, she would have been worried,
since her ten-year-old son Sashi had not yet returned home. But now
thanks to the ParentEye app, she can follow his movements in the
school on the mobile phone. Today is the Annual Sports Day and Sashi
was expected to be late.
At
5.30 p.m. she observed that he had got onto the bus. Thereafter, she
watched the movement of the bus. When it was about five minutes away
from the house, Renuka stepped out and reached the stop just as the
bus arrived.
“This
is a very handy app,” she says. Thanks to ParentEye Renuka did not
have to go through tension regarding Sashi.
This
app has been developed by Shaiju CK, the Co-Founder and CEO of
Scientia Innovation, a Bangalore-based software engineering company.
“We have placed a blue tooth enabled chip on the identity card of
each student,” says Shaiju. “And in every class and the common
areas of the school, there is a blue tooth sensor. So a parent or
teacher will know where a student is, at a particular time. Suppose a
student moves away from a group, during the lunch break, a
notification will be sent immediately to the class teacher as well as
the parent.”
There
are other features too. One notable advantage is that you are able to
make a profile of each student. “The teachers will give a feedback
regarding a student on the app, under each individual name,” says
Shaiju. “Teachers can say he likes to draw or read or do maths.
When a student does something often, most probably, he has the talent
for it. Through this data, we can predict the skills of the child.”
Parents
can get a good idea of the activities that are taking place in
school. And when the teacher gives the homework, through the app, the
parent also comes to know immediately.
Performances
can also be monitored. “There are graphs which show whether a
child's performance is improving in Maths or English over the course
of a year,” says Shaiju.
Asked
whether there is an invasion of privacy of the student, Shaiju says,
“In most schools, there are cameras, even inside the classrooms.
ParentEye is not looking at what the child is doing. It is just
identifying the location.”
So
far, the ParentEye is being used in 150 schools in North Kerala.
Another 47 schools are using it in Bangalore and a couple of schools
in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have it.
And
most users are happy. Teacher Seena Sivaraman says, “This app is
very useful and handy for day-to-day updates. We have gone almost
paperless and saving a lot of time.” Says parent VA Paulson, “It
has helped me to know how my child is faring in school.” Another
parents Saneesh Parambath says, “I would recommend ParentEye to
new-generation schools.”
In
fact, Shaiju is indeed reaching out towards the new-generation
schools. He has plans to introduce the app in South Kerala, Chennai
and Pune and also in Africa. “We have already set up the app in
schools of Ghana and Nigeria,” says Shaiju. “It is an exciting
time for us.”
Shaiju
is a former Vice President at JP Morgan Chase in New York. Some of
the other companies he has worked in include Hewlett Packard, Qwest
Telecom and Satyam. But in 2010, he started his own firm. “I am
passionately in love with technology,” he says. “And I am so glad
that, with the help of my brother Shaji, I could make an app that is
helpful for teachers, parents and students alike.”
(The New Indian Express, Kochi, Thiruvananthapuram and Kozhikode)
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