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മാര്‍ച്ചില്‍. നടക്കുന്ന SSLC പരീക്ഷയ്ക്ക് വേണ്ടി സമ്പൂര്‍.ണ്ണയി ല്‍ വിവരങ്ങള്‍ പൂര്‍ ത്തിയാക്കേണ്ട അവസാന ദിവസം 10.11.12 ആണ്........2013 മാര്‍ച്ചില്‍ നടക്കുന്ന എസ്.എസ്.എല്‍.സി. പരീക്ഷയുടെ വിജ്ഞാപനം പ്രസിദ്ധീകരിച്ചു. പരീക്ഷ 2013 മാര്‍ച്ച് 11 ന് ആരംഭിച്ച് മാര്‍ച്ച് 23 ന് അവസാനിക്കും.......... SIET Aptitude Test notification can be download from the link given below
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Model examination 2013- time table
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Monday, December 5, 2011

Year Plan 2011-12

The year plan for 2011-12 can downloaded from here. Please click the repective links.


                                   1. 10th year plan
                                   2. 9th year plan
                                   3. 8th year plan


Friday, November 11, 2011

How to Write a Limerick

  To help you get started writing limericks, here’s some helpful information about writing limericks.
To begin, a limerick is a funny little poem containing five lines. It has a very distinctive rhythm and rhyme pattern.
  • Rhyme Pattern: The last words of the first, second, and fifth lines all rhyme with each other. We’ll call those rhyming words “A,” however the words could be “ Peru,” “shoe,” and “true” as illustrated in the first poem below or “Tim,” “swim,” and “him” as illustrated in the second poem below. And the last words of the third and fourth lines rhyme with each other. We’ll call those rhyming words “B,” however the words could be “night” and “fright” in the first example or “dock” and “rock” in the second example.
  • Rhythm Pattern: The first, second, and fifth lines all have this rhythm pattern: da DUM da da DUM da da DUM (notice there are 3 DUMS or beats). Say, “There once was a fellow named Tim” out loud. Now say, “da DUM da da DUM da da DUM” out loud. Notice that both have the same rhythm. The third and fourth lines have a different rhythm pattern: da DUM da da DUM (notice there are 2 DUMS or beats). Say, “He fell off the dock” out loud. Now say “da DUM da da DUM” out loud. Notice that both have the same rhythm.
Here is a very famous limerick. Notice both the rhyme and rhythm patterns.
1.
There was an old man from Peru, (A)
da DUM da da DUM da da DUM (3 DUMS)
2.
who dreamed he was eating his shoe. (A)
da DUM da da DUM da da DUM (3 DUMS)
3.
He awoke in the night (B)
da DUM da da DUM (2 DUMS)
4.
with a terrible fright, (B)
da da DUM da da DUM (2 DUMS)
5.
and found out that it was quite true. (A)
da DUM da da DUM da da DUM (3 DUMS)
When you write a limerick, make sure that it has the same AABBA rhyme pattern. Make sure it also has the same 3 DUMS, 3 DUMS, 2 DUMS, 2 DUMS, 3 DUMS rhythm pattern, too. To be sure, recite the poem, substituting “da” for all unaccented or unstressed syllables and “DUM” for all accented or stressed syllables, as I have done above. If your poem doesn’t have a similar rhythm pattern, then you need to make some adjustments.
Ideas for new limericks can come from almost anywhere. For example, your city, state, country, or name. If your name is Tim or Jim, you could write something like this:
A Clumsy Young Fellow Named Tim
  1. There once was a fellow named Tim (A)
  2. whose dad never taught him to swim. (A)
  3. He fell off a dock (B)
  4. and sunk like a rock. (B)
  5. And that was the end of him. (A)
Notice that the rhyme pattern (AABBA) and the rhythm pattern (3 DUMS, 3 DUMS, 2 DUMS, 2 DUMS, 3 DUMS) are almost identical to the rhythm and rhyme patterns in the “Man from Peru” limerick.
OK, now that you know what the rhythm and rhyme patterns of a limerick are, you’re ready to write one. Here are five simple steps to writing a limerick:

1.
An easy way to get started is to pick a boy’s or girl’s name that has one syllable (like Bill, Tim, Dick, Sue, or Jill).

There once was a fellow (or young girl) named ____(pick an easy name with one syllable). We’ll pick “Jill.” So the first line is:

“There once was a young girl named Jill.”
2.
Now make a list of words that rhyme with the last word in the first line—in this case, Jill. Your list of rhyming words might include: hill, drill, pill, skill, bill, will, and ill.
3.
Now write the second line using one of the rhyming words. Here’s an example:

“Who freaked at the sight of a drill.”

(Notice that the last words in the first two lines rhyme and that both the first and second lines contain 3 DUMS or beats.)
4.
Now think of an interesting story. What could happen to someone scared of a drill? Well, you might have an interesting story if Jill had to go to the dentist. Here’s what might happen in the third and fourth lines.

“She brushed every day.”

