Search This Blog

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Sarang Waghmare Paintings




















Born in a small village called Beed, Maharashtra, Sarang Waghmare obtained diploma in Fine Arts from Abhinav Kala Mahavidyalaya, Pune. He developed his own style for representational composition. He loves beautiful Indian culture and his observations on the same are represented in his paintings.


Bio Of Sarang Waghmare


Sarang Waghmare (b. 1975)

EDUCATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS
2000-2001 Diploma in Art Education (second Class) of Mumbai Board
1998-1999 G.D. Art (Drawing & Painting in 2nd class) Abhinav Kala Mahavidyalaya, Pune
1995-96 Art Teachers Diploma, (2nd class) Kailash Kala Niketan, Beed.


GROUP EXHIBITIONS
1998 Rangavedh Balgandharva Kala Dalan, Pune
1999 Holiday Inn, Pune
2000 Rama International, Aurangabad


AWARDS/HONOURS
1999 Pune review- Art Exhibition, Pune
1998 Annual Art Exhibition- Abhinav Kala Mahavidyalaya, Pune
1995 State Award- State Art Exhibition Maharashtra State, Mumbai


PARTICIPATION
2008 South Zone Cultural Center, Nagpur
2001 Camlin Art Foundation, Mumbai
2000- Maharashtra State Art Exhibition (artist category)
1998- V. V. Oak Art Foundation, Pune
1995,1997, 1998 – Maharashtra state art Exhibition, Mumbai (student category)
1994 Nagoya University of Art, Japan (International Art Exhibition for student work)

Monday, July 8, 2013

How to Write a Research Proposal

Framework of the Research Proposal 
research proposal is a written document that includes the following information:
        Summary of prior literature.
        Identification of research topic and research questions.
        Specification of procedure to be followed to answer research questions.

The purpose of your proposal is to sell your idea by showing you have thought it through very carefully and have planned a good research study.

There are three major sections of a research proposal, although the exact headings can vary:
I. Introduction
II. Method
III. Data Analysis

Two examples of Tables of Contents for a research proposal are shown in Table 4.1 (see your textbook).
         Notice that the headings can vary.
         When you write a proposal, check with your committee or funding agency to determine if they have a preferred layout of headings.


I. The introduction section of your proposal.

         The purpose of this section is to introduce your research idea, establish its importance (i.e., you want to “sell” it to your reader), and explain its significance.

         Flow of the introduction:
        Start with a general introduction that 
         defines the research topic.
         demonstrates its importance.
        Then review the relevant literature.
        This review should lead directly into a statement of the purpose of the study and your research questions.

II. The method section of your proposal.

         This provides a written description of the specific actions, plan, or strategy you will take to answer your research questions.
         It includes information about your proposed
        Research participants
        Design
        Apparatus or instruments, and
        Procedure. 


Participants
The subsection of the method section entitled participants should provide a written description of the individuals who will participate in your research study and how they will be recruited.
Be sure to specify the following

  • Their demographic characteristics such as age and gender.
  • Inclusion and exclusion criteria you will use.
  • Any inducements for participation you plan to use.
  • Where they are located.
Design
In this subsection of the method section, entitled “Design, you present your plan or strategy to be used to investigate your research questions.


         You must include a separate design section if your design is complicated; otherwise you can put in your procedure section. 
         The following is included in the design section: 
        Type of design and design layout of your study (e.g., you might use a pretest-posttest control-group design).
        Description of all the variables being examined in your study. 
        Description of how your variables are to be combined.
        Description of the points of measurement and manipulation in the design.


Apparatus and/or Instruments
In this subsection of the method section you describe any apparatus and or instruments you propose to use in your research study.  


  • The following information should be included:
        General description of the apparatus or instruments.
        Variables measured by instruments.
        Reliability and validity of instruments.
        Why the instruments or apparatus are used.
        Reference indicating where apparatus or instruments can be obtained.


Procedure
In this subsection of the method section of your proposal, you carefully describe how your study will be executed.
         The following information should be included in the procedure section:
        A description of the design if it was not previously described.
        A detailed step-by-step description of how the study will be executed.
The reader should know exactly what you intend to do after reading this description. It should include enough information to tell the reader how to do the study if he or she wanted to replicate it.


III. The data analysis section of your proposal describes exactly how you propose to analyze the data you plan on collecting. 

In a quantitative study, you will use some type of statistical analysis. You need to specify those analyses.

