when is a community not a community?

In response to mark\’s suggestion that we contribute to a discussion about why we are in this community has stimulated a question for the group – when is a community not a community?

If you all think about any communities/groups you may belong to – they all have one thing in common.

Faces by Fazen

There is always a core group who seem to do everything, are always involved no matter what, and others who remain quietly on the periphery…sometimes popping up when the need arises and disappearing again. People come and go, and in some instances people are a captive audience at some time or other. I am captivated with this community, and thoroughly enjoying our progress through the course activities. For me a community is about having a common purpose or reason to meet.

The common reason for this community being formed is that we are part of a course with common goals, in terms of assessment, but also in the need to find out more about online communities. Although we all have differing reasons for participating and different expectations and because of this we will each take away different things from this experience.

Because we are an online community, we are using a range of online tools and methods to interact, and a range of activities to give us a reason to use them. We could have set up just a Blackboard discussion Board with 93 forums as they did in one iteration of this course, but we have chosen to give the class the opportunity to see how a variety of tools and strategies work – that way you can experience them and choose what will work for you in your teaching.

So I don\’t expect we will all feel comfortable, or warm and cozy in this community because it is challenging. But I hope that the strength of the community will be in helping each other overcome the challenges. For myself, it is a challenge because I have never used such a wide variety of tools and methods to teach an online course, and this is my first time teaching this course. I am loving it, and I don\’t particularly feel like I am teaching, rather I am feeling like a participant. There are so many interesting viewpoints and discussions going on. I was here because I was one of the facilitators, now I am here because I am finding it fascinating – Although I am spending far too much time participating.

I have also found out a lot about different online communities and some of the theoretical underpinnings by listening to the guest speakers. I am learning so much. I now know that online communities are not just about Gilly Salmon\’s five-step emoderating model or about asynchronous or synchronous discussions. They are so much more. You will see what I mean if you look at the list we compiled last night in the wiki – onlinecommunities. The new page we invite you all to contribute to along with your own discipline-specific page.

The overall aim of this course is to get everyone to the facilitator phase (development – stage five – relates to Gilly Salmon\’s five-stage model) of being in an online community and to get there there are other phases to pass through e.g. access to the tools and strategies (access – stage one) getting to know the community (socialisation – stage two), sharing knowledge and information (information sharing – stage three), creating knowledge and resources (knowledge building – stage four) .

Why is evaluation so important?

I was asked recently to present about evaluation for one of the constructing courses sessions. I decided to do an Elluminate session so I could fit it around study leave. However this morning when I was all geared up to present, the server decided to play hookey and go west.

This spurred me on to prepare a slide show with audio (Plan B). The presentation is called: Why is evaluation so important?

It can be viewed on the Internet and doesn\’t appear to take too long to load. The presentation is approximately 20 minutes long and covers the what, why and how of evaluation and its relationship to educational design.

I would have preferred the synchronous computer conference option so people could ask questions and we could have some discussion. However, while preparing the audio to accompany the presentation, I found I was able to tie things together better. This meant that my presentation was longer than originally intended, but I feel that it integrates the concepts underlying evaluation much more clearly. I just hope my audience thinks so as well. I have also given them the option of both asynchronous and synchronous discussion around the topic of evaluation.

I used MyPlick to upload the presentation (PowerPoint) and audio (mp3) which I created in Audacity. I prefer this site to SlideShare because the presentation and audio can be lodged on the same site. Mmmn maybe \”all my eggs in one basket\” is not such a good idea.

All this stuff is really helping me develop stronger digital information literacy skills. The importance of this became very apparent today during a research meeting where we were discussing some of the processes we would use to communicate and share ideas. Considering the research project is action research and the focus is digital information literacy, we as researchers will also be learning, not just the participants, through using web 2.0 tools to conduct the research processes. This is the start of my reflections around this project; it will be very important for all of us to keep a log of the process. Preferably an open log on the web where we can read each others entries and really share progress and ideas. This will be very important with the national spread of researchers in the project.

Structured versus not structured versus guided

Is the Facilitating eLearning Communities course an example of constructionist and constructivist and reflective learning?

Are we like this lego maze (Lego Maze Eric4 by Anvilon)
– structured yet in a quandary and having to find our way around and out? Is there really an end point for a course like this? I hope not….I believe participation in Facilitating eLearning communities needs to be an evolving experience which has to ebb & flow with the technologies, change according to the needs of the participants and catch the trends and waves of eLearning.

