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Showing posts with label IIT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IIT. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Where are the engineers?

That only a third of IIT students go on to pursue technology is symptomatic of the deep crisis in engineering education today, and could be solved if practice is preferred to theory in the institutions.

A crisis, pundits on American television often say, is a terrible thing to waste. The recent unpleasantness following the de-recognition of the Ambedkar Periyar Study Circle by the Indian Institute of Technology administration is a case in point. That the administration found a graceful way to put an end to the impasse and come to some reconciliation with the small group of students involved is, of course, important. But it also gives us occasion to ponder over some bigger questions involving higher education in India.
The issues concerning greater inclusivity for long-marginalised groups and of freedom of speech on campus are important but most university administrators have found effective ways to resolve these problems through models such as affirmative action and diversity policies, gender and ethnic sensitivity training, modular learning programmes, remedial education and so on. Indian universities could adapt these to the local context. Periodic workshops and meetings of senior academic administrators could also help.
A broken engineering education
The bigger and perhaps far more serious predicament is that engineering education is completely broken. Ironically, this is because of the very success of the IITs and engineering colleges. One problem is that economic and public policy interpretations of the problem are inadequate to characterise it fully. Well-worn neo-Benthamite frameworks of interpretation, a resource efficiency study, for instance, might reveal poor teachers or infrastructure, but would miss fundamental insights from fields like culture studies and sociology.
Calling something a societal problem means that more is at stake than just an aggregate of individual ‘interests’ or ‘utilities’. Social scientists recognise that broad patterns of human interaction tend to coalesce into structured routines and maybe even have rules of their own, but that these are always situated in broader historically and spatially defined contexts. In engineering education, we see this in the mad rush for seats in the milieu of rising aspirations cutting across caste and class.
The race for a career
In the past two decades, young men (and rarely women) have been drawn in large numbers towards elite engineering colleges but they cannot simply be understood as autonomous souls drawn towards engineering as an academic discipline. Rather, there is a large set of other social influences pushing them — parents, peers and teachers but also the image of IIT graduates as smart, young, well-dressed professionals in high-paying careers. Most important, this rush has taken place in the context of great churning and economic opportunity, even as more than 95 per cent of the population struggles to find true forms of mobility. In my own case, my father, who had a degree in English literature and became a journalist and later a civil servant, was convinced that I, his only son, had to be educated in an IIT, which he termed a ‘passport’ to the good life. I did actually benefit from my IIT degree in aeronautical engineering, by using it to get advanced degrees in science and environmental policy, which again helped me gain entry into the humanities and social sciences.
For tens of thousands of IIT alumni, similar success stories are evident. But let us look at what happens to the entrants to the system. I categorise three broad sets of attitudes that students develop in IITs. First, there are those who are motivated by the prospect of the passport, largely having come from modest economic and social backgrounds. Earlier they used to have an eye on postgraduate education, primarily abroad, with the hope of securing corporate or academic positions. Today, with the global corporate market demanding IIT talent, students often skip further education. Indeed, the proportion of undergraduates from IITs doing their PhDs has diminished dramatically in recent decades.
The second group is characterised by a deep despondency of some sort, even with outstanding job prospects. Many turn towards non-engineering vocations, ranging from the arts to politics and entrepreneurship, as Chetan Bhagat, Arvind Kejriwal and Mansur Khan have famously done.
It is the third group that is the real motivation for the IITs. This group has a direct interest in solving challenges of technology. They could be experimenters or entrepreneurs but are mostly trying to engage with the material sense in which the transformation of human society is an undertaking in itself. Examples here range from Vinod Khosla and Subra Suresh to numerous other technology leaders across the world.
In all groups, however, students seem to experience many forms of alienation that could spiral into crises where one is forced to take a position unexpectedly. To the extent that IITs are also prone, like every other institution today in India, to asking socially relevant questions around gender, caste, and elite privilege and corruption, politics is always already within its midst. If it has been muted, it was only because of a self-fashioning by its members that the discourse could be ‘apolitical’, itself a doomed venture.
What’s the solution?
The fact that only a third of graduating IIT students fulfil the original vision of IITs to create ‘temples’ or true workshops of technology should give us pause. What does it mean that most of the engineering students today do not seek to work on real-world engineering problems?
Several of my colleagues in the Humanities and Social Sciences, increasingly seen as an oasis for engineering students but also as a threat by many, are routinely solicited for advice, to find options to exit their pre-organised trajectories. Most students are like unwilling recruits in the army, forced to do time, but seeking space to explore other interests. That the APSC issue was read by many as reinforcing the institute’s disciplinary authority, as if it were an extension of cheating, for instance, raised tensions and voices. What, then, should be done about IITs?
First, phase out the undergraduate BTech programme and replace it with a five-year engineering curriculum, but with roughly 50 per cent of time devoted to technology development as an end in itself. The reasons for doing so are many. Primarily, IIT education reinforces elite engineering status by emphasising theory and equations over practice. I learnt a lot of high-level mathematics before I came face-to-face with a real aircraft, where the equations I had studied seemed distant. But what one really needs to build skills and understanding is a greater emphasis on real-world technologies and their operations in relation to economy and society. This is not happening, except in some excellent initiatives such as the Centre for Innovation in IIT Madras. By preferring mathematical puzzle-solving over manual skills, the present system subtly reproduces prejudices in many Indian communities and accentuates certain routines of privilege, both within the student community and occasionally in faculty hiring and promotions. Even the entry into IITs should be based on problem-solving ability as well as demonstrated aptitude for materially engaging with tools and technologies.
Second, turn IITs into nodes that actively foster ‘living laboratories’ across India. If this were a part of a new national mission, each IIT would be expected to build communities of practice within its neighbourhood by drawing on all existing segments of local entrepreneurship, and India has outstanding models. Such relationships should be open-ended and truly experimental if even a few are to succeed.
Third, the Ministry of Human Resource Development should continue to stay at arm’s length from the IITs and indeed all higher education institutions in general. This does not imply privatising them, which would increase fees and further stratify education. Rather, such institutions should be encouraged to experiment with forms of curricula that are expansive rather than particular, and require them to take responsibility for building a collective, inclusive platform for higher education, while providing the resources, both economic and otherwise.
The bottled-up tensions that emerged in the recent IIT Madras crisis are symptoms of a larger, deeper crisis in which all of us are implicated. It is time to recognise these signs and find sustainable solutions.
(Sudhir Chella Rajan is a faculty member of the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Madras. The views here are his own. Email: scrajan@iitm.ac.in.)

