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  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    An Analysis Of Instructional Media Utilization In Adult Education Programme For Rural Women
    (I.C College Of Home Science Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University Hisar, 1984) Gupta, Abha; Verma, T.
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    A Study On Utility Of Home Programmes Broadcast From All India Radio, New Delhi For Radio Listening Farm Women
    (I.C College Of Home Science Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University Hisar, 1984) Chawla, Renu; Sharma, R. K
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    Genetics of yield and Some Quality Traits in Pearl Millet (Pennisetum Tyohoides (Brum) Stapf and Hubb)
    (College of Agriculture Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University Hisar, 1983) Sachdeva, Ashok Kuamr; Singh, P.
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    Studies on the Early Diagnosis and Correlated Response in Green gram (Vigna Radiata (L.) Wilczek)
    (College of Agriculture Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University Hisar, 1984) Malik, Brij Pal Singh; Singh, R. K
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    Problems of Old Age and Related Factors in Urban Haryana
    (Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural Univesity, Hisar, 1998) Punia, Darshana; Punia, S
    Ageing is a phase of life and a biological process. Every organism that is born must age with time and decay. It has been described as the process of diminishing capacity to react to environmental conditions and weaving out of the body's basic mechanisms to withstand stress. In our society, old age is often regarded as a time when the vessel of life has become empty and a time when human development and human potentiality has come to an irreversible and inevitable halt. Aging is process which takes place during the entire life span of an organism. Though old age in man is often associated with disease, however, aging can never be regarded as synonymous with disease, loneliness and uselessness. The truth about aging is that it is a natural and universal process. It is not at all a crisis which hits us suddenly and abruptly in middle age, but it is a continuous unfolding cycle of change that begins to operate even before our birth.
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    An Exploratory Study of Cognition and Selected Natural and Socio-Economic Factors of Rural Pre-School Children
    (Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural Univesity, Hisar, 1983) Bishnoi, Anushiya; Khalakdina, M.
    Cognition is the process of knowing. A person perceives or thinks about objects and events and his mental representation of these is known as cognition. It includes knowledge of the properties of objects and relationships among them. Some psychologists suggest that basic human concepts emerge from the interaction of innate capacities with environmental opportunities (Rower - 1974). Nutrition is necessary before innate capacities can be activated. The environment, however, must provide opportunities. for experiences that activate the capacities and determine their further development. Environment is, therefore, considered as an important factor in the the of an individual among the many features of the child's environment, nutrition has been accepted as a pre-requisite for optimal growth and development. In recent years, nutrition as a public policy issue has become a priority area as it relates to the social, political and economic development of a country. Nutrition is a basic need for human growth. The prevalence of malnutrition is high in developing countries According to the 1971-72 National Sample Survey about 57 per cent people in the rural areas are found to be below tile prescribed caloric intake (UNICEF,1981).
  • ThesisItemOpen Access
    A Comparative Study of Knowledge and Attitude of Rural and Urban High School Boys and Girls Regarding Family Planning
    (Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural Univesity, Hisar, 1984) Malhotra, Rashmi; Nath, M
    India·s population policy stands somewhere between the pessimistic prediction of the Neo-Malthusians that mankind. particularly the third world. is heading for a major disaster if population continued to grow at the present pace and the assumption of the structuralists who as Epstein are convinced that the earth's resources are sufficient to cope with any size of population. provided society can be restructured in such a way as to ensure the universal application of ever advancing technological progress. ~he census of India shows that population of India is 683.810,051. India has neither the physical resources nor the organisational machinery Social, political and economic to control such a huge mass of population. At present there is an urgent need for uplifting 325 million persons living below the poverty line especially in rural areas (Simat, 1982). In spite of the various developmental programmes this change cannot be met if population continues to grow so rapidly.