IIPM Admission

Showing posts with label Colleges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colleges. Show all posts

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Indian universities and higher education institutes seem to be caught in a time warp teaching things

IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board

As the world moves ahead at a maddening pace, many major Indian universities and higher education institutes seem to be caught in a time warp' teaching things that became irrelevant ages ago

Subhash Kumar, an MCA student at Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology, Bhopal, woke up to the bitter reality that the academic degree for which he had sweated out day and night, was not going to be of much help, as soon as he got his first job as a programmer in a software company. The huge disconnect between what is being taught and what is required in the industry made life difficult for him and though he managed to save his job, he got average annual performance review.

He did not know Java, a computer language, because it wasn't included in his curriculum. This despite the fact that three-fourth of programming in the software industry in India is done in Java. 'I fail to understand the logic behind teaching things such as neural network or compiler designing when a minuscule percentage of students work on these domains. On the other hand, programming languages are not taught in the colleges while 95 percent of jobs in the market demand these skills,' says a discomfited Subhash. Tribhuvan Kumar echoes similar sentiments. 'How many computer science teachers in these reputed colleges even know the name of technologies such as Hybernet and SAP?'

Prateek Kumar, a law student at ICFAI law school says, 'We are taught everything from criminal procedure code to business and corporate law. It means there are more than 600 sections that have to be finished in just 44 classes. The teacher is able to explain only 250 to 300 sections.' The students are left to fend for themselves for the rest of the sections. For smaller law colleges in the country, it is very difficult to subscribe to those online sites which provide latest live case studies and judgments. 'Law is an evolving field and many new subjects are coming up such as Cyber Law, Environmental Law etc. There are very few teachers who can properly teach these subjects. Very few law colleges in the country have mock courts to teach proper way of pleading in a case,' adds Kumar.

The problem in India is at many levels. The syllabi are decided by the affiliating colleges and the curricula are prescribed by the universities. 'This leaves little room for quality control because syllabi are not revised frequently,' says Fr. Ambrose Pinto, Principal, St. Joseph's College, Mangalore.

Rajkumar Falwaria, a political science assistant professor at DAV college, Delhi University, says, 'The Delhi University is trying to revise the syllabi of many subjects. But there are hardly any books for the revised or newly introduced curriculum such as globalisation. I teach 'Reading Gandhi' for which there is no proper book in the market except for some cheap examination oriented guides.'

The college education scenario in the developed countries such as the USA is altogether different. Jesse Marks, a student at Yale University, sheds some light on the system while speaking to TSI, 'The curriculum is updated every semester (our classes are taught in spring and fall semesters)... and must be approved by the directors of each faculty. As for the content, many courses reflect current events and trends, whether it is a political science course on terrorism and counter-terrorism or a foreign correspondence course on the Iraq war reporting. Of course, others, especially in mathematics and history, may be taught in the same manner for decades.' Now, compare this situation to the one back home. The physics (Hons) syllabus of Magadh University in Bihar has not been revised since 1962, the year the university was established! Students here are still taught diode and triode in electronics. Rajesh Ranjan Prasad (name changed on request), head of the department of Physics at a college affiliated to Magadh University says, 'The world has moved to microprocessors that can do a billion calculations per second and we are teaching diode and triode. Frankly speaking, if the curriculum is revised and I am asked to teach those things, I will fumble in all likelihood.'

Except for commerce and a few other subjects, the curricula of most of the subjects are outdated, outmoded and obsolete. But the problem is not confined to the obsolete curricula. Many colleges have revised their course structure and curricula but in those cases the teachers are not able to handle the newly introduced syllabi. For example, Patna based National Institute of Technology has completely updated and revised its engineering syllabus two years ago, but this has created problems for both students and teachers. Rajeev Kumar, a fresh electrical engineering graduate from the institute says, 'Electrical power system problems are completely based on Matlad software and hardly any teacher is equipped to handle this. The college should have given them a proper training before they introduced such advanced things.' Kumar is currently employed at Power Grid Corporation of India.

The asphyxiating dominance of universities over the affiliated colleges is the primary reason why colleges are not able to revise the curricula as per the needs of the changing times. Political interference in universities has created an unhealthy atmosphere and this has added to the problem of the plummeting standards of education in the colleges.