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Thinktank: Govt using IIT research selectively
New Delhi:
TIMES NEWS NETWORK


Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) on Monday alleged that the Centre resorted to “selective use“ of studies by IIT-Delhi to argue that vehicles were minor contributors to PM 2.5 (fine, respirable particles) levels and that banning older diesel vehicles would not help in improving the city's air quality.The Union ministry of road transport and highways has so far submitted three scientific studies to substantiate their argument against the ban on old vehicles. Two of them are by Transportation Research and Injury Prevention Programme (TRIPP) of IIT-Delhi and another by University of Birmingham, Desert Research Institute, Reno and the Central Road Research Institute. The ministry has also tried to argue that the transport sector's contribution to air pollution may have been overestimated by people. But CSE said two important issues have been hidden from the NGT bench--the impact of diesel fumes from vehicles in the breathing zone and the toxicity of diesel, which is graded as a carcinogen by WHO.
“While resorting to number crunching to prove that vehicles do not contribute much to ambient PM2.5 levels, the IIT-study and the affidavits are silent on health risks from direct exposure to vehicular fume, especially diesel fume that is of bigger concern.While the NGT order covers all old diesel vehicles in both private and commercial segments across the NCR, this study focuses only on old cars in Delhi to stop the NGT ban,“ CSE said in a statement.
It assessed the IIT-D studies that were submitted to NGT and said they could be misleading. The study states that the number of vehicles in the 11-15 years' age bracket is very small--only 6% of the total fleet, which contributes 1% to PM 2.5. “The emission load from diesel vehicles that are 11-15 years' old and meet older emissions standards emit a lot more on a per vehicle basis than those that are between 1 and 10 years' old. Compared to a BS-IV car, a 15-year-old diesel car emits 7.6 times higher particulate matter and 3.4 times higher NOx,“ CSE added.
Emissions from one old diesel car are equal to that from four to seven new cars.“A 10-year old diesel car emits 2.4 times higher PM. Removing old vehicles will reduce direct exposure substantially .This benefit will be much higher if the old diesel trucks are also removed or bypassed,“ CSE said.
“It is inexplicable why MoRTH has considered the estimates of only one study on the estimates of vehicles' contribution to PM 2.5. The IIT-D study fails to highlight the health risk from the direct exposure to vehicular fume that is of serious concern globally . Vehicular emissions take place within our breathing zone,“ the environmental think-tank said.
For example, studies by Health Effect Institute have shown that the influence of vehicular pollution is maximum up to 500 metres from roadside and more than half of Delhi's population lives within this breathing zone, the statement said. CSE also said that IIT-D had not guided the government and NGT about the toxic risk and the fact that WHO and IARC have classified diesel exhaust as class-I carcinogen for its strong link with lung cancer.

