Q1.READ PASSAGE CAREFULLY AND ANSWER THE FOLLOWING
QUESTIONS:
1. The revolution in information technology (IT), far from helping India to leapfrog
to a post-industrial society, threatens to rupture the social fabric by enriching a
few at the cost of many.
2. In a very short time and quite unexpectedly, India has risen to considerable
eminence in the world of information technology. This year, software products
are expected to account for $ 5.7 billion in exports and will account for a
quarter of the growth in the economy, which is expected to grow nearly seven
per cent. Within eight years, predicts a recent study by McKinsey & Co. and the
National Association of Software & Service Companies (Nasscom), India’s
annual IT exports could hit $ 50 billion about 33 per cent of global software
exports. Such a surge is expected to generate 2.2 million jobs—and push our
growth rate near the double digits that many East Asian Tigers enjoyed before
the 1997 crash.
3. For the rapidly growing middle class, which was desperate to make its
presence felt but remained mired in the great Indian outback of the global
economy and regretfully watched the industrial revolution pass it by, this is the
moment they have been waiting for. When countries like Japan and Germany,
the objects of Indian admiration, should come knocking on our doors to solicit
our talent to invigorate their industry, it is indeed redemption of sorts. And IT is
the cause of it all.
4. The big question is, will IT do an encore for India as a nation, and not just for a
wafer thin percentage of IT-literate Indians, mostly the poster boys of the IITs?
5. IT has, as yet, failed to touch the lives of the average citizen and India is
nowhere close to being a knowledge economy or society. As per the
International Data Corporation (IDC), in a survey of 55 countries, India ranks
54th on its Information Society Index.
6. The fact is, it is a straightforward reflection of the deep inequality of our
education system which breeds a few ‘geniuses’ at the cost of the entire nation.
A study by former director of the National Centre for Software Technology, R.
Narasimhan, points out that nowhere is the digital divide more glaring than in IT
education. The report warns that India’s ‘obsession’ with the software industry
and its exports orientation is leading to the churning out of unemployable
students on one hand and bright whiz-kids on the other. While the latter are
lured away by overseas employers, the former remain unemployable.
Narasimhan cautions against the ‘hype’ associated with the phenomenal
growth of India’s software industry defying rational explanations and built up
into a ‘mystique of sort’ which breeds false hopes. 7. India’s software industry is a poor employment generator. In the mid-Nineties,
some 20,000 people were actively employed in software export services. In
contrast, there were three million registered unemployed graduates in the
Nineties. While the ‘Narasimhan study doesn’t mention number of hobs lost
due to computerisation, one could comfortably add a million to the number.
1. The revolution in IT threatens to break apart the social fabric
because…………………………
(a) the stocks of software companies have risen at BSE
(b) it has helped India to rise beyond the industrial society
(c) it is enriching a few at the cost of many
(d) it has created a gulf between the rural and urban sector
2. Growth in export of Indian software products and national economy have been
achieved because of…………………………
(a) global recession
(b) liberalised economy
(c) public private cooperation
(d) eminence of Information Technology
3. It is a time of pride for the middle classes in India
because…………………………
(a) developed industrial nations will require Indian software professionals to
invigorate their industry
(b) they are desperate to make their presence felt
(c) they have remained stuck in the mud of global economy
(d) they have regretfully watched the industrial revolution pass by them
4. The digital divide is clearly visible in IT revolution
because…………………………
(a) it has improved a lot of average Indian citizen
(b) it has benefitted only the products of IITs or some IT-literates
(c) it has made India a knowledge economy or society
(d) non-IT trained students run the IT institutes
5. Narasimhan’s report cautions against ‘hype’ around IT software industry
because…………………………
(a) it is rational
(b) it breeds false hopes
(c) all look for foreign assignments
(d) it attracts even the dullards
6. The word ‘redemption’ in para 3 means…………………………
(a) recoupment
(b) recumbent
(c) recovery
(d) redeeming
B. Answer the following questions in brief:
7. Why is the digital divide clearly visible in IT revolution?
8. Why is IT not beneficial for average Indians?9. What does Narasimhan’s report highlight on IT software industry?
10. How is it lucrative for the middle classes in India?
11. Find the words from the passage which are similar in meaning.
(a) Recovery (para 3)
(b) Very easily seen (para 6)
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
Where is the passage dear
Answered by
0
Answer:
passage is not there ....
Similar questions