I know it is not about mastery learning because the learning is intended to come out of the participants own perceptions, explorations and knowledge development. Plus there is no exam or test. But…

If structured = mastery learning and sequential step by step learning – then this course is not structured. If structured = guided and free to follow your own interests & explore – this course is structured.

I find it quite intriguing that people feel the course is unstructured. Yes there were more instructions for the first few topics and activities and directed discussion than the latter part of the course – yet some people chose not to engage.

The 10 min lecture series has been structured, and also allows discussion and reflection. some people have not been able to engage synchronously and have done so after the events and have made very good postings on their blogs about some, not all the presentations. Others have not engaged at all. Several people have engaged with the assessments – learning log (blog) and wiki – others have not.

I wonder why people feel it is unstructured – or does this mean unguided? Even though there is a learning guide, posted lists of what people should be doing on the course blog, email directions, directed activities for the first few topics, directed assessments, a lecture series, a list of resources, content on WikiEducator etc. Does guided mean something different for all of us? Guided does not equal structured or does it?

In a true constructivist learning community the course is far too structured. There are too many things participants are told to do already. There was very little for them to negotiate. Do participants feel they need to be sat down and directed through a series of topics, and some workshops on how to use some of the technologies? Does structured for some mean teacher-directed rather than learner-directed?

What I would like to know is do people feel they are being guided to be part of an online community? If the answer is yes, then we are on the right track.

Perhaps it is the topic. I believe people learn best how to be an online facilitator by being exposed to a range of strategies and practical opportunities rather than a whole lot of content and theory about how to do something though there is some of that too. Part of being an online facilitator in a community is to experience discomfort as well as comfort. David alludes to that and also mentions the value of finding out things for ourselves.

I am surprised that he feels that participants are \”relatively unguided\” – people have been given a lot of material to look at and plenty of discussion topics have arisen. The facilitators could have continued to impose very directed discussion topics all through, but instead chose to use the 10 minute lectures as the basis for discussion…which has occurred.

Perhaps what we need now is a short presentation to bring all the threads together for the community – this could serve as a reflection on what we have covered and a stimulus for the next leg of discussion. Watch this space!

facilitate or teach or learn

In response to Leigh\’s posting as you prepare to facilitate try not to teach. To teach or not to teach. to facilitate or not to facilitate. To moderate or not to moderate! Is there really a debate to be had I wonder?

I believe that all this angst has come about because \”a teacher\” decided some way back that he or she would replace the word \”teach online\” with \”facilitate online\”. It means the same!

Because we have all been encouraged to step back a bit and stop pushing information at students and encourage them to do more thinking for themselves and more self-directed learning, teaching is now facilitating. But is it?

Learner-centred is the new buzz word along with facilitated learning – it is still about teaching. The teachers, you and I, leigh, are still seen as the experts in the discipline we are teaching otherwise we would not be asked to \”teach\” the course.

So why have we been asked to teach the course and not the local butcher who is equally able to facilitate a jolly good discussion?

Because we have some expertise – like it or not, we have to teach our class something so they can teach themselves. Teach or model, facilitate or model – otherwise they will not just be feeling frustrated or confused – too much to learn – they will be really, really angry and p…ed off. Why didn\’t we just send out the handbook with the instructions for the course and the assessments with a few readings and tell them to get on with it?

Because we have to teach them something. that involves not just facilitating a good ole discussion, it involves giving information, brokering information, helping/facilitating them to find information, setting up systems and facilitating ways for them to develop as a community, directing them towards the things they need to complete to pass the course or not. Is that not teaching in one sense?

Making it interesting and challenging and scary enough to make them come back for more – fear as in the kind you get on a rollercoaster. Fear can be a great stimulant!

In my mind, good teaching is about good facilitating and treating the learners as individuals and as competent intelligent people who can think for themselves and who are encouraged to think critically.