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

IIT Students Crumble Under Study Load, Expectations
Mumbai:


When Shankar K (name changed) arrived at one of the older IITs a couple of years ago, he became the first person in his family to attend college.His parents had pooled to gether their life's savings to send him to coaching class and then IIT, and today , the 20-year-old is in his second year of electrical engineering.
Every day, he says, is a struggle. The pressure to keep up with his grades is taking a toll. So much so, he hasn't had time to make good friends. And with his poor English and communi cation skills, he fears that landing a good job is going to be a real challenge.
Stress is part and parcel of college life, but for some students at the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), it can get overwhelming.
Everything adds up: daunting academic loads, struggling to keep up after a lifetime of being an overachiever and the burden of expectations from family, friends and peers.
Last year, the IITs saw an estimated 14 student suicides, probably the highest ever across these elite colleges. On Sunday , Jitesh Sharma, a third-year student of chemical engineering at IIT Bombay , allegedly committed suicide. He left behind a note, talking about poor performance in his exams as well as his worry about placements.
The inability to cope ­ often spiraling into depression ­ has haunted several students. “The world creates artificial expectations. There's peer pressure, family pressure, societal pressure.Unfortunately , for some students, their ambition is centred around pay packages. To their mind, their success will be judged only around their pay packages and placements,“ says Indranil Manna, director, IIT Kanpur.
Agrees Mohak Mehta, placement manager at IIT Bombay: “There are students blindly taking up computer science and engineering even if they aren't inclined towards it just because that's where the fattest pay cheques are. Parents call up the placement cell to find out the schools or branches getting the top salaries, and that's the one they pressurise their children to join.“
At a leading IIT, a top 50 AIRholder in JEE took up computer science but could not cope with the pressure. He went into depression. “In this competitive environment, when someone starts slipping, stress just keeps building up from there,“ says a director at a top IIT, who does not wish to be named.
“There are students coming into the system thinking that once they've made it to an IIT, things are easy from then on,“ says Parth Vaswani of IIT Kanpur.“They don't realise it's just the first hurdle. You could have been a topper all your life, but here you may be struggling to get by.“
Pressure builds up in various ways. There are students who see their batchmates bag coveted internships in the second and third years and suffer from comparison.There are those who have been faring poorly academically . Then there are students from humble backgrounds whose families have sold their land or put in all their savings for what they believe is the ticket to a better life. Some of these students don't even have the time to bond or make friends.
“Stress and depression is more prevalent among people who are shy and quiet. There are counsel lors on campus but they won't reach out for help,“ says IIT Bombay's Mohak Mehta.
Anonymity helps, says Richa Singh, an IIT Guwahati alumnus who started a crowdfunded online platform called Your D.O.S.T.to provide emotional support.They have over 30 counsellors on board so people can reach out anonymously and vent their feelings online.
While providing an enterprise solution at IIT Guwahati, 360 students signed up within the first 10 days. Around 100 queries came in ranging from difficulty in concentrating on their studies and poor grades, to apprehensions about not getting placed. Singh says she is in talks with other IITs to implement the initiatives there as well.
IITs too have their own systems in place. There are counsellors on board, buddy systems, faculty advisors at hand to look out for students at risk. “We try to make sure there are multiple ways of reaching out to students,“ says Bhaskar Ramamurthi, director, IIT Madras. “It's not always foolproof but we try and ensure we do everything we can.“

Thursday, April 09, 2015

Plan to make namma IIT numero uno


Eminent intellectuals, engineers and former IIT professors from the state came under one roof with a strong plan to make namma IIT in Karnataka the best institute among the country’s 23 branches.
Speaking at a seminar on ‘IIT Karnataka – optimal location and guidelines towards making it world class,’ organized by the Institution of Engineers, SS Murthy, former professor of IIT-Delhi suggested that the IIT should be established at a location that offers a cosmopolitan ambience to attract students from different parts of the country, and one that’s within a two-hour drive from an international airport. “If we don’t establish the IIT in such a place, then there’ll be interference from babus (politicians) wanting to help locals get jobs in the institution.”
He pointed out that 11 IITs are situated in state capitals and five others are located close to them. The remaining are suffering, he added. With a huge demand from across districts wanting to house the prestigious institution, Murthy suggested that the government establish one main IIT in one city and two sub-centers at other places. “This concept is followed in US universities; Uttar Pradesh itself has two IITs,” said Murthy. BVA Rao, former professor, IIT-Madras, said ever since their establishment in 1950, none of the IITs has managed to attract foreign students.

