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Satellite Instructional Television Experiment (SITE) is one of the pioneer experiments in Indian
television scenario where television is used for social causes. The experiment became a tool for
mass education through various programmes designed exclusively for the project. The
programmes concentrated on education, agriculture, health and family planning. It was
the first experiment to telecast educational programmes direct from satellite to receivers
The earth stations at Delhi and Ahmedabad telecasted four hours programmes every
day. Programmes are classified into two: Educational Television (ETV) and
Instructional Television (ITV).Educational television programmes designed for
school children. Such programmes focused on education. Broadcasted 1.5 hours
programme on working days at school hours. Students are exposed to these
programmes as part of the school activity. During holidays, the time used for
teacher empowerment. Varieties of content developed to train teachers through the
facilities provided by the project. Almost 10000 primary school teachers became
part of the training programmes.
The experiment practiced in 2400 villages spread over six selected regions in Orissa,
Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh and Kamataka. Besides the villages,
certain towns also got the programmes through earth transmitters. ETV and ITV used
local languages like Hindi, Oriya, Telungu and Kannada.
All India Radio personnel planned and produced programmes at the production centers setup
in Delhi, Ahmedabad and Cuttack. A committee included central and state government
representatives, experts from universities, teacher training colleges and social workers helped
the production team. Special committees on education, agriculture, health and family planning
formed to support the production groups. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)
set up its own Audio -Visual Instruction Division to plan and produce programmes
for SITE.
SITE is a result of a recommendation by the UNESCO expert mission in 1967. As per the
request of government of India, UNESCO undertook a feasibility study for a project in satellite
for communications. The feasibility study conducted between November 18, 1967 and
December 08, 1967. Following the UNECO report, three Indian engineers visited USA and
France in June 1967 to get first hand exposure to the technical aspects. Government of India set
up the National Satellite Communications Group (NASCOM) in 1968 to lead possible
utilizations of synchronous communication satellite. The group consisted cabinet ministers,
representatives of ISRO and All India Radio. The NASCOM recommended using ATS-6
satellite for communication purposes. AT-6 is a second generation satellite developed by
NASA for an experiment in educational television. To practice the recommendation,
Department of Atomic Energy made an agreement with National Aeronautic and Space
Administration (NASA) of US for the loan of a satellite for one year in 1969.
As per the Memorandum of Understanding signed between the two countries, the
objectives of the project were divided into two parts—general objectives and
specific objectives. The general objectives of the project were to:
Using the facility SITE commenced its operation on August 01, 1975. The experiment became
a great success. Villagers received the project whole heartedly. For the entire year people
gathered around television sets and watched programmes eagerly. In the midst of
demands from Indian villagers, journalists and others NASA shifted its ATS-6
satellite away from India. Thus the project concluded in July 31, 1976 remaining sweet
memoirs of television realities.
Technologically the experiment put forward an insight and the demands took a positive
initiative to develop own satellite for communications. After tiresome jobs, ISRO developed
Indian National Satellite system. In August, 1982 India launched satellite.
Reference Link:
http://mediamarx.blogspot.com/2012/04/satellite-instructional-television.html