“So, her dentist would say,”

(Notice that “day” and “say,” the last words in the third and fourth lines, both rhyme. And notice there are 2 DUMS or beats in each line.)
5.
Now you need to go back to the list of “A” rhyming words to find one that can end the poem. Here’s an example:

“Your teeth are quite perfect. No bill.”
Here’s the poem we just wrote:
There once was a young girl named Jill.
Who was scared by the sight of a drill.
She brushed every day
So her dentist would say,
“Your teeth are so perfect; no bill.”

                                        Collected from Internet by Udayakumar
THE BEGGAR AND THE KING
a play in one-act

by Winthrop Parkhurst



For Full Play Click here

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

VISMAYA CHEPPU

Vismaya cheppu (Social Science) prepared by District Panchayath can download by clicking the image given below.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Movie Review –Akira Kurosawa's Dreams

A solemn little boy comes out of his house one rainy morning to find the sun shining. His mother, practical and no-nonsense, looks up at the sky and says that foxes hold their wedding processions in such weather. ''They don't like to be seen by people,'' she says, and goes about her business.
The casual remark is enough to send the boy into the forest, where the trees are as large and imposing as California redwoods. Even the ferns are taller than he is. The rain glistens within the shafts of sunlight. The boy moves with a certain amount of dread. This is forbidden territory. 

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Tuesday, October 18, 2011



FRAGILE RELATIONS
A poem from jayachandran
                                                            Jayachandran. V 
                                                          vjcvku@gmail.com 
It was pious for us,
The true human relationship,
Bound with relationships of families 
And society, gave us a sense of belonging.

True friendship gave us more. to hope,
Humanity was at the spearhead in us,             
Share of joy and sorrow, could hold us together.




Monday, October 17, 2011


MOVIE REVIEW RUBRIC


Self-Grading Movie Review Rubric     Name:___________________________

First paragraph:
1. Did you state the title of the film? ___________

2. Did you clearly state your opinion in your opening paragraph and expres
your “gut” reaction to the film?
3. Did you BRIEFLY summarize the plot of the movie?
Second, Third, and Fourth Paragraphs. I don’t care what order these paragraphs are in, as long as you analyze each of the three aspects of film:
  1. Briefly describe the literary aspect(s) from the film you analyzed?
  1. Briefly describe the dramatic aspect(s) from the film you analyzed?
  1. Briefly describe the cinematic aspect(s) from the film did analyzed?
Concluding Paragraph:
1. Did you recommend and rate the film? __________

What grade do you think you deserve for your movie review? __________

Akira's Crow

Saturday, October 8, 2011

The sunshine through the rain


Dreams ( Yume?, aka Akira Kurosawa's Dreams, I Saw a Dream Like This, or Such Dreams I Have Dreamed) is a 1990 magical realism film based on actual dreams of the film's director, Akira Kurosawa at different stages of his life. The film is more imagery than dialogue. The alternative titles ("I Saw a Dream Like This") are a translation of the opening line of Ten Nights of Dreams, by Natsume Sōseki, which begins: Konna yume wo mita (こんな夢を見た?). The film was screened out of competition at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival.
 

Friday, October 7, 2011

Celluloid Heroes

 "Celluloid Heroes" is a song performed by The Kinks and written by their lead vocalist and
principal songwriter, Ray Davies. It debuted on their 1972 album Everybody's in Show-Biz.Lyrical themes The song names several famous actors of 20th century film, and also mentions Los Angeles's Hollywood Boulevard, alluding to its Hollywood Walk of Fame. The actors mentioned are Greta Garbo, Rudolph Valentino, Bela Lugosi, Bette Davis, Marilyn Monroe, George Sanders, and
Mickey Rooney although some versions of the song, including recorded concert versions, are performed with fewer verses and, thus, Marilyn Monroe, George Sanders, and Mickey Rooney are
left out.


Read more ............

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Panthibhojanam


Eventhough Narayana Guru had built a number of temples and composed many poems in praise of popular Hindu deities, he had many atheist followers. This shows his love for humanity as a whole which is irrespective of any faith based affiliations. Many of his atheist followers in fact considered him as an atheist1. For instance, one of his prominent disciples Sahodaran Ayyappan was a militant atheist and one of the founders of Yukthivadi, the first rationalist/atheist magazine in Malayalam. When Sahodaran Ayyappan modified Narayana Guru's famous catchphrase, Oru Jati, Oru Matham, Oru Daivam Manushyanu (One Caste, One Religion, One God for Humanbeing) and re-written it as Jati Venda, Matham Venda, Daivam Venda Manushyanu (No Caste, No Religion, No God for Humanbeing), the latter did not protest2.
READ MORE.............

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Sun dog

On This Day in Science History - September 11 - Sun Dogs
Saturday September 10, 2011
September 11th marks the passing of French astronomer Joseph-Nicolas Delisle. Among his accomplishments, he was the person who proposed the mechanism behind the sun dog phenomenon.

Sun dogs, or "perhelia" are the bright rainbows that occasionally occur on either side of the sun. They are formed when ice crystals form in the upper atmosphere and reflect the sunlight. If the sun is high enough, a halo or ring can form around the sun. Moon dogs are the same phenomenon at night with the moon.

I am not sure of the origin of the term "sun dog". I have seen references in Greek and Chinese mythology, but have not found any definitive origin. Pass along any stories you have heard about it and find out what else occurred on this day in science history.