Wednesday, April 01, 2015

New IITs, IIMs will look different

Many more Indian Institutes of Technology and Indian Institutes of Management may come up in the country before long. A Human Resources Development ministry committee, headed by education secretary and consisting of KV Kamath, chairperson, ICICI among others, has accepted the recommendations submitted by noted architect Hafeez Contractor.
The concept was basically prepared for the central educational institutions after undertaking a case study of national and international educational institutions. The case study also included a detailed analysis of the location, land parcel, students enrolled, faculty available, courses offered and the facilities provided at the select institutions.
According to Hafeez Contractor’s recommendations, the NITs with 6,000 students should be built on 150 acre campus. Besides, the IITs with 10,000 students should have a 260 acre campus while the Central Universities with 10,000 students should be built on 250 acre campus. In case of Indian Institutes of Management, Contractor said that those with 1,000 students should have a campus of 5 to 10 acres.
The concept was broad enough in its sweep to take care of the regulatory bodies and calculations based on floor plans, administrative, academic blocks, faculty and staff accommodation and hostels in IIMs, IITs and NITs. His recommendation also included a model architectural map indicating the horizontal and vertical spread of the building blocks with scope of future expansion.

Friday, March 13, 2015

IIT to tighten screws on plagiarism, malpractices


Strict guidelines proposed, including fail grades, community service for copying, to suspension for two semesters for more serious offences
In an open house meeting held with student representatives and faculty members on Thursday, the ethics committee of IITBombay has proposed strict guidelines regarding academic malpractices. Punishments -including a fail grade, community service and suspension for two semesters -are set to become part of institute rules, if cleared at a meeting next month.The premier engineering institute has been under pressure to tackle problems of plagiarism from published research, and cheating in projects and take-home assignments, after an internal survey two years ago revealed a significant number of students felt that ethical standards were low and needed improvement.
A survey of outgoing students, conducted last year by the student magazine Insight, had painted a grim picture, with more than 50% confessing to cheating during their course.Another survey found that exchange students from foreign countries did not have a high opinion of students' ethics ­ with around 75% saying yes to the query “Is the average student at IIT-B more likely to use unfair means than one at your home institute?“ Only 15% of exchange students felt that teachers at IIT-B were as strict in punishing cheating, while 40% said IIT-B teachers were more lax (the rest selected the `Can't say' option).
In two years since the internal survey, individual departments have adopted a stricter attitude towards malpractices, but no common rules for the entire institute were agreed upon. According to students, while some professors made use of plagiarism detecting software compulsory, others had not.
The punishments proposed at Thursday's meeting ranged from a fail grade plus community service for offences such as copying in exams or assignments, to suspension for two semesters for serious offences such as impersonating another student in an examination.Student representatives plan to conduct a referendum to solicit opinion regarding the rules.
“This is a positive move, though one that took time in coming. Plagiarism devalues all our efforts and the establishment of common rules will help create a general culture of ethics,“ said a student who attended the open house discussion.
“While we may not have reached the high standards of the West, it is widely known that the problem of cheating is far less at IIT-B compared to other Indian universities. The proposed rules reflect how serious students and faculty are about tackling the issue,“ said a research scholar.

Wednesday, January 07, 2015

Jan 07 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Number of JEE aspirants falls by 50,000
Mumbai:


For the first time in recent years, the number of aspirants for JEE (Main), the all-India engineering entrance exam which is also the first screening for IIT admissions, has dropped. Around 13.03 lakh students registered this year against last year's number of 13.56 lakh. Experts believe this could be an indicator of saturation and waning interest in engineering.The last day for registration was December 27, but the deadline was extended to January 10 for aspirants from Manipur, which recently joined the exam. An official from the Central Board of Sec ondary Education, which conducts the exam, said that the number might go up by a few hundreds but would not make a major difference to the total.
About 1.86 lakh aspirants have opted for the online test, up from last year's 1.71 lakh.
While IIT-Bombay professor D B Phatak said the number of aspirants has remained constant for some years now, G D Yadav, vice-chancellor of the Institute of Chemical Technology , Matunga, said interest in engineering education was waning because of the poor quality of institutes.“Many graduates don't get good placements and eventually have to do management programmes to get jobs,“ he said.



Monday, January 05, 2015

Jan 05 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
IIT-M TO POWER IDEAS of entrepreneurial success


Centre for Innovation (CFI), a student-run innovation lab at IIT-Madras, is run ning an initiative called Nirmaan, a mock incubator to support students with entrepreneurial interests by providing them a riskfree environment to develop their ideas and shielding them from financial pressures through seed funding. Mahesh Panchagnula, adviser of co-curricular at IIT Madras, said that though CFI's motto is `Walk in with an idea, walk out with a product', right now the students build a prototype and leave it at that. Through Nirmaan, they aim to make students work on improving their prototype so that at the end of their college stint they are ready with a marketable product.Twenty-nine teams and projects are now part of Nirmaan after a registration and selection process in September.The seed funding of `2 lakh per team is being provided as per requirement and the progress of ideas is being reviewed by a faculty team. The funds come from alumni grants, corporate sponsors and institute funds.
Sai Gole, a student manager at CFI and also a member of Nirmaan, said the idea is to make it easier for student ventures to enter the startup ecosystem outside the college by reducing a few steps in the process.“With a relatively mature product and a network of mentors already with them, it is easier for the student entrepreneurs to approach incubators and investors,“ Gole said. She added that almost six startup teams that were part of CFI were able to get incubation at IIT Madras' incubation cell.
The 29 teams which are part of Nirmaan are working on a variety of in novative products ranging from a lightbased wearable that is an alternative to alarm clocks to portable paper strip tests to detect milk adulteration. Student managers of CFI are also planning to approach the faculty and students of other colleges to explain the concept of Nirmaan and two institutions have already expressed interest in the idea.
IIT Madras started CFI in 2008 with funds donated by the 1981 batch during their silver jubilee reunion. While CFI's clubs had around 500 student members in 2008, it now boasts of almost 1,300 student members showing the increase in a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship among the institute's students.