Suvro Kamal Dutta, a political and economic analyst, has had opportunity to study both in India and at Cambridge University. He shares his experience with TSI, 'The big gap between India and other western countries in terms of educational standards seems very difficult to bridge. For example, see the history syllabi. We are not ready to move beyond Ashoka, Babar, Akbar and the independence movement. Even the students doing post graduation do not know about the technology of carbon dating and the use of remote sensing technology in the analysis of pre-historic locations.' He further adds, 'It is good to teach about our past but the education should be backed up with reality. It is more important to know what is happening at WTO and the impact of privatisation, liberalisation and globalisation on the Indian economy than what an emperor did a few hundred or a few thousand years ago.' The compartmentalisation of subject matter with no linkages in between and very few curricula linking the theory with application in the real world around render students wanting for motivation. Graduates should require minimal training before becoming productive, but typically there is an immense and inevitable need to retrain when on field ' waste of resources and time. 'The undergraduate syllabi are almost irrelevant, de-linked from the rest of the world. Educators and those responsible are usually apathetic and indifferent. Lack of refresher courses for teachers and infrequent syllabi revision leaves no room for innovation and creativity due to the smothering system of examinations conducted by universities,' says Archana Sharma, an eminent physicist and staff-scientist at CERN.

Some of the topics taught in Indian economics in the old syllabus as well as the new are totally irrelevant. There could have been interesting debates on topics like globalisation and liberalisation. It could have contained the economic backlash of the recent Iraq war. But sadly, our undergraduate curriculum has no scope to deal with contemporary topics.

Similarly, in journalism what is the use of teaching lithography when it is a junk technology? At most of the government universities, Hindi teachers have been assigned to teach journalism. Brijesh Mishra, a senior-producer in a leading business TV channel says, 'Most of the teachers who are teaching journalism have not seen newsroom in their life. They teach obsolete things which do not help students when they join industry. Instead, they should have taught how to write a good newspaper or television report, how to prepare rundown for the bulletin and most important how to cope with the immense pressure in a TV newsroom when news are bombarding you every second.'

The disconnect between the industry and academia is evident with report of Confederation of Indian Industry which clearly says that only 39.5 per cent of graduates in India are employable and that if India wants to sustain its pace of development, nothing less than a radical surgery will help.

The quality of teachers is another problem plaguing our universities and colleges. Vishesh Ranjan (name changed on request) says that the majority of the faculty in the MCA department at MANIT, Bhopal' where he is studying' is run by ad hoc teachers who are totally incompetent. 'They teach wrong concepts and even bring their own notes. The MCA course demands good computer lab. However, only 30 out of 60 computers work. There is no student feedback system. We are in a way forced to be taught by such teachers,' says a disappointed Ranjan.

India is a country gifted with large talent base and time has really come to change the outmoded education system in order to tap the creative energy of Indian students. This can only be done by revamping the curricula, and incorporating students' feedback so as to be informed of their needs and demands.


For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
When foreign shores beckon
An array of unconventional career options
IIPM BBA MBA B-School: Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize To Irom Chanu Sharmila
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India

Sunday, January 02, 2011

Ragging rights and wrongs


Prof Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions

Many steps have been taken in recent years to weed out ragging from campuses; but worries still nag college freshers and their parents. Aliya Abbas finds out why

School is behind you. You are ready for life in a college. There is excitement in the air. But amid the burst of activity an indefinable fear lurks in your heart. You have heard horror stories about bright young freshers being mentally pulverized by seniors on college campuses around the country. The dread of ragging psyches you out of your mind.

Indeed, ragging is rampant across India despite the authorities threatening stringent measures against the perpetrators. Once treated as a mere initiation ritual, it constituted largely harmless ribbing senior students indulged in to welcome newcomers to the campus. It was all done in jest and good humour. Ragging remained within civilized parameters. In recent years, however, the practice has assumed 'illegal' proportions. As ragging crosses the limits of acceptability, it is important for new students to know their rights and stand up for them. An anti-ragging law is in place.

Over the years, ragging has metamorphosed into something ugly. In the 1980s and 1990s, it used to be limited to undisruptive acts that usually culminated in singing, dancing and bonhomie. But in recent years, ragging has turned nasty, even life-threatening. Physical assaults, sexual abuse and mental torture have scarred many students for life, forcing some to opt out of their colleges, some to take the extreme step of killing themselves.