In response to some of leigh\’s questions –

  • Why is this course called facilitate online learning communities and not teach online learning communities? To be absolutely pedantic here it is Facilitating eLearning communities. So just as Leigh has replaced eLearning with online – have we not replaced teaching with facilitating?
  • Is teaching and facilitation really interchangeable?
  • Yes mostly it is because good teaching should strike a balance and the teacher should step back when necessary and step forward and teach when needed – sometimes we need to be more proactive to facilitate scaffolded learning and not just assume people will enjoy struggling to find out everything themselves. The level of support needed, I believe, depends on each person\’s zone of proximal development(Wikipedia, 2007), for each situation and each topic. As you will see a person can be assisted to develop not only by the teacher but also by their peers – so does the peer then become a teacher too?
  • Is facilitation simply one of many techniques that a teacher employs in their work? Or is teaching just one of many 3rd party services that a facilitator might call on in their work?
  • Is it possible to be both a teacher and a facilitator within the same group of people?
  • In response to these questions, I believe the answer is yes in both cases. Why? Because firstly, I see the terms as interchangeable where someone really knows how to support learners albeit called teacher or facilitator. Secondly, a balance is crucial in contemporary society .
  • What are the differences in the roles and what are the social dynamics in play when they function?
  • It depends on our definitions for teacher and facilitator and these depend on our philosophies as this discussion is demonstrating.

Examples: If facilitating a meeting – we might approach it in different ways. We can talk and dominate the session for the bulk of the time and answer questions, or present a slide show and demonstrate what we have been doing and/or would like to see being done and answer Qs. we can set an agenda and call for contributions, and chair the meeting to keep discussion on track and comments relevant. we can dominate the meeting by always bringing up points of discussion. a meeting can be facilitated by all members and all members contribute equally thus teaching others by telling them new things or bringing up points they may not have thought of.

I guess it depends on whether you believe that learning occurs all the time and whether when we learn we have taught ourselves or learned from others. Does that then make them teachers?

Oh boy – is it not all about letting others speak, and about people having an equal chance to contribute, and valuing each person\’s contribution and unique style?

To me that is much more important than debating the difference between teaching and facilitating. even someone standing up in front of a class and delivering a lecture for an hour, has facilitated learning in some way. what they may not have done is facilitated group discussion or critical thinking but they could have and I always tried to operate this way in large lectures.

So lecture is not synonymous with monologue or transfer of information – it depends on the style of the lecturer – just as tutorial or discussion is not synonymous with interaction. as we know people can just sit there and wait to be told and not contribute no matter how excellent the facilitator might be. Intrinsic motivation can play a huge part in how actively people engage and contribute.
You facilitate an exam perhaps not teach in it. That is the only example I can think of where there might be a difference BUT you actually supervise an exam or invigilate not really facilitate it. You facilitate a discussion or a meeting but you may not do it well just as you may not teach well. And for me good teaching is about being a good facilitator of knowledge, of interaction, of information, of learning and of people. Are there other examples you can think of where you facilitate not teach?

Auf wiedersehen

This is my good bye to everyone in the Facilitating eLearning Communities course.

When writing to the email group to thank them for participating in the course, I realised that the community was really only beginning. Although the course is now officially finished, we will be keeping the email group open so the community can share ideas, tips and stories about their experiences facilitating online. I also invited everyone to help develop the online communities pages on WikiEducator. I hope some will continue to engage in the group.

As a first time facilitator and co-facilitator in the course I found the experience a very challenging and rewarding experience. It has not been easy and it was never boring. Overall, it was extremely interesting to interact online with such a diverse and highly skilled group of educators; everyone in the group had very different needs and expectations. Sometimes I found it frustrating and sometimes I found it confusing – the reactions of the group were not always logical and rarely predictable.

For example, I believed the instructions for the first part of the course were clear and straightforward but that relied on people working systematically through the Blackboard activities and resources. People did not seem to get it. Then we confused people by throwing other technologies into the mix – email group, blog, wiki – as problems came up we offered a range of solutions. There was choice introduced, not just step-by-step and work through the activities and resources on Blackboard….post a discussion in Blackboard. The options threw a lot of people into the pirana pool. People\’s preference for options other than Blackboard meant the platform became redundant as we thought it would in a networked community.

Was it too much too soon?

For the next class, I feel that the Blackboard option will not be an option. Sure we could have shown people a couple of nice to know web 2.0 technologies and left them safely sitting in the learning Management System AND that could have been a community of sorts. Perhaps a subsistence community and a community with very limited means but a gated community – safe but how I hate the idea.

Instead we took the class out into the scary cyber world of uncertainty and unpredictability. Choice was the flavour of the day – ask a question and there were several options to choose from. Good or bad! We took people on a constructionist, constructivist and scaffolded/facilitated pathway with many forks and turns. People were not comfortable and they complained or disappeared from view. The true blue online facilitators did reappear though and they were stronger than when they started and more innovative – yes there were a few bruises and damaged egos – but they made the effort to ride the bull.