Monday, December 29, 2014

Dec 29 2014 : Mirror (Mumbai)
2014 CAT RESULTS - Topper from IIT-B to shun cushy job, become teacher


Harshveer Jain, 22, who currently works with a realty search portal, says he wants to follow footsteps of his mother who teaches in a college in Indore
Two students from the Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay are among 16 management aspirants who have achieved a 100 percentile score in the Common Admission Test (CAT).One of them, Harshveer Jain, who cracked CAT without attending a coaching class, plans to follow his mother’s footsteps and become a teacher in future.
The 22-year-old graduated from IIT-B with a B Tech in engineering physics this year and currently works with real estate search portal housing.com.
“I want to teach and write — I want to do something for my country. I may pursue a PhD and teach marketing in a college or join a school,” he said, adding that he would love to work in his school in Indore.
Harshveer inherited the love for academics from his mother, who teaches electronics and communication in a college in Indore. Apart from teaching, he is also passionate about books and intends to write a fantasy novel series.
Anuraag Reddy, a fourth-year electrical engineering student at IIT-B, also cracked the test conducted by the Indian Institutes of Management. He said that he wanted to join a finance firm after completing his MBA.
More than 1.65 lakh students across the country appeared for CAT in November. The results were announced on Saturday.
Harshveer said that he found it diffi cult to study while working full time.
“I had only two spare months before I took up my current job. After being hired, I studied only during the weekend. I did not attend any classes, though I did use a package of online tests from a coaching centre,” he said.
The young techie took around 60 mock tests in the months leading up to CAT.
Anuraag studied for only three months and took 10 mock tests. “I did not prepare for maths because I have been good at it since my school days. However, I took English very seriously and spent a lot of time reading articles in the New York Times and the Economist,” he said.
The two candidates had similar advice for CAT aspirants: focus on speed and accuracy.
A student from IIT-Delhi, Aashish Chhiller, is also among the 16 candidates with a 100 percentile score this year. The 21-year-old, who is the fourth year of production and industrial engineering hopes to make a career in the field of data analytics. But he is also interested in photography and graphic design.
Dec 29 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
IITian brain drain declines due to emergence of IIMs
Chennai


For decades, IITians have been faulted for leaving the country in search of greener pastures. But now, contrary to public perception, the brain drain from the premier technical institutions to foreign shores is declining.According to faculty members, the number of students from IIT-Madras S going overseas for higher studies and jobs has dropped from around 50% in the t 1980s to around 15% in the last couple of years. Of the Y 800 BTech and dual degree students graduating from IIT-Madras in 2015, only 2 10% are likely to leave the country , said placement advisor Babu Viswanathan. 2 Of the 661 BTech and dual degree candidates who passed out in 2013-14, 100 left for foreign shores, including 88 to the US and two to Canada. In the 2012-13 academic year, only 40 of the 640 graduates went overseas for jobs or higher studies. “The number of students going overseas for higher edu cation is declining. The brain r drain has almost stopped.
This year, around 10% have , signed up to go abroad, but , note that an equal number is staying back to start their o own ventures. It's a positive trend because we can retain t talent,“ said dean, internag tional and alumni relations, IIT-Madras, R Nagarajan. c “There is a bigger drain of students from core branches r to non-core companies during placements,“ he added. He said this was one area that the IITs were seen as lacking when compared to foreign universities. But, with support for entrepreneurship in the institute -ranging from minors courses, an MS in Entrepreneurship, deferred placements, and offers to incubate startups with poten ate startups with poten tial -students are reth inking their plans.
Professor Viswa nathan said the emer gence of institutes such as the Indian Institute of Management within the country contributed to the decrease in num bers. “In recent years, 50% of those who go for higher studies choose the IIMs. They have seen that there is good value in doing an MBA here af ter IIT,“ he said.Faculty members, howev er, added that a little overseas experience was not a bad thing. For international exposure, students find the institute's many MoUs with foreign institutions come in handy .