In a qualitative study, there is no one or “right” way of analyzing the data. You must explain the approach you propose to use and justify its use. In general, qualitative analysis will involve coding and searching for relationships and patterns in qualitative data.

An abstract is required in completed research studies; it is an optional section in a research proposal. You will need to determine if one is needed in your case.

The elements of the abstract will include the following:


  • Concise statement of research hypothesis or research questions.
  • Statement of expected number and characteristics of participants.
  • Brief summary of procedure or way data will be collected.
  • Brief statement of how will analyze results.
  • Abstract is optional in proposals.


Sample Research Proposal

Resident:  John Smith, PGY2

Research Mentor:  Jane Doe, MD, Section of General Internal Medicine

Date of Proposal:  February 5, 2009

I.  Title of Proposed Research Project Medical Students as Mediators of Change in Tobacco Use  



II.  Specific Aims

In conducting this study, we will accomplish the following specific aims:

Specific Aim 1.  Compare the effectiveness of the stage specific smoking cessation counseling intervention with the control intervention by evaluating the impact on the following patient outcomes at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months:  a) quit rate, b) stage of change, c) desire to quit, d) motivation to quit, e) confidence in quitting (self-efficacy), and f) nicotine dependence.

Hypothesis 1.  Patients counseled by students initially trained in stage specific smoking cessation counseling will have higher quit rates, improve their stage of change, increase their desire to quit, be more motivated to quit, have higher confidence in quitting, and have less nicotine dependence at 12 months.

Specific Aim 2.  Compare the effectiveness of the stage specific smoking cessation counseling intervention with the control intervention by evaluating the impact on the following processes of care rated by patients at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months:  a) satisfaction with the quality of care in general, and b) satisfaction with the quality of care related to smoking cessation counseling.

Hypothesis 2.  Patients counseled by students initially trained in smoking-specific behavioral counseling will have greater satisfaction with both measures of quality of care at 12 months.



III. Background

Tobacco is the only legally sold product known to cause death in one half of its regular users.(1)  Thus, of the estimated 1.3 billion people in the world who smoke, nearly 650 million will die prematurely as a consequence.(1)  In the United States, approximately 25% of men and 20% of women, or 46 million adults,  smoke.(2)  The financial toll of tobacco use in the U.S. is substantial.  Estimated costs include $75 billon per year in medical expenditures and $80 billion from lost productivity.(3)  The personal health risks of smoking are even more significant with respect to morbidity and mortality.  Although the role of physicians in cessation efforts has been demonstrated, many physicians fail to counsel patients.  The most common reasons cited for lack of counseling include inadequate training and time pressures. Our intervention will target medical students in the early stages of training.  The proposed intervention will provide a foundation for medical learners in stage specific counseling and will aid physicians in primary practice to help their patients stop smoking.  The rationale for this program is that providing education early and allowing students to use these skills with patients in the community can help: 1) future physicians with confidence in smoking cessation counseling, 2) physicians in the community who may not have adequate time to counsel patients, and 3) patients whose health may be at risk from smoking.



IV. Research Methods

Study Design:  Randomized cross-over trial consisting of two smoking cessation counseling interventions:  1) counseling intervention including patient education, written material and follow-up by students who have been trained in stage specific tobacco cessation techniques, and 2) counseling intervention that includes patient education, written material and follow-up by students who have been trained in non-smoking cessation techniques (exercise counseling).

Setting:  Community practice sites in internal medicine, family medicine and pediatrics throughout Connecticut where medial students attend weekly continuity sessions with physician preceptors.

Study Subjects:  80 first-year medical students and 308-350 patients aged 16 years or older in the students’ community practice sites who are seeing the students’ physician preceptor for any reason and meet criteria of smoking one or more cigarette daily in the previous week.

Randomization:  Students will be randomized by the day they attend their Principles of Clinical Medicine Course and trained in stage specific tobacco cessation counseling or exercise counseling.  After 6 months, students will receive training in the other behavioral counseling technique.

Main Outcome Measures: patients’ quit rate, stage of change, desire to quit, motivation to quit, confidence in quitting (self-efficacy), and nicotine dependence at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months.

Process Measures:  patient satisfaction with the quality of care in general, and satisfaction with the quality of care related to smoking cessation counseling.