Prof. Raman Rao, principal, Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University (JNTU), Hyderabad, says, 'It is our duty to protect the interests of each student. They come here with high hopes. Every college or university in the country should take stringent measures to stop ragging.'

No law can be effective until people are aware of it. Says Harsh Agarwal, co-founder of CURE (Coalition to Uproot Ragging from Education), a Delhi-based NGO, 'There is a need to define ragging. Before making laws, one has to accept ragging as a social evil rather than as a mode of breaking the ice between new and old students on a campus.' He suggests that students could be educated through seminars, debates and street plays, besides other modes of communication. 'Ragging is not just limited to government colleges but has spread to new private institutions as well,' he adds.

Ragging is such a scourge that both students and their parents are today wary of colleges and hostels. Who can forget the tragic case of Aman Kachroo? Last year, the 19-year-old lad went to study medicine in Himachal Pradesh. He was beaten so mercilessly by his inebriated seniors that he lost his life. Since then, many students have been reported to have committed suicide after being ragged.

To prevent recurrence of such incidents and help students across the nation, the University Grants Commission launched a 24x7 toll free helpline (1800-180-5522) last year. Nearly 300,000 students from various states approached UGC for help but only 500 lodged formal complaints against either the college authorities or the culprits. Most students are apprehensive of the likely repercussions of standing up to this reprehensible practice. Says Agarwal: 'I am in favour of a soft approach. Just implementing laws or levelling charges under various sections of the Anti-Ragging Act will not help. Instead students should be made aware of what can be done to prevent ragging.' 'College authorities should encourage friendship-based activities, where students can learn from each other. Only then will India be a ragging-free nation. We should sensitise parents, teachers and peer groups in both universities and colleges,' adds Agarwal. The good news is that awareness is growing nationwide. The media has taken up the cause and that has helped make people aware of the ugly and fatal consequences of ragging. The Human Resources Development Ministry and various college authorities, too, have strengthened rules to prevent ragging.

There has been an appreciable increase in reporting of ragging cases in recent times, but there is still a long way to go. Ankit Mehrotra, a fresh graduate from a leading engineering college in Gurgaon, says, 'We were not ragged on the campus but while returning home in a college bus. We were forced to perform demeaning acts in front of girls.' Asked whether he ever reported the matter to the college authorities, he says he did not for fear of the consequences. 'I had to complete my term there at any cost,' he says.

The fact that many students still refrain from reporting cases of ragging to the college authorities or their own parents proves that the laws are still not strong enough to inspire confidence. Until iron-clad laws are implemented, the exercise aimed at eradicating ragging will be futile. But on many campuses, some success has been achieved. A professor at Delhi University's political science department, says, 'Because of anti-ragging laws and the active role of the various college authorities, no cases of ragging have been reported from our campus.' He adds: 'We conduct surprise checks in and around classrooms as well as in the hostel premises, this way we make sure that no untoward incident occurs.' Similarly, Christ College, Bangalore, is ragging-free. 'We see to it that no such incident ever happens in our hostel. Parents leave their children here trusting us. It is our responsibility to provide them with a healthy environment where they can study in peace,' says Cicily Cherian, warden of Christ College girls' hostel.

Bengal Engineering College, once a notorious hub of obnoxious forms of ragging as well as student unrest, has shed that reputation to a great extent. The college, located in Shibpur in the outskirts of Kolkata, has witnessed much improvement since Ajay Kumar Roy took over as the vice-chancellor in 2009. 'This isn't just media hype; things have really changed in BE College,' says first year student Soumitra Kar.

In Hyderabad's JNTU, the campus has reported no cases of ragging but the hostel has. Says a B.Tech student T. Mohan Chary: 'About six months ago, at least five students were suspended for ragging. They were handed over to the police. In fact, our principal also made sure that they did not appear for their semester test, leave alone the final exam. Since then, no case of ragging has been reported either on the campus or from the hostel as stringent actions are being taken and we are spreading awareness about ragging through seminars and other significant mediums.'