I learned a great deal from the experience and am impressed by the tenacity of the community to try out new challenges and experiences. Facilitating the class with Leigh opened new communities I had hitherto tried but avoided eg Second Life, gaming, FaceBook. I really liked the 10 minute lecture series – how fortunate we were to have so many people willing to contribute their know how to the community. My only regret is not having enough time to reflect on my blog about all the events. I can still do this of course because they are all recorded.

I asked the class to forgive us for discombobulating them. I was impressed with the high level of critical thinking and there was significant diversification of the communities\’ online facilitation abilities as we moved through the course. It is clear there is no one magic bullet for success. Each group will be different. Hopefully the group has established some guidelines for themselves and the groups they will go on to facilitate. I hope they can now recognise the need to allow their students room to evolve as a community. I firmly believe that only by providing loosely-structured problems will students be assisted to think critically and really learn how to learn.

I have never forgotten the words of a visiting lecturer years ago who ran a workshop on critical thinking. \”If you want to get your students to think critically, you have to put them in a place where they do not feel comfortable and where they feel challenged, they will not go there on their own.\”

I particularly like the explanation on the uses of critical thinking on Wikipedia. To get this class to think critically about good and bad methods for facilitating online communities it was necessary to present them with experiential real world problems in an online community and not just one or two but a wide range. Just transmitting information to them abut how to facilitate online would not have cut it; they had to experience it warts and all. What was bad to some was good to others and vice versa. Each experience would have beenunique although the community was exposed to the same things.

\”Critical thinking is also critical inquiry, so such critical thinkers investigate problems, ask questions, pose new answers that challenge the status quo, discover new information that can be used for good or ill, question authorities and traditional beliefs, challenge received dogmas and doctrines, and often end up possessing power in society greater than their numbers.\” \”The intellectual skills of critical thinking–analysis, synthesis, reflection, etc.–must be learned by actually performing them.\” (AN INTRODUCTION TO CRITICAL THINKING by Steven D. Schafersman, 1991).
Facilitating this course has helped me to become better at critical thinking. It is not an easy thing to get the balance right in a course like this and my big question is – should we cater to the lowest common denominator in terms of skill and comfort or should we make the challenge higher and hope for the best. I believe for this class we did the right thing going with the latter – uncomfortable as it was at times for all of us.

Viral Challenges: Fun At Home

by: Manisha Chandwani

All the Social Media sites are bombarded with so many fun challenges while everyone is staying home during the quarantine.

The first week of Lockdown was quite challenging for everyone and especially for students. The day to day activities was stopped all of sudden due to the Pandemic situation across the globe. Coronavirus has affected everyone’s daily life schedule but as we know staying at home is essential for each one of us to stay healthy and corona free.

Viral Challenges
Viral Challenges

So to utilize this quarantine time people brought the best challenges on every social media site be it Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, etc. Users are going crazy with the trends and enjoying the challenges. #Challengeaccepted!!

These challenges include the most followed Dalgona Coffee challenge. This challenge has been highly participatory almost every person has loved this challenge and done it. This challenge is been extremely shared because no matter how bored you are at the end you will fetch yourself a mouth-watering coffee after all who say no to the coffee.

Another extremely shared challenge is Bingo. People are utilizing their time in creating beautiful and exciting Bingo which is basically what you have/ haven’t done in your city, college, school and this challenge are been mostly accepted by the youth.

Other Challenges are also been overrun on social media like physical challenge- Pushups and Squats challenge, Drawing anything on your story challenge and tagging others to do the same, For food bloggers Cook at home #Quarantinecookingchallenge, Dance challenges on TikTok and so many more.

These challenges were started by people when they began to stay home. All the challenges have come out as a positive impact on people during quarantine and it seems like no matter for how long we have to stay home such challenges will surely keep us engaged, entertained and connected to the World.

Mob Lynching

By- Shrey Jain

Lynching is a premeditated extrajudicial killing by a group. It is most often used to characterize informal public executions by a mob in order to punish an alleged transgressor or to intimidate a group. A recent report by India Spend, basing itself on the content analysis of news reports, concludes that “In the first six months of 2017, 20 cowterror attacks were reported–more than 75 percent of the 2016 figure, which was the worst year for such violence since 2010. The attacks include mob lynching, attacks by vigilantes, murder and attempt to murder, harassment, assault and gang-rape. In two attacks, the victims/survivors were chained, stripped and beaten, while in two others, the victims were hanged.”