Analyses:  patient level analyses of main outcome and process measures comparing patients who received counseling from students trained in smoking cessation counseling and patients who received counseling from students trained in exercise counseling adjusting for potential confounding factors.  We will use logistic regression for dichotomous outcomes and linear regression for continuous outcomes.  We will use generalized estimating equations (GEE) and random effects modeling to allow us to adjust for time-dependent covariates



V. Timeline of Research Project

                                                                                                            Month

Activity                                                                             1     2      3-4       5          6-9     10-12     13-14

Student randomization                                                        X

Train standardized patient                                                          X

Assess student behavioral counseling skills                                                       X

Train student in smoking or exercise counseling                                                X

Assessment of office practice sites                                                                              X

Train medical assistants to recruit patients                                             X

Recruit patients                                                                                    X        X

Patient counseling in-person                                                                                        X         X

Patient counseling by phone                                                                                         X         X

Data collection                                                                                                 X        X

Data analysis                                                                                                               X         X

Prepare publication(s)                                                                                                                    X

Present research at scientific meetings                                                                                             X





VI.  Literature Cited

1.  World Health Organization Website:  WHO tobacco Treaty set to become law, making global public health history.  WHO . 2005. 1-17-2005.

2.  Cigarette smoking among adults--United States, 2001. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2003; 52(40):953-956.

3.  Centers for Disease Control.  Targeting Tobacco Use, the Nation's Leading Cause of Death 2004. CDC. 2005. 1-19-2005.

THANKS http://dentistryandmedicine.blogspot.com

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

COSMIC HEALING WITH SAIBABA MANTRA

Pyramids: Indicative of Vedic Civilization on Other Planets?


 
On the left is a picture of pyramids on the border of the lunar crater Pythagoras. There is a certain order to their arrangement. There is a similar grouping of pyramids, also exhibiting a certain arrangement, in the crater Aristillus. A lone mount, called Monte Pico, exists in northern Mare Imbrium; Monte Pico is interesting because it is 2 miles high and as much as 18 miles long, also because of its pyramidal shape.

Pictured right is the D & M Pyramid on Mars:
The pyramidal shape of these structures are not typically brought to your attention in science class in school, nor do you see reports about their pyramidal shape on TV, nor is their shape frequently addressed in astronomical circles, and when it is, it is often minimized or sloughed off.

The pyramids of Egypt and the Sphinx have been closely liked with Vedic culture. Writer P.N. Oaks has linked the name Egypt with Ajapati, descendents of Aja, Shree Ramas grandfather. Etimologically, P.N. Oaks equates the title of Egypts ancient rulers, the dynasty of Ramesis, with the Sanskrit words Ram Eisus, meaning Ram- God. Mr. Oaks identifies the Sphinx with the word Sing in Sanskrit, meaning lion, as this was a ancient word for the sovereign. It is a common linguistic trait of words which have descended from Sanskrit and become corrupted that the letter p is often silent and the letter h hardly pronounced. In English, the word sing corrupted itself into king.

On page 613 of his book Our World Vedic Heritage, Mr. Oaks presents a picture of an ancient, Egyptian statue of a man dressed in robes and practically covered with Vishnu tilak and sandal paste, the exact markings corresponding very well to the kind which the Shree Vaishnava sect uses in South India. The caption identifies the man as a designer of the pyramids and a Dravidian. The picture was originally produced in the book Egyptian Myth and Legend, on page 368, as well as in the book: Long Missing Links. On the next page P.N. Oaks produces another picture from the book Long Missing links, that of a pharoah of Memphis. The pharoah is also using tilak with the same markings as the Shree Vaishnavas.

Miles and miles of tunnels and chambers exist underneath the pyramids in Egypt, so deep that they still have not been fully explored. Where do they go? In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, there are numerous references to opulent, subterrainian worlds, accessed through these tunnels, and the tunnels under Tibet are deemed to lead directly to Shambala and Shangri La, two Vedic cities in the hollow Earth.

Consider the following evidence:


Since the declassification of the new ground-penetrating radar 2 years ago, the most staggering data has emerged of complex and labyrinthine underground systems in various parts of the world.
In similar fashion, the SIRA radar was deployed in Egypt as early as 1978, mapping an extraordinary subterranean complex beneath the Egyptian pyramids. Arrangements made with President Sadat of Egypt, resulted in three decades of top secret excavations to penetrate the system. At a recent meeting in Australia, one of the key scientists on the Giza project, Dr. Jim Hurtak, showed film footage of work in progress called, CHAMBERS OF THE DEEP, due to be released at the end of the century.