Monday, December 22, 2014

Dec 22 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
CAUSE OVER CASH - IITians give up fat pay for social work
Mumbai


Fellowships, Social Start-Ups Attract GenNext
Even as several students from the current batch of IIT Bombay are looking forward to becoming multi-millionaires for the last three weeks, some passouts have dared to swim against the tide. It's no longer a mad pursuit to get sevenfigure salaries for these IIT students; it's a quest for their dreams that matters to them.While some want to teach, some have taken up social entrepreneurship and a few have taken up social work.IIT-Bombay's 2010 passout, Pratyush Rathore, was earning an annual package of Rs 44 lakh (salary plus incentives) in a New Yorkheadquartered financial firm in Gurgaon when he quit his job to pursue his dream of teaching, against his parents' wishes.
After training students for IIT entrance exams for three years, Rathore has now purchased land to set up a school in a small village close to his hometown -Sirlay , in Madhya Pradesh. He has applied for the diversion process and is awaiting a nod from the local authorities for his plan to take off.
Rathore said, “I was into algorithmic trading. But my hobby was to teach and after three years of experience, I am confident about pursuing my dream.“ He had to get his parents to visit Gurgaon to show them the lifestyle he led. “It was only after the visit that they were convinced,“ said Rathore.
When Rathore quit his job to set up a school in 2011, his plans tanked after his partners backed out. “I continued training students for IIT preparations, and simultaneously , was looking for a job. My parents were relieved after I got a work-fromhome profile from a firm based in Mumbai,“ he said.
But now, his idea is taking shape. “Since it is my hometown, it is not difficult to get contacts and resources here.I plan to set up a school similar to the one in the movie `3 Idiots', where we will not follow the conventional schooling system,“ said Rathore. A passout from the 2014 batch, Siddharth Shah, opted for a Gandhi fellowship, a two-year residential programme which requires him to work with schools in small towns to train principals and teachers in leadership qualities and better teaching practices, and help them in transforming education.
Shah said, “I wanted to explore opportunities that could help me bring about a social change. I am content with less. I can always go back to research once the programme is over.“
Suhani Mohan, also an alumni from IIT-B, quit a cushy job with a multina tional bank with a pay packet of over Rs 20 lakh. She is now setting up a firm, which will make machines that can produce low-cost sanitary napkins for rural India.
“We knew that our skills can be used to make this product. It is a start-up and we are currently using our own resources for funding the venture,“ Suhani said.She has set up the venture with two of her friends.
Meanwhile, for some students, the fellowship programmes on offer during campus placements seemed like the way to go. Ankur Tulsian, a mechanical engineer from the 2011 batch, opted for the Young India Fellowship over an MNC offer.
The fellowship allowed him to get lessons in liberal arts and leadership from global experts for a year.“The programme gave me an opportunity to learn courses that I had not studied at IIT. It helped me to put whatever I had learnt in perspective.The diversity of class was also a refreshing change from that of the engineering cohort at IIT.“
Tulsian said that some convincing went into get his parents onboard the idea.Since he was offered a scholarship, they agreed to it eventually , he added.

Tuesday, December 09, 2014

Dec 09 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Facebook signs IIT-B undergrad girl for Rs 2 crore


In probably the highest package offered to an undergrad in recent times in the country , Aastha Agarwal, 20, an IIT-Bombay student from Jaipur, has bagged a Rs 2-crore offer from Facebook, reports Ashish Mehta. She is in her third year pursuing computer science and will join FB by next October. She had trained with the firm earlier this year.



Friday, December 05, 2014

Parliament passes IIIT bill



Any decision on education policy will be in tune with constitution, Human Resources Development Minister Smriti Irani assured as Parliament passed a bill to bring four institutes of information technology under the ambit of a single authority.
The Indian Institutes of Information and Technology (IIIT) Bill, 2014, passed by Rajya Sabha 1 December, seeks to provide the four existing IIITs an independent statutory status and proposes to declare them as institutes of national importance to enable them to grant degrees to their students.
The bill, passed by Lok Sabha last week, is the first education bill passed by the Narendra Modi government.
Moving the bill for passage, Irani assured the house that any decision on education policy by government will be in ambit of the constitution.”Some members asked if the education policy decisions by government will be influenced by my own thought. I would like to assure members any decision by government will be within the ambit of constitution,” she said. Irani also called it a “golden moment” saying MPs from “left, right and center” came together for the education bill.
“I am feeling proud… the message is clear, there is no politics in education,” she said. The four institutes are IIIT-Allahabad, IIIT-Gwalior, IIIT Design and Manufacturing, Jabalpur and IIIT Design and Manufacturing, Kancheepuram.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/12/parliament-passes-iiit-bill-first-on-education-by-modi-government/#sthash.dyVdhMbI.dpuf

Thursday, December 04, 2014

Dec 04 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
In a first, 2 Indian univs, 2 IITs in Times' top 40
London:


There is great news for India's universities.For the first time, two new Indian entrants have jumped straight into the top 40 of the second annual Times Higher Education Brics and Emerging Economies' rankings.
Moreover, 11 other Indian universities have made it to the top 100 rankings. Around 18 countries featured in the 2015 rankings, which was released on Wednesday .
Around 15 universities -from Chile, China, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Russia and Turkey -have entered the tables for the first time.
China has cemented its dominance among the emerging global economies, retaining the top two places and increasing its representation among the top100 institutions to 27, up from 23 last year.
India has increased its representation with 11 of the top 100 places, up from 10 last year and it has a new national leader -Indian Institute of Science in 25th place, the IIT Bombay in 37th place and IITRoorkee in 38th position.
Phil Baty , editor of the Times Higher Education Rankings, said, “India is starting to show its potential in these rankings, increasing its overall representation in this new top-100 list to 11, from 10 last year. Only China and Taiwan have more top-100 institutions than India, which remains ahead of Russia and Brazil among the giant developing economies.But this improved showing is partly due to the fact that more Indian institutions have recognized the benefits of being part of the rankings process, and more are sharing their data with Times Higher Education“.
“Several Indian institutions have actually lost ground compared to last year.So there is clearly no room for any complacency . The good news is that by engaging with the global rankings and sharing performance data to benchmark themselves against the tough global standards set by Times Higher Education, India's leading institutions have shown a hunger for further development and for sharing the best practice. If this is backed by a government-led commitment to support India's top universities to compete on the global stage, with sufficient funding and reforms, there would be plenty of room for optimism.“
The rankings were given after accessing all aspects of the modern university's core missions (teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook).
China retains the top two positions (Peking University followed by Tsinghua University) in the rankings.
Fudan University follows Peking and Tsinghua, taking the ninth place, while University of Science and Technology of China lost its top-10 position, moving into joint 11th place.
Russia has seen a dramatic improvement in its standing ­ increasing its representatives in the top 100 from just two last year to seven this year, and seeing its number one university , Moscow State University, climbing up from 10th to 5th.

Wednesday, December 03, 2014

Dec 03 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Women shine at IIT placements
MumbaiDelhiChennaiKolkataGuwahati:
TIMES NEWS NETWORK


Highest Package Touches Rs 1.42cr; 2 Girls Out Of 5 Get FB Offers
A woman was among three students who bagged the highest package at IIT-Bombay on the first day of the placement season.In fact, two women are among the five students Facebook has hired this year from the campus. This includes those hired during the pre-placement process.At IIT-Kharagpur too, a woman was among the three, who got top deals.Most of the students, who bagged premium packages, are into coding.
Around Rs 1.42 crore was the highest package offered this year to an IIT student. IIT computer science students usually bag top offers. But the number of woman in this field is always less. “This is the main reason why lesser numbers of girls manage to get top deals. This year, we have on ly five girls in the batch and most of them managed a good deal,” said a student, who got a position at San Francisco.
At IIT-Delhi, women have done better this year than 2013. “ About 15-20 women got offers, about a quarter of total number of women in our batch,” said a student, who got an offer from the Deutsche Bank At IIT-Madras, the numbers went up from last year’s 95 on day one to 158 this year, said placement coordinator Babu Vishwanathan. The highest offer made at Madras was around Rs 80 lakh.
At IIT-Roorkee, four students bagged offers from Google, Oracle and Microsoft. At IIT-Bombay, the number of
day one offers went up from 182 to 215 this year. Flipkart dominated the second day of placements at IIT-Madras with 19 offers to the students.
27 companies made 163 offers on day one at IIT-Kharagpur with Rs 42 lakh being the highest offered domestic package. The highest salary offered at IIT-Guwahati was over Rs 74 lakh.
Dec 03 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
IIT-B girl bags Rs 1.4-cr FB offer


One of the three students who bagged the highest package of Rs 1.42 crore each offered by Facebook at IIT Bombay on the first day of the placement season is a girl. At IIT Kharagpur, too, a girl is among the three who got the top deals. Most students who bagged premium packages this year are into coding.

