Sunday, December 28, 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

    Burger King Says You Can Thank Buzzfeed And One Direction For Return Of Chicken Fries

    NEW YORK — Fans of Burger King's chicken fries may have the boy band One Direction and the website Buzzfeed to thank for the return of the skinny fried sticks.

    Burger King Says You Can Thank Buzzfeed And One Direction For Return Of Chicken Fries

    Take The Vapours: London Drinkers Buzz Over A Cloud Of Breathable Alcohol

    Take The Vapours: London Drinkers Buzz Over A Cloud Of Breathable Alcohol
    LONDON — Britons are buzzing over a temporary entry in the capital's already saturated drinking scene: breathable booze.

    Take The Vapours: London Drinkers Buzz Over A Cloud Of Breathable Alcohol

    In King Kong, Boardwalk Pier Embraces Kitsch As Big Parks Turn To Latest Intellectual Property

    In King Kong, Boardwalk Pier Embraces Kitsch As Big Parks Turn To Latest Intellectual Property
    Snorting smoke and wearing an "I love Wildwood" T-shirt, King Kong again clings to a 60-foot lighthouse towering over the shore town's boardwalk. Eight vintage planes circle the gorilla, bringing riders 26 feet in air.

    In King Kong, Boardwalk Pier Embraces Kitsch As Big Parks Turn To Latest Intellectual Property

    New Test Gauges Dogs' City Savvy, From Navigating Busy Sidewalks To Taking Elevators

    New Test Gauges Dogs' City Savvy, From Navigating Busy Sidewalks To Taking Elevators
    NEW YORK — They're skills any city dweller needs: Taking strangers and noisy streets in stride. Riding calmly in elevators. Hopping a cab or subway. And ignoring tempting food all around you.

    New Test Gauges Dogs' City Savvy, From Navigating Busy Sidewalks To Taking Elevators

    Why Britons Are Losing Out On Sex

    Why Britons Are Losing Out On Sex
    The pressure of having “amazing sex” tonight has actually left many Britons without action between the sheets for a month, finds an interesting survey.

    Why Britons Are Losing Out On Sex

    Marriage Can Curb Drinking Problem

    If you are young and already having a drinking problem, finding a partner to tie the knot may help you return to a normal life again, new research suggests.

    Marriage Can Curb Drinking Problem