The film reveals the discovery of a vast megalithic metropolis, 15,000 years old, reaching several levels below the Giza plateau. While the rest of the Nu-Age speculates about a hidden chamber under the left paw of the Sphinx, the legendary " City Of The Gods ", lays sprawled beneath. Complete with hydraulic underground waterways, the film shows massive chambers, the proportions of our largest cathedrals, with enormous statues, the size of the Valley of the Nile, carved in-situ. Researchers, risking their lives with lights and cameras, carefully negotiated rubber dinghies across subterranean rivers and kilometer-wide lakes, to penetrate sealed chambers beyond. Already, remarkable caches of records and artifacts have been found.

It is the legacy of a civilisation and a technology way beyond our own. A technology capable of creating a vast underground city, of which the sphinx and pyramids are merely the surface markers. ( Paul White )

Shrila Prabhupada, Bhaktivedanta Swami stated in the purport to Canto 4, Chapter 22, Text 54 of the Bhagaat Purana that The Vedic literature, however, repeatedly informs us that the Moon is full of highly elevated inhabitants who are counted amongst the demigods.

So could it be that Pyramids on any planet, be it Mars, the Moon or the Earth, indicate underground entrances to the civilisations described in the Puranas? The elevated inhabitants, of which the Moon is full of, according to Shrila Prabhupada Bhaktivedanta- could they live in an underground, lunar world, accessed through openings on the surface which are marked by pyramids? We know that the Puranas tell of Vedic civilisation on other planets, so this seems to be a reasonable conclusion.

தமிழக வரலாற்றை மாற்றிய இரு முக்கியமான போர்கள் !.



வரலாற்றில் எத்தனையோ போர்கள் நடந்திருந்திருந்தாலும், சில போர்களால் தமிழகத்தின் வரலாறே மாறியுள்ளது, அப்படியான போரில் குறிப்பிட்டு நாம் பார்க்க வேண்டியது " தெள்ளாற்றுப் போர் ". இந்த இடத்தில் நடந்த இரு பெரும் போர்களால் பெரிய மாற்றங்கள் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.

" தெள்ளாறு ", இன்றைக்கு, திருவண்ணாமலை மாவட்டம்,வந்தவாசி வட்டத்தில் இருக்கும் ஒரு சிறிய கிராமம், பல்லவர்கள் காஞ்சியை தலைநகராக கொண்டு கி.பி. 2 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு முதல் கி.பி. 850 வரை சுமார் அறுநூற்று ஐம்பது ஆண்டுகள் தமிழகத்தில் வலிமையுடன் ஆட்சி புரிந்தவர்கள். இவர்களை அழிக்க எத்தனையோ போர்கள் நடந்திருந்தாலும், குறிப்பாக சோழரும், பாண்டியரும் ஒன்றாக இணைந்து பல்லவ பேரரசின் சாம்ராஜ்யத்தை அழிக்க நினைத்தது இங்கு தான்,பாண்டியர்கள் பேரரசர்கள், சோழர்கள் அங்கும் இங்குமாய் சிற்றசர்களாகவே இருந்தனர்,அப்போது ஆட்சி செய்த வந்த பல்லவ மன்னன் மூன்றாம் நந்திவர்மன் (கி.பி. 825-850 ) ,இங்கு நடந்த போரில் சோழர் மற்றும் பாண்டிய கூட்டுப் படையை எதிர் கொண்டு அதில் வெற்றியும் கண்டான், அதுமட்டுமல்லாது அவர்களை கடம்பூர்,வெறியலூர்,வெள்ளாறு,பழையாறு ஆகிய இடங்களில் எதிர்கொண்டு பாண்டிய நாட்டு எல்லை வரை ஓட ஓட விரட்டினான், சோழர்கள் பல்லவர்களுக்கு கப்பம் கட்ட உடன்பட்டனர் !. அது முதல் நந்திவர்மன் " தெள்ளாறு எறிந்த நந்திவர்மன் " என போற்றப்பட்டான்.இந்த போர் குறித்து ஏராளமான கல்வெட்டுகள் காணக்கிடைக்கின்றன, அவன் மீது பாடப்பெற்ற " நந்திக் கலம்பகத்தில் ' இந்த தெள்ளாற்று வெற்றியினை பலவாறு புகழந்துரைக்கிறார்கள் . இந்த போரின் வெற்றிக்குப் பிறகு பல்லவர்கள் பெரிதும் வலிமை பெற்றனர், இறுதிக்காலம் வரை பகைவர்கள் நந்திவர்மனை கண்டு அஞ்சியே இருந்தனர்.பல்லவர்கள் தங்கள் வலிமையை நிலைநிறுத்திய போராக இது விளங்கியது.