Mob Lynching
Mob Lynching

According to India Today “, At least 16 cases of lynching have been reported from Tripura to Maharashtra since May 10, the latest being the lynching of five men in Dhule district. These incidents caused deaths of 22 people including a transgender” Social and political commentators have blamed this violence on a rise in socio-political and religious cleavages, a rise of vigilantism and an apparent atmosphere of impunity for attackers.

“The violence started with cow-related vigilantism but it is now building up more violent behavior–from small to big reasons anything could be the trigger,” psychologist Upneet Lalli, deputy director of the Institute of Correctional Administration in Chandigarh, told India Spend.

Videos of people tied and beaten, begging mobs to spare their lives, have been circulating on WhatsApp groups and other social media, affecting people everywhere. Also, Social media is aiding and abetting the process Mob psyche is different from the individual psyche. “When an individual acts, there is a sense of responsibility, but in a mob, there is a dispersion of responsibility and guilt.” The mob justifies its act as heroism to save the community, their identity, their children, themselves.

Ramayan: The philosophy of Life

By- Neha Sharma

 

An Inspirational tale of sacrifice, love, separation, conflict & redemption. Ramayana depicts characters that we should aspire to be like. It treads on the righteous path of Dharma and karma.
In order to overcome the ills prevalent in society, follow the teachings of Ramayana in these modern days. The Ramayana speaks the true identity of the individual, the real meaning of family and the sanctity of the society. It explains in detail the relationship that should exist between the preceptor and the discipline.
Ramayana teaching should be put into practice only then man can live a life of peaceful purpose.
It exhorts to transform one’s heart by practicing the noble values of prosperity, devotion and righteousness. Rama has devoted the highest virtues of truth, purity, fame, beauty & prosperity.

The fact is that every individual is divine, but due to immense attachment of men with his body, they are unable to know or recognize their divine nature. So you can experience and enjoy divinity only by treading along the path of love and truth shown by lord Ram.
The Ramayana is a Universal epic. Its influence stretches across countries, civilization, continents, culture, cults, creeds, classes etc and cultures.
It expounds rules for daily life and living. It also propagates the importance of love, Justice, Sacrifice and virtue. It cautions man against the danger of the six evils namely kama (lust), krodha (anger), Lobha (greed), Moha (attainment), Mada (pride), and Matsarya (envy, jealousy).
Sita’s abduction by Ravana brought about the downfall of Ravana. This great epic teaches that Good always wins over evil even it is more powerful as illustrated by the victory of Ram over Ravana.

Classroom Management: Try Positive Discipline

classroom management approach that focuses on the positive is one time-tested method to deal with kids who are misbehaving. But some who use this approach are getting some brushback from old-school teachers (and parents) who, stubbornly, insist that teachers who employ a use classroom management plan that focuses on only the positive is one that is too “Soft” on children.
However, lots of modern-day teachers still insist that the positive approach is the way to go. Today on TeachHUB.com, frequent contributing writer Janelle Cox, who has been a successful elementary school educator in Upstate New York for eons, looks at why positive disciplining is still disciplining.
Janelle’s ideas include:
  • Positive Discipline Teaches Logic
  • Rewarding Students for a Good Choice is Positive
  • And More!

In summation, Janelle notes: “The goal of using the positive discipline approach is to produce students who can think critically and make good decisions on their own. It allows students to learn and adapt from their behaviors in order to meet the expectations of their teacher. By teaching students (in a positive way) to make better choices, we are leading them on the path to success.”
Do you use a positive discipline approach in your classroom management techniques? Feel free to share your thoughts and experiences with this topic in the comment section, we would love to hear your thoughts.

