Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

14-Year-Old Boy From Sanskrit 'Gurukul' Wins International Maths Competition

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2016 01:31 PM
    A 14-year-old student of Ahmedabad-based Hemchandracharya Sanskrit Pathshala has brought laurels to his 'gurukul' by winning an international mathematics competition held in Indonesia recently.
     
    Tushar Talawat won the 'International Mathematics Competition', organised by Abacus Learning of Higher Arithmetic (ALOHA) International in Indonesia's Yogyakarta on July 24, where over 1,300 students from 18 countries participated.
     
    "His achievement has not only made the country proud, but also drawn attention towards the Gurukul education system. The ancient Vedic Mathematics has again shone at world-level with his feat," Mukul Kanitkar, joint organising secretary of RSS-affiliated Bhartiya Shikshan Mandal (BSM), said here.
     
    BJP MP Manoj Tiwari also attend the press meet in which Tushar demonstrated the pace at which he can do arithmetic calculations.
     
    Tushar had also excelled in similar contests organised at state and national levels. During the Gujarat leg of the competition in October last year, he had solved 70 questions in 3 minutes and 30 seconds and defeated 5,300 competitors, a release by BSM claimed.
     
    At the national-level competition in December last year in Chennai, he had solved 70 questions relating to addition, subtraction and multiplication of six digits in 3 minutes and 10 seconds and defeated 4,300 students, it added.
     
    Tushar, has completed one-and-half years of his 10-year course at the Gurukul.
     
    "The Gurukul education system doesn't offer certificates at present. It may do so in another 10 to 12 years after the system gains brand value. Students at Gurukul however can appear for academic exams through National Institute of Open Schooling," Kanitkar said.
     
    The Hemchandracharya Sanskrit Pathshala has 90 students and 150 teachers.
     
    Tushar also met HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar. "Like Tushar, other students can really showcase their talent through various competitions," Javadekar tweeted after the meeting

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study
    Less than half as many girls as boys apply to study economics at the university, while only 10 percent of females enrol at university with an...

    Poor maths behind fewer female economists: Study

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll
    A Google poll revealed that many Israeli people are willing to sacrifice sex and stop talking to their mothers for the sake of internet surfing....

    Israelis ready to dump family, sex for internet: Poll

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee
    Faced with higher prices, more people are likely to drop swimming than gym workouts, finds a fascinating study....

    People shun swimming due to high entry fee

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time
    Wild chimpanzees flexibly plan when and where they will have breakfast after weighing multiple factors, such as the time of day and the type of food to be eaten, research shows....

    Chimpanzees plan their breakfast time

    Future-focused women fight climate change better

    Future-focused women fight climate change better
    “They are more politically liberal and liberals are more likely to value the environment which makes them more likely to believe in global...

    Future-focused women fight climate change better

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study
    As compared to men who have had only one partner during their lifetime, having sex with more than 20 women is associated with a 28...

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study