Washington: The need to learn and teach from anywhere will not stop even after the COVID-19 pandemic comes to an end, Google's India-born CEO Sunder Pichai has said, asserting that there is an "incredible" opportunity to re-imagine learning for what comes next.

Google on Wednesday unveiled more than 50 new software tools aimed at remote learning, as teachers and students continue to meet in virtual classrooms amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

"The need to learn and teach from anywhere won't end, even when the pandemic does. We have an incredible opportunity to reimagine learning for what comes next. That's why last year we made learning and education, a formal focus area," Pichai, 48, said.

He said that the core mission of the company has been to organise the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful.

"The two are deeply connected. Learning is what makes information useful and what enables people to apply knowledge, to make things better for themselves, their families and their communities, he said.

According to Google, 170 million students and educators are using Google Workspace for Education worldwide to create, collaborate and communicate.

In June 2020, 140 million were using G Suite for Education. Today, Google Classroom helps more than 150 million students, educators and school leaders around the world teach and learn up from 40 million last year.

Ben Gomes, senior vice president, Learning and Education at Google said technology allows to provide more tools, more resources, to help teaching and to enable more learning.

No matter what the background, everyone can and should have access to great learning experiences and the goal is to help people transform themselves, to help them realise their full potential, he said.

The COVID-19 pandemic continues to blur the lines between home and classroom and it takes everyone, teachers, parents, extended families working together to get through the school day, Gomes said.

This challenge is also compounded by unequal access to devices, poor connectivity, and sometimes the digital skills needed to use all the tools, he added.

"So, we wanted to help meet the urgent need of this moment. While our mission didn't change, everything got accelerated. We focused our work across Google, where we thought it could add the most value, whether that was learning for school, learning for work or learning for life. This has never been more important than it is now, he said.

"Like information did in the nineties, learning is undergoing a massive transformation today. To make more learning possible, we want to use advances in technology to help meet your evolving needs, Gomes said.

Avni Shah, vice president Google for Education, said the past year went from being a scramble to adopt and adapt born out of unexpected and adverse circumstances to being an opportunity to reimagine what education could be.

Let the Truth be known. If you read VB and like VB, please be a VB Supporter and Help us deliver the Truth to one and all.



New Delhi (PTI): India on Tuesday described the wounding of three Indians in an attack on the United Arab Emirates' port city of Fujairah as "unacceptable" and pressed for an immediate cessation of hostilities targeting innocent civilians.

New Delhi's reaction came a day after the Indians were injured after a drone attack caused a fire at a major oil industry zone in Fujairah. The UAE had accused Iran of carrying out the strike.

"The attack on Fujairah that resulted in injury to three Indian nationals is unacceptable," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said.

"We call for immediate cessation of these hostilities and the targeting of civilian infrastructure and innocent civilians," the spokesperson said.

Jaiswal said India continued to stand for dialogue and diplomacy to deal with the situation so that peace and stability could be restored across West Asia.

"We also call for free and unimpeded navigation and commerce through the Strait of Hormuz in keeping with international law. India stands ready to support all efforts for a peaceful resolution of issues," he said.

The attack on Fujairah city came as the ceasefire between the US and Iran came under strain in the Strait of Hormuz.

The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil and gas pass, remains a major sticking point in the talks. Shipping through the narrow Gulf waterway has been severely disrupted by the conflict, triggering a sharp increase in oil prices and energy shortages in several countries.

The UAE's defence ministry on Monday said its air defence systems engaged 12 ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles and four drones launched from Iran.

The ministry affirmed that it "remains fully prepared and ready to deal with any threats and will firmly confront anything that aims to undermine the security of the country."