A fresher, Anushka Siddiqui, is excited about beginning her higher education in Delhi University. She says she does not fear being ragged at all as there are strict rules. Her mother, Ranjana Banerjee, a lecturer at JNU, agrees: 'The authorities are taking serious steps to curb ragging. So I have no apprehensions about sending Anushka to college.'

DU might have got its act right, but not every college or institute in this country can claim to have weeded out ragging for good. Worries continue to cast a shadow on young minds as many loopholes still remain to be plugged.
(Some names changed on request)

A success story

Jyothi Nivas College, Bangalore

The college follows to the T all the rules laid down by the Anti-Ragging Committee. They include:
Cancellation of admission
Suspension from attending class
Withholding/withdrawing scholarship/fee concession and other benefits
Debarring from appearing in any test/examination or other evaluation process, and withholding the results
Debarring from representing the university in the fest, sports or other such events
Suspension/expulsion from the hostel
Rustication from the college for a period of up to 4 semesters
Expulsion from the college and consequent debarring from the admission to any other institution
Fine of Rs.25,000/-
In the case of offences of very serious/grievous nature, referring the case to police, in addition to any other punishment
Collective punishment where the offence is committed collectively by a group or by a class making it difficult or not possible to identify specific persons

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
Award Conferred To Irom Chanu Sharmila By IIPM

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Indian universities and higher education institutes seem to be caught in a time warp teaching things


IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board

As the world moves ahead at a maddening pace, many major Indian universities and higher education institutes seem to be caught in a time warp'teaching things that became irrelevant ages ago


Subhash Kumar, an MCA student at Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology, Bhopal, woke up to the bitter reality that the academic degree for which he had sweated out day and night, was not going to be of much help, as soon as he got his first job as a programmer in a software company. The huge disconnect between what is being taught and what is required in the industry made life difficult for him and though he managed to save his job, he got average annual performance review.

He did not know Java, a computer language, because it wasn't included in his curriculum. This despite the fact that three-fourth of programming in the software industry in India is done in Java. 'I fail to understand the logic behind teaching things such as neural network or compiler designing when a minuscule percentage of students work on these domains. On the other hand, programming languages are not taught in the colleges while 95 percent of jobs in the market demand these skills,' says a discomfited Subhash. Tribhuvan Kumar echoes similar sentiments. 'How many computer science teachers in these reputed colleges even know the name of technologies such as Hybernet and SAP?'

Prateek Kumar, a law student at ICFAI law school says, 'We are taught everything from criminal procedure code to business and corporate law. It means there are more than 600 sections that have to be finished in just 44 classes. The teacher is able to explain only 250 to 300 sections.' The students are left to fend for themselves for the rest of the sections. For smaller law colleges in the country, it is very difficult to subscribe to those online sites which provide latest live case studies and judgments. 'Law is an evolving field and many new subjects are coming up such as Cyber Law, Environmental Law etc. There are very few teachers who can properly teach these subjects. Very few law colleges in the country have mock courts to teach proper way of pleading in a case,' adds Kumar.

The problem in India is at many levels. The syllabi are decided by the affiliating colleges and the curricula are prescribed by the universities. 'This leaves little room for quality control because syllabi are not revised frequently,' says Fr. Ambrose Pinto, Principal, St. Joseph's College, Mangalore.

Rajkumar Falwaria, a political science assistant professor at DAV college, Delhi University, says, 'The Delhi University is trying to revise the syllabi of many subjects. But there are hardly any books for the revised or newly introduced curriculum such as globalisation. I teach 'Reading Gandhi' for which there is no proper book in the market except for some cheap examination oriented guides.'

The college education scenario in the developed countries such as the USA is altogether different. Jesse Marks, a student at Yale University, sheds some light on the system while speaking to TSI, 'The curriculum is updated every semester (our classes are taught in spring and fall semesters)... and must be approved by the directors of each faculty. As for the content, many courses reflect current events and trends, whether it is a political science course on terrorism and counter-terrorism or a foreign correspondence course on the Iraq war reporting. Of course, others, especially in mathematics and history, may be taught in the same manner for decades.' Now, compare this situation to the one back home. The physics (Hons) syllabus of Magadh University in Bihar has not been revised since 1962, the year the university was established! Students here are still taught diode and triode in electronics. Rajesh Ranjan Prasad (name changed on request), head of the department of Physics at a college affiliated to Magadh University says, 'The world has moved to microprocessors that can do a billion calculations per second and we are teaching diode and triode. Frankly speaking, if the curriculum is revised and I am asked to teach those things, I will fumble in all likelihood.'