அடுத்தாக வடக்கே கங்கை வரையும், தெற்கே கடல் கடந்து கடாரம் வரை ஆட்சி புரிந்த சோழப் பேரரசு !.விஜயலாயன் தொடங்கி,ராஜ ராஜன் சோழன் , ராஜேந்திரன் சோழன் என்று புகழின் உச்சிக்கே சென்ற சோழர்கள் கி.பி-1279 பிறகு எங்கே சென்றார்கள் ? அவர்கள் வீழ்ந்த இடமும் இந்த "தெள்ளாறு" தான் . சோழப் பேரரசு மூன்றாம் ராஜ ராஜனின் ஆட்சியின் போது அழிவின் விளிம்பில் இருந்தது, தெற்கே " சுந்தர பாண்டியன் " சற்றே வலிமை பெற்று, சோழர்களின் மீது போர் தொடுத்தான்,பாண்டியனுக்கு அஞ்சிய சோழன் காஞ்சிபுரத்தை நோக்கி ஓடினான், அவனை காடவ மன்னன் கோப்பெருஞ்சிங்கன் இந்த தெள்ளாற்றில் இடைமறித்து போர் புரிந்தான், அதில் மூன்றாம் ராஜ ராஜன் தோல்வியுற்றான்,அது சோழர்களுக்கு பெரும் பின்னடைவாய் இருந்தது.பின்னர் காடவ மன்னன் அவனது தலைநகரான சேந்தமங்கலத்திற்கு கொண்டு சென்று அங்கு சோழனை சிறை வைக்கப்பெற்றான்.இதை அறிந்த பாண்டியனும், சோழனின் மாமனாரான மேலைச் சாளுக்கிய மன்னனும் சேந்தமங்கலத்தின் மீது போர் தொடுத்து சோழனை சிறை மீட்டனர், சேந்தமங்கலமும் அதன் கோட்டையும் முற்றிலுமாக அழிக்கப்பெற்றது, இங்கு தற்போது தமிழக அரசு தொல்லியல் துறை அகழாய்வு செய்து கோட்டைப் பகுதிகளையும், காடவர் தலைநகரையும் வெளிக்கொணர்ந்தது.மூன்றாம் ராசா ராசனுக்கு பின், மூன்றாம் ராஜேந்திரன் சிறிது காலம் ஆட்சி புரிந்தான், பின்னர் கி.பி-1279- ல் சோழப் பேரரசு தமிழ்நாட்டில் இருந்து காணாமல் போனது !.

இவ்வாறு இந்த இடத்தில் நடந்த இரு பெரும் போருக்கு பின்னர் தமிழகத்தின் வரலாற்றின் பாதையே மாறியுள்ளது, ஒரு வேலை முதல் போரில் பல்லவர்கள் தோற்று பாண்டியர்கள் வெற்றிபெற்றிருந்தால், சோழ வம்சமே மீண்டும் வராமல் போயிருக்கும், அவர்கள் பாண்டியர்களுக்கு கப்பம் கட்டும் குறுநில மன்னர்களாகவே இருந்திருப்பார்கள் !.தஞ்சை கோயில், கடாரம் வரை ஆட்சி என தமிழர்களின் புகழ் விரிவடையாமலே சென்றிருக்கலாம் !. ஒரு வேலை இரண்டாவதாக காடவர்களுடன் நடந்த போரில் சோழர்கள் வென்றிருந்தால் ? இன்னும் அவர்கள் வலிமையுடன் தமிழகத்தை ஆண்டிருப்பார்கள், கடாரம் வரை கப்பலில் சென்று போர் புரிந்த சோழர்களுக்கு,ஆங்கிலேயர்களை விரட்ட எவ்வளவு காலம் பிடித்திருக்கும் ?!..

(SOURCE : " வந்தவாசிப் போர் - 250 என்ற புத்தகத்தில் இருந்து கிடைக்கப்பெற்ற செய்தி )