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प्यूरा योजना

                          Providing Urban Amenities to Rural Areas –  अरबन एमिनिटीज इन रूरल एरिया का संक्षिप्त रूप है-प्यूरा। इसे हिन्दी में कहा जा सकता है। -’गा्रमीण क्षेत्रों में शहरी सुविधाएं उपलब्ध कराना’। इस योजना का उद्देश्य पहचाने गए गा्रमीण क्षेत्रों में शहरी सुविधाओं के सृजन और आधुनिक किफायती सम्पर्क के माध्यम से गा्रमीण-शहरी अंतर को दूर करना है। ’प्यूरा’ का मूल तथ्य है कि एक शहर के इर्द-गिर्द गांवों में विकास की अन्तर्निहित क्षमता है और यदि इन गांवों को आवश्यक आधारभूत सुविधाएं प्रदान की जाएं, तो वे आस-पास के क्षेत्र के लिए विकास केन्द्रों के ,रूप में उभर सकते हैं। इस योजना का उद्देश्य है- विकास की क्षमता रखने वाले चयनित नगरों के आस-पास गा्रमीण समूहों को पहचानना और उन समूहों से निम्नलिखित चार प्रकार की सम्पर्कता प्रदान करना-
                1.सड़क, परिवहन और बिजली की उपलब्धता।     2.बाजार सम्पर्कता जिससे किसान एवं अन्य गा्रमीण उत्पादक अपने उत्पादों के लिए अधिकतम मूल्य प्राप्त कर सकें।
          3.विश्वसनीय टेलिकॉम, इंटरनेट एवं सूचना प्रोद्योगिकी सुविधाओं के साथ इलेक्ट्रॉनिक्स सम्पर्कता।
                4.अच्छी शैक्षिक एवं प्रशिक्षण संस्थाओं के रूप में ज्ञान उपलब्ध कराना। शहरों के आस-पास जिन गा्रमीण समूहों का चयन किया जाएगा उनके लिए अलग-अलग विस्तृत परियोजना रिर्पोट तैयार की जाएगी, जिससे कि वहां सृजित की जाने वाली विश्ष्टि आधारभूत सुविधाओं की पहचान की जा सके। वैसे सामान्य तौर पर प्रत्येक गा्रमीण समूह को निम्नलिखित सुविधाएं अवश्य उपलब्ध कराई जाएंगी-‘प्यूरा‘ के लिए जो नीति अपनाई गई है उसके अन्तर्गत ‘प्यूरा‘ समूहों में सृजित की जाने वाली आधारभूत सुविधाएं, योजना के पहले चरण में, भारत सरकार एवं राज्य सरकारों की मौजूदा योजनाओं के माध्यम से सृजित की जाएगी। ऐसी अनेक योजनाएं हैं जिनका उपयोग चुने हुए समूहों के विकास के लिए किया जा सकता है। आधारभूत सुविधाएं सृजित करने के अलावा स्वर्णजयंती गा्रम स्वरोजगार योजना जैसी योजनाओं का उपयोग इन समूहों के गरीबों को स्वरोजगार के अवसर उपलब्ध कराने के लिए नए तरीके से किया जा सकता है। उदाहरणार्थ-लोगों को टैक्सी सर्विस, कृषि सेवा केन्द्र, विपणन सुविधाएं आदि शुरू करने के लिए वित्तिय सहायता दी जा सकती है। इस तरह दी गई सुविधाओं के अलावा समूह के विकास के लिए अन्य मंत्रालयों की योजनाओं का भी उपयोग किया जा सकता है। लेकिन आधारभूत सुविधा सम्बन्धी कमी को पूरा करने के लिए ‘प्यूरा‘ के अन्तर्गत सिर्फ अनुपूरक सहायता दी जाएगी।
                                ’प्यूरा’ जैसी परियोजना देश में पहली बार शुरू की जा रही है, इसलिए यह जरूरी है कि इसे देश भर में चलाने से पहले कुछ प्रायोगिक परियोजनाओं के माध्यम से इसकी सफलता की जांच की जाए। इसी उद्देश्य से 2004-05 के दौरान इस तरह की केवल सात प्रायोगिक परियोजनाएं सात राज्यों में शुरू की जाएंगी। वे सात राज्य हैं- उत्तर -प्रदेश, राजस्थान, बिहार,उड़ीसा, महाराष्ट्र, असम और आंध्र प्रदेश। प्रायोगिक परियोजनाओं को 10-15 गांवों के एक समूह से शुरू किया जाएगा। प्यूरा के अंतर्गत परियोजनाओं की जांच उनकी स्वीकृति और कार्यान्वयन की निगरानी के लिए एक संचालन समिति गठित की गई। भारत सरकार के सचिव को इस समिति का अक्ष्यक्ष बनाया गया। समिति की पहली बैठक 11 जनवरी 2005 को बुलाई गई जिसमें निर्णय लिया गया कि प्रत्येक चयानित समूह को 4-5 करोड़ रूपये की वित्तिय सहायता उपलब्ध कराई जाएगी। प्रारभ्म के चरण में इन परियोजनाओं की कार्य अवधि 3 वर्ष की होगी