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     Patna, April 4 : As the radio crackles to life, hundreds of thousands of   students in Class 1 and 2 across Bihar - one of the most underdeveloped states   of India - prick up their ears. They are set for another invaluable lesson in   spoken English. The “English for Fun” radio programme started by the Bihar   government is a hit among primary school students in the state who feel it is   taking them that much closer to modern India. Rajesh Anand, a six-year-old from Janipur village in Phulwarisharief   district, never misses the programme, which is broadcast three times a week   during school hours. “I did not know anything more than the basic alphabet and elementary words   like bat, cat and rat. But now I have improved my English after listening to the   radio programme,” Rajesh, who studies in Class 1, said when this IANS   correspondent visited his village close to the Bihar capital. “Now I can say ‘welcome’, ‘thank you’ and even write small sentences,” said   Rajesh. It’s an achievement for a boy who belongs to a landless farmer’s family   and speaks the Maghi dialect at home.  The programme covers nearly six million primary school students in 37   districts in the state and is broadcast through radio sets in government   schools. “English for Fun” was launched by the Bihar government in December last year   at a cost of Rs.40 million in collaboration with a Bangalore-based NGO,   Education Development Centre, and the US Agency for International Development   (USAID). It teaches spoken English and grammar through 50 songs and simple lessons   aired by All India Radio in a 50-minute capsule. “It is easy and interesting. We enjoy it and all of us eagerly wait for the   radio class,” said Priya Kumari, a Class 2 student from a primary school in   Janipur. Rajesh Bhushan, director of the Bihar Education Project (BEP) that is   implementing the programme, said: “It was launched to provide students an   opportunity to learn the language, brush up their grammar and at the same time   make the process of learning fun.” BEP has provided radio sets to 70,000 schools at a cost of Rs.1,000 per set   and is also paying the broadcast fee to All India Radio, Bhushan said. He said   USAID has funded the technology tools for teaching and training programmes. BEP has also published a primer with the help of the Bihar chapter of Unicef   that lays down guidelines to teach English to Class 1 and 2 students in primary   schools across the state. Primary schools in the villages of economically backward Bihar cater to   children from families with poor literacy. According to figures released in   October 2007, the literacy rate in the state stood at 47 percent. Official sources said 53 episodes of the interactive radio instruction   programme have already been broadcast and 122 would be aired four days a week   from April 15.  (IANS)
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