Monday, November 24, 2014

IIT-Madras joins CERN experiment

The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment, which is part of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, is famous for its role in the discovery of the Higgs Boson a.k.a the god particle. It is expected to start collecting data once again around March 2015. But this time, it will include another member from our environs — IIT-Madras.
IIT-Madras has been accepted as a full member of the collaboration and is looking forward to make best use of the opportunity. Now, PhD students from the physics department will get to work in the collider; undergraduate students can do short summer projects at CMS; members of physics, computer science and electrical engineering departments at IIT-M can work on data analysis, grid computing and high-end detector building related to the experiment. “Being connected to CERN can give many more students a taste of the power of fundamental research,” says Prafulla Kumar Behera of the physics department of IIT-Madras, pointing out that this is the first IIT and, in fact, the first institute from the southern States to have become a full member of the CMS. It is to be noted that Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, and Bhabha Atomic Research Centre have long been members, as also Delhi and Panjab Universities.
The key areas where they hope to work is in data analysis and upgrading of the detector, according to Dr. Behera, who also feels that the experience of building up the silicon detector will come in useful in developing indigenous technology in medical (imaging) science and R&D in general. At present, the CMS experiment has gone up to 8 teraelectronvolts energy (TeV) and is geared to touch 14 TeV. This will involve having to upgrade the detector to handle the radiation and increased rate of data taking, which is where the group expects to be able to contribute.
Broadly speaking, the questions the experiment will probe are: whether the Higgs boson will undergo a decay in B quarks; whether there exist charged versions of the Higgs particle, which would mean physicists need to look beyond the standard model; whether dark matter can be produced by collision experiments and so on.
Keywords: IIT-MadrasCERNHiggs Boson

Friday, November 14, 2014

IIT Kharagpur plans to become international


IIT Kharagpur will now go global as it plans to bring professors and scholars from foreign universities besides offering joint PhDs with top international institutes.
Ten professors from some of the world’s leading universities would come to the Kharagpur campus each year for few months, under the Shri Gopal Rajgarhia International Programme which was launched recently.
According to Director Partha Pratim Chakrabarti, around 30 talented international scholars would be invited each year to conduct research activities at IIT. He also mentioned that they were already in talks with leading universities from the US, Europe, Australia, and Japan.
Under the joint PhD programme, students would be awarded with the doctorate by IIT-Kharagpur and an international university.
“The students will study at both the places. There will be international workshops and activities with the foreign university,” Chakrabarti said.
The international programmes will start from the January session.
IIT Kharagpur’s distinguished alumni from the 1968 batch, Gopal Rajagarhia donated Rs 10 crore for funding the initiative.
“I was always keen to give it back to IIT. Its international ratings are poor because of low international exposure. With this program, we want the IIT to make its presence felt in the international arena so that its ranking improves as per our Vision 2020,” Rajgarhia said.
At present around 200 PhDs are awarded by the IIT each year which they hope to take it to 400.
“We want around 25 per cent of PhDs to be joint PhDs. We will also be getting foreign students to study here for such joint PhDs,” director Chakrabarti said.
Besides student and faculty exchange, the IIT is also adding an international component to its courses by offering micro specialisations with a foreign collaborator.
They have already started the International Summer Winter Programme wherein students and faculties from India and abroad are participating.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/11/iit-kharagpur-plans-to-become-international/#sthash.LGwl1Lr8.dpuf

Friday, November 07, 2014

Meeting to fast track process of setting up 5 new IITs

The HRD ministry recently convened a meeting of state government officials and existing IIT directors to speed up the process of establishing the new IITs in Jammu and Kashmir, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala.
According to sources, while Andhra Pradesh has located a site in Tirupati which has been approved by a site selection committee other states have been a bit slow. Kerala has also finalised a site. In the case of Chhattisgarh state, a final decision has to be made whether the IIT will come up in New Raipur or some other site. Although Goa had also found a site, it is not being considered large enough in area for an IIT and the state government has been asked by the ministry to look for a bigger site. The J&K government has asked district magistrate of Jammu to locate a site. An area of 100 acres is required for an IIT and the land needs to be free of all liabilities.”
 Furthermore, the HRD ministry has to submit affidavit in the Delhi High Court on November 30 for common counseling, after a direction from the High Court. It may be mentioned that the IITs and NITs are working together on a new software that will make possible common counseling so that it can be implemented from 2015-16.
- See more at: http://digitallearning.eletsonline.com/2014/11/meeting-to-fast-track-process-of-setting-up-5-new-iits/#sthash.5JNdnD51.dpuf

Friday, October 31, 2014

Oct 31 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
IIT Delhi will award 178 PhD degrees
New Delhi:
TIMES NEWS NETWORK


IIT Delhi will hold its 45th convocation on November 1, at which 178 PhD, 935 postgraduate and 729 graduate degrees will be awarded. Physicist and Nobel Prize winner George F Smoot will deliver the convocation address.IIT Delhi director R K Shevgaonkar said that MHRD has asked the institute to coordinate for the Unnat Bharat Abhiyan. IIT-Delhi will collaborate with the other IITs, NITs, other technical institutions and NGOs for rural development. “Each IIT will adopt 10 villages in the neighbourhood and suggest financially viable technological solutions to problems of sanitation, water, energy and housing,“ he said.IIT-Delhi has already helped set up micro-enterprises in a village in Jodhpur.
While the number of PhDs being awarded over the last three years has declined marginally , IIT authorities promise that the number will be more than double in two years.