As to your problem, anything which you declare locally using the old fashioned scriptlets is not linked with a jsp:useBean. Also, declaring a local scriptlet variable is not visible in the included pages, you need to explicitly put them in at least the request scope. As using scriptlets is a bad practice. I recommend to forget about it at all.
In your specific case, just create a real java bean to hold the data. That is, a class with an (implicit) default constructor and private properties which are exposed by public getters/setters. Here's a basic example:
public class User {
private String name;
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
}
Then you can use a servlet class to preprocess requests. You can use servlet's doGet() method for this.
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) {
User user = new User();
user.setName("Jitendra");
request.setAttribute("user", user); // Store in request scope.
request.getRequestDispatcher("/WEB-INF/show.jsp").forward(request, response);
}
Map this servlet in web.xml on an url-pattern of for example /show. This servlet should then be accessible by http://example.com/context/show and its doGet() would be executed immediately.
Then change/create the JSP file show.jsp which you place in /WEB-INF to prevent from direct access (so that clients cannot access it by http://example.com/context/show.jsp but are "forced" to call the servlet) with the following line:
<p>User name: ${user.name}</p>
The ${user} refers to the object which is associated with any request/session/application attribute key user. This does behind the scenes jspContext.findAttribute("user"). As the returned User instance conforms the javabean spec, the ${user.name} will invoke the getName() method on the User instance and the EL will display its outcome.
Oh, I should add, you do not need jsp:useBean for this as the servlet has already created and put the desired bean in the scope.
That said, I recommend to start with a decent JSP/Servlet tutorial/book. Examples:
Hope this helps.