Except for commerce and a few other subjects, the curricula of most of the subjects are outdated, outmoded and obsolete. But the problem is not confined to the obsolete curricula. Many colleges have revised their course structure and curricula but in those cases the teachers are not able to handle the newly introduced syllabi. For example, Patna based National Institute of Technology has completely updated and revised its engineering syllabus two years ago, but this has created problems for both students and teachers. Rajeev Kumar, a fresh electrical engineering graduate from the institute says, 'Electrical power system problems are completely based on Matlad software and hardly any teacher is equipped to handle this. The college should have given them a proper training before they introduced such advanced things.' Kumar is currently employed at Power Grid Corporation of India.

The asphyxiating dominance of universities over the affiliated colleges is the primary reason why colleges are not able to revise the curricula as per the needs of the changing times. Political interference in universities has created an unhealthy atmosphere and this has added to the problem of the plummeting standards of education in the colleges.

Suvro Kamal Dutta, a political and economic analyst, has had opportunity to study both in India and at Cambridge University. He shares his experience with TSI, 'The big gap between India and other western countries in terms of educational standards seems very difficult to bridge. For example, see the history syllabi. We are not ready to move beyond Ashoka, Babar, Akbar and the independence movement. Even the students doing post graduation do not know about the technology of carbon dating and the use of remote sensing technology in the analysis of pre-historic locations.' He further adds, 'It is good to teach about our past but the education should be backed up with reality. It is more important to know what is happening at WTO and the impact of privatisation, liberalisation and globalisation on the Indian economy than what an emperor did a few hundred or a few thousand years ago.' The compartmentalisation of subject matter with no linkages in between and very few curricula linking the theory with application in the real world around render students wanting for motivation. Graduates should require minimal training before becoming productive, but typically there is an immense and inevitable need to retrain when on field ' waste of resources and time. 'The undergraduate syllabi are almost irrelevant, de-linked from the rest of the world. Educators and those responsible are usually apathetic and indifferent. Lack of refresher courses for teachers and infrequent syllabi revision leaves no room for innovation and creativity due to the smothering system of examinations conducted by universities,' says Archana Sharma, an eminent physicist and staff-scientist at CERN.

Some of the topics taught in Indian economics in the old syllabus as well as the new are totally irrelevant. There could have been interesting debates on topics like globalisation and liberalisation. It could have contained the economic backlash of the recent Iraq war. But sadly, our undergraduate curriculum has no scope to deal with contemporary topics.

Similarly, in journalism what is the use of teaching lithography when it is a junk technology? At most of the government universities, Hindi teachers have been assigned to teach journalism. Brijesh Mishra, a senior-producer in a leading business TV channel says, 'Most of the teachers who are teaching journalism have not seen newsroom in their life. They teach obsolete things which do not help students when they join industry. Instead, they should have taught how to write a good newspaper or television report, how to prepare rundown for the bulletin and most important how to cope with the immense pressure in a TV newsroom when news are bombarding you every second.'

The disconnect between the industry and academia is evident with report of Confederation of Indian Industry which clearly says that only 39.5 per cent of graduates in India are employable and that if India wants to sustain its pace of development, nothing less than a radical surgery will help.

The quality of teachers is another problem plaguing our universities and colleges. Vishesh Ranjan (name changed on request) says that the majority of the faculty in the MCA department at MANIT, Bhopal' where he is studying' is run by ad hoc teachers who are totally incompetent. 'They teach wrong concepts and even bring their own notes. The MCA course demands good computer lab. However, only 30 out of 60 computers work. There is no student feedback system. We are in a way forced to be taught by such teachers,' says a disappointed Ranjan.

India is a country gifted with large talent base and time has really come to change the outmoded education system in order to tap the creative energy of Indian students. This can only be done by revamping the curricula, and incorporating students' feedback so as to be informed of their needs and demands.


For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
IIPM BBA MBA B-School: Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize To Irom Chanu Sharmila
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India