rationalthinker
February 3rd, 2012, 08:02 PM
Sibal’s way: How to standardise mediocrity in IITs
Trust the education ministry to fix all the problems that deserve low priority first.
Faced with a sharp deterioration in the quality of the country’s engineering institutes—including the elite Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs)—Union HRD Minister Kapil Sibal is planning changes to the entrance tests, as though that is the priority. Among other things, Sibal’s ministry wants a common entrance test for all engineering colleges. It also wants to give weightage to a student’s class 12 marks while giving admission to IITs and engineering colleges.
As a first step, in 2013, the IIT-JEE (Joint Entrance Examination) and the All-India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE) will be merged. A Hindustan Times report quotes an anonymous IIT director as saying:
“The new entrance examination will have many elements of IIT-JEE as we want to ensure that the best brains join our institutes.”
But wasn’t the IIT-JEE already doing that? Getting the best brains? What stopped the ministry from merely extending IIT-JEE to all engineering colleges in the country that were centrally administered? Why have a new, hybrid exam?
To be sure, the logic of reducing the number of exams students have to take is unimpeachable. Currently, apart from IIT-JEE and AIEEE, there are the state-level Common Entrance Tests and separate tests for engineering colleges run by private promoters (Bits, Pilani, for example). Students thus have to take several tests in addition to their normal Class 12 one.
Reducing the number of test is a laudable objective. Since IIT-JEE is the king of all engineering exams, it would have made eminent sense to make it the standard SAT-equivalent for engineering college admissions in India.
The proposal to give weightage to class 12 results is, however, likely to be more controversial. Schools and junior colleges welcome it, for the problem is students focused on IITs tend to ignore their Class 12 board exams. There is also an implicit assumption that once Class 12 marks become important, students will depend less on coaching classes.
But will it happen that way?
When Class 12 results are given equal weightage for entry to IITs and the National Institutes of Technology (NITs, which get their student feeds from AIEEE), will students go more to coaching classes or less? Even today, students take a year’s break to go to Kota to focus on IIT-JEE. If Class 12 becomes important, some students will, no doubt, drop out of coaching, but more of them will take even more coaching – for both IIT-JEE and Class 12. Their future now depends on maxing both exams. Who will take chances?
But will it happen that way?
But Mr Sibal, the challenge in Indian engineering education is not the quality or number of entrance tests we have , but what you get after crossing these hurdles and reach an IIT or an NIT. Unfortunately, this is not an area receiving much focus since the attempt, as Sibal says,:confused:
Trust the education ministry to fix all the problems that deserve low priority first.
Faced with a sharp deterioration in the quality of the country’s engineering institutes—including the elite Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs)—Union HRD Minister Kapil Sibal is planning changes to the entrance tests, as though that is the priority. Among other things, Sibal’s ministry wants a common entrance test for all engineering colleges. It also wants to give weightage to a student’s class 12 marks while giving admission to IITs and engineering colleges.
As a first step, in 2013, the IIT-JEE (Joint Entrance Examination) and the All-India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE) will be merged. A Hindustan Times report quotes an anonymous IIT director as saying:
“The new entrance examination will have many elements of IIT-JEE as we want to ensure that the best brains join our institutes.”
But wasn’t the IIT-JEE already doing that? Getting the best brains? What stopped the ministry from merely extending IIT-JEE to all engineering colleges in the country that were centrally administered? Why have a new, hybrid exam?
To be sure, the logic of reducing the number of exams students have to take is unimpeachable. Currently, apart from IIT-JEE and AIEEE, there are the state-level Common Entrance Tests and separate tests for engineering colleges run by private promoters (Bits, Pilani, for example). Students thus have to take several tests in addition to their normal Class 12 one.
Reducing the number of test is a laudable objective. Since IIT-JEE is the king of all engineering exams, it would have made eminent sense to make it the standard SAT-equivalent for engineering college admissions in India.
The proposal to give weightage to class 12 results is, however, likely to be more controversial. Schools and junior colleges welcome it, for the problem is students focused on IITs tend to ignore their Class 12 board exams. There is also an implicit assumption that once Class 12 marks become important, students will depend less on coaching classes.
But will it happen that way?
When Class 12 results are given equal weightage for entry to IITs and the National Institutes of Technology (NITs, which get their student feeds from AIEEE), will students go more to coaching classes or less? Even today, students take a year’s break to go to Kota to focus on IIT-JEE. If Class 12 becomes important, some students will, no doubt, drop out of coaching, but more of them will take even more coaching – for both IIT-JEE and Class 12. Their future now depends on maxing both exams. Who will take chances?
But will it happen that way?
But Mr Sibal, the challenge in Indian engineering education is not the quality or number of entrance tests we have , but what you get after crossing these hurdles and reach an IIT or an NIT. Unfortunately, this is not an area receiving much focus since the attempt, as Sibal says,:confused: