32 professional colleges to be shut down soon
HYDERABAD : The education industry in the state seems to be going
bust. Unable to attract students and faculty and not being in a position
to maintain the required standards, at least 32 engineering and
business management colleges have thrown up their hands and called it a
day. Accordingly, the state government has given a green signal to these
32 institutions to shut shop and not admit students from the academic
year 2012-13.
It is for the first time that so many colleges are folding up in the
state, in sharp contrast to the trend a decade ago when engineering
colleges, business schools and pharmaceutical colleges sprang up all
over the state. The No Objection Certificates (NOCs) to 21 of the
colleges to close down were issued in January while the remaining ones
were allowed to close down in February.
Among the colleges going out of business are five engineering, nine MBA,
14 MCA, three pharmacy and one 1 PGDM colleges. The list includes the
much publicized colleges such as Malla Reddy Institute of Management
Sciences, Secuderabad, Rajahmundry Engineering College, Rajahmundry,
Narasimha Reddy PG College, Medchal, Asian School of Business, Ranga
Reddy, St Francis Institute of Computer Sciences, Qutbullapur and
Anantapur Institute of Management & Sciences.
The closure of these colleges is the result of the crisis that set in
the technical education field in the state, which was the pioneer in the
mass-scale establishment of professional colleges, said sources.
"Even though there is not a single town in the state that does not have
an engineering college, very few are known for their quality education.
So, students prefer ordinary degree courses over the substandard
engineering colleges," sources in the department of technical education
told TOI.
According to the sources, 45 per cent of the seats in the engineering
colleges are lying vacant, while the vacancies in business management
courses are 38 per cent and 45 per cent in MCA. By the next financial
year, many more colleges may call it quits, they added.
The lack of qualified faculty, inability of these institutes to maintain
the standards set by All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE),
the apex body that controls the technical, MCA and MBA courses in the
country, and the inability of these institutions to pay the salaries
fixed by the AICTE have also compounded the issue. "There are colleges
which have not paid salaries of the faculty for months," said a lecturer
from an engineering college on the outskirts of Hyderabad. Technical
education commissioner S Balasubramanyam confirmed to TOI that letters
of NOC were issued to 32 colleges for their closure.
Meanwhile, the trend is not unique to Andhra Pradesh alone. The decline
of technical education has also set in other states as well, albeit in a
small way.
According to D Purandeswari, Union minister of state for human resources
development, around 134 business schools across the country are facing
closure. Till now, the 134 business management institutions have
submitted applications to the AICTE for closure of programmes due to
various reasons including poor strength of students.
Last week, Purandeswari informed the Lok Sabha that with 32 such cases,
Andhra Pradesh tops the list of colleges shutting shop followed by
Rajasthan, where 25 institutions are on the verge of closure. "There are
18 such institutions in Uttar Pradesh, while 14 B-Schools of
Maharashtra have requested the AICTE to allow them to down the shutters.
The other states are Madhya Pradesh (8), Gujarat (7), Haryana (7),
Karnataka (6), Chhattisgarh (5), Punjab (4), Tamil Nadu (2), Himachal
Pradesh (1) and Uttarakhand (1)," she said.
Source : TOI
Take project work seriously
Project work gives confidence to face campus interviews, finds Sumit Bhattacharjee
At a recent campus drive in a corporate engineering college conducted by
a software major, a student was asked about his project work.
Confidently, the student discussed about the project that he had done on
VLSI design. The HR executives were shocked. Not by students
articulation or the depth of his knowledge. They were surprised to find
that two other students had talked about the same project from the same
batch.
Well, such situation arises when the project work is taken as a mere
‘ritual' and not dealt with seriously, says the principal of GMR
Institute of Technology (GMRIT) C.L.V.R.S.V. Prasad.
Project work is part of the engineering curriculum and the students have
to submit a project on one academic topic during the second semester in
the final year. “Most of the students take it very lightly, and
projects can be bought for a sum. There is a full-fledged industry
surviving on this. Pay a sum and acquire a project on any topic and if a
student cannot buy it, just do the ‘cut and paste' job from the
internet or copy a friend's project. What they do not realise is the
importance of it,” says Prof. Prasad.
The basic objective of the project is to make the students apply their academic knowledge in a real life scenario.
“Students should treat projects as an integral part of their academics.
It gives them confidence, as the exposure in a project allows them to
apply their mind and creativity. A serious approach towards project can
take them a long way, not only it helps them during interviews but also
during their career,” says V.S.R.K. Prasad, principal of Anil Neerukonda
Institute of Technology and Sciences (ANITS).
The principal adds that understanding the application of theoretical
knowledge in practice is essential for engineering students. “A chemical
engineer would learn about the function of refineries in the theory
class. But how exactly the crude oil is refined to get the final outcome
can be understood only by doing a project. The application of the
chemical process, the temperature and the pressure required, the by
products, the use of various valves and the measurements can be
understood only through a project,” he adds.
Former Vice - Chancellor of JNTU (Kakinada) Allam Appa Rao points out
that the area of project work is what that separates the Indian colleges
from the ones in the US. “In the US the system is 3+3 (3 theory + 3
practical), whereas in India it is 6 theory and 2 practical. We load our
students with theory and neglect the practical or project work. Even
the teachers are tuned to complacency in regard to projects. It is
through projects that one can engage his or her knowledge and creativity
by dealing with real life problems,” says Prof. Appa Rao.
The V-C adds that projects are not only essential, but the students
should take up the challenge of accepting projects concerning new areas
of technology or build upon futuristic ideas.
Being a little harsh, the former Head of the Department of Computer
Science Engineering in Andhra University College of Engineering P.S.
Avadhani says, “if you do not take your project seriously, it will be
very difficult to get a good job.”
The professor advises the students to think and finalise the project
idea by the second semester in the third year. “Always think of doing a
project on the latest trends in technology. A computer science student
can think of doing a project on .NET, Android based project or HTML
based project. Work on realistic application based projects - like how
to automate the library or how to generate student ID cards. Students
can also think of working on HTML 5. Computer science students can
ponder upon system level projects also, as it is on demand by the
industry at present,” says Prof. Avadhani.
On how to generate interest among the students on projects, Prof.
C.L.V.R.S.V. Prasad says that institutions and teachers should take it
up seriously. “The students should be made to do the project within the
college under the mentorship of a teacher.”
Source : Hindu
Colleges give attendance for Rs.15K : 100 engineering colleges Found to be involved in attendance scam
Nearly 100 engineering colleges affiliated to JNTU-Hyderabad were
found to have been involved in an “attendance scam”. The college
managements would tell students that they could not appear for
examinations because they were short on attendance. They then collected
up to Rs 15,000 from each student to get the him/her exempted from the
attendance requirement.
JNTU-Hyderabad had introduced the rule regarding attendance in order to
improve standards in engineering education. But some college managements
exploited this rule and used it to extort money from students. JNTU
will issue show cause notices to principals of the engineering colleges
concerned on the issue.
Nearly 2.3 lakh students have registered for the ongoing B.Tech semester
exams. Of them, nearly 2,500 students were learnt to have been detained
by some colleges despite having sufficient attendance. The modus
operandi was to exclude the attendance of students who participated in
activities such as technology events, sports meets, national seminars,
field trips, education trips etc. Some colleges even marked the students
as “absent” when they appeared for the semester exams, mid-term exams,
supplementary exams etc., in other colleges, where exam centres were
allotted.
Colleges illegally detain students
Though the attendance norms of JNTU-Hyderabad clearly stipulate that
students engaged in activities such as sports meets, national seminars,
etc., should be marked as “present”, the managements of colleges
affiliated to the university ignored this directive with an eye to
fleecing the students later.
The attendance scam came to light when some 110 students detained by DRK
College of Engineering and Technology, located on the city’s outskirts,
recently complained to JNTU officials that the management is forcing
them to pay up to Rs 15,000 to get attendance exemption.
JNTU, which inquired into the issue, found that out of 110 students
detained, around 60 students have the required attendance and are
eligible to appear for the exams. Following this, students and parents
from other colleges started approaching JNTU with similar complaints.
JNTU has found that nearly 100 of its 300 affiliated colleges have
illegally detained students.
When contacted, the JNTU-Hyderabad vice-chancellor, Prof. Rameshwar Rao,
said: “This is a serious issue. We are investigating thoroughly into
the complaints. We will initiate stringent action against the erring
colleges. We have already asked the colleges to send the revised
attendance sheets of students. Based on that, we are giving opportunity
for eligible students to appear for the exams.”
The Controller of Exams, Dr A. Govardhan, urged students to lodge
complaints with the university against colleges that violate attendance
norms and force students to pay the additional fee to get exemption. “As
per norms, there should be 75 per cent attendance. A 10 per cent
concession is given on medical grounds. There is no such provision in
the university to get attendance exemption by paying a certain amount.
If any college does so, it amounts to cheating. My request to such
students is to lodge written complaints against the colleges to enable
us to initiate action,” he said.
Source : DC
37 pharmacy colleges in State blacklisted
The Pharmacy Council of India (PCI) is said to have blacklisted 37
colleges in the State for making excess admissions in violation of the
PCI norms and with the pretext that the AICTE has permitted them so.
The PCI central council meeting held in New Delhi recently is said to
have taken the decision as some colleges have admitted 200 students
though the original sanctioned strength is only 60. As per the PCI
norms, the maximum strength can go up to 100 if the colleges are more
than four years old while it has to be 60 for colleges established in
the last four years.
K. Ramdass, general secretary of the A.P. Pharmacy Colleges Association,
has said that PCI president B. Suresh will be meeting Chief Minister N.
Kiran Kumar Reddy on May 9 along with the managements of pharmacy
colleges to discuss the issue of excess admissions. He is also likely to
discuss other issues with regard to pharmacy education in the State.
The PCI and AICTE have been at loggerheads over the authority on
pharmacy education in the country. While the PCI claims that it should
decide on admissions and administrative aspects of pharmacy education,
the AICTE maintains that it has the authority to sanction additional
seats in the existing colleges apart from sanctioning new colleges.
Source : HINDU
UK PG degree not recognised in India
A UK postgraduate degree, for which thousands of Indian students
aspire for every year, is not recognised in India as a PG degree and
candidates holding such degrees may be rejected by the varsities for
higher studies like Ph.D.
The stand taken by the Association of Indian Universities (AIU) and the
British Council that guides Indian students on UK education too seem to
corroborate this view. Recently, an Indian student, Himanshu Vyas,
applied for a Ph.D programme in an Indian university after completing
his M.Sc. in International Business from Nottingham University Business
School, University of Nottingham.
However, his application was rejected on the ground that the
postgraduate degree he pursued was of one year duration. Realising the
problem, Himanshu wrote to the British Council and he got a reply that
recognition of overseas degrees in India is guided by Government of
India regulations and AIU was the right authority. Moreover, it made it
clear that the British Council does not offer equivalence certificates.
When he checked the AIU website, it clearly indicated that Master Degree
programmes which are less than two years in duration of foreign
universities will not be accorded equivalence and AIU does not issue
Equivalent Certificates in such cases. Interestingly, AIU is the only
recognised body in India for granting academic equivalence of degrees
and diplomas not only within the country but also to other similar
bodies in foreign countries.
The website also indicates that the AIU has signed Memorandum of
Understanding Arab Republic of Egypt, Russian Federation, Australia,
Germany and Sri Lanka. As per the provisions of the MoU, the degrees
awarded by the accredited universities of these concerned countries, for
the full time programmes offered on the campus of the country of origin
are accepted for admission to higher courses by Indian universities on
reciprocal basis.
After spending lakhs of rupees for the course, Himanshu is now worried
that his dad's money and precious time have gone down the drain.
Ravilochan Singh, Managing Director of Global Reach, a prominent
education consultancy, says thousands of students who go to UK are now
worried. He says “AIU needs to be presented with facts so that it can
change its equivalence system and accords exception to the one year
Masters from UK.”
At the same time, he says British Council needs to lobby for recognition
of British Masters degrees of one year duration before it begins
claiming the British Degrees are globally recognised.
“The least they can do if they fail to do justice to students is to
promote their Masters with a clear statutory disclaimer that their
degrees are not eligible for further education in India.”
Source : HINDU
7 Pharma colleges blacklisted
The Pharmacy Council of India has cracked the whip on seven
pharmacy colleges in the state for admitting more students than
permitted. With this, the one-upmanship between the All India Council
for Technical Education and PCI over control of pharmacy colleges has
taken a new turn.
The PCI has barred admissions to these colleges from the ensuing
academic year 2012-13. The PCI has informed the state government that
these colleges have violated the Education Regulation Act, 1999, by
admitting more students than they were permitted and has asked the
government to initiate action against them. It also asked the government
not to include these colleges in Eamcet counselling next year.
The managements of these colleges claim that their intake is as approved
by AICTE and that PCI’s diktat is unilateral and unjustified. They have
urged the PCI to sort out the problem with AICTE. While PCI gives
approval for 60 seats in a pharmacy college, AICTE has approved an
intake of up to 200 seats. PCI’s contention is that AICTE has given
indiscriminate approval to the increase in student intake without
conducting proper inspections to see whether the infrastructure and
faculty in the colleges is adequate.
Pharmacy Council of India has made it clear that it will not recognise
the degrees awarded to students by colleges that gave admissions in
excess of the number approved by PCI.
List of the colleges :
1) Sri Vasavi Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, tadepalligudem,w.g dist
2) Bahadur venkatareddy pharmacy college, barkatpura,Hyderabad
3) S. R. College of Pharmacy, Hasanparthy, Warangal
4) Shadan college of pharmacy,hyderabad
5) Malla reddy institute of pharmaceutical sciences,hyderabad
6) K V Subba reddy college of pharmacy,Kurnool
7) Vignan college of pharmacy visakhapatnam
Source : DC
Produce 1 Murthy in 5 yrs, Guv tells JNTU
Governor and Chancellor of Universities E.S.L. Narasimhan on Monday
appealed to JNTU-Hyderabad to produce at least one Narayana Murthy in
five years. Speaking at the third convocation of JNTU-Hyderabad, where
an honorary doctorate was awarded to Mr Narayana Murthy, the founder of
Infosys, the Governor said: “Don’t get carried away by statistics like
the number of colleges we have and the number of engineers they produce
every year. Producing thousands of engineers every year is not
important; what matters is the quality of engineers being produced.
“I request the VC, registrar and your faculty members to take an oath
today that we will produce at least one Narayana Murthy in five years.
Even if you produce one Narayana Murthy in five years, it will be a
great achievement.” Mr Narasimhan showed his disapproval of the
government’s policy of giving engineering seats to students even if they
score zero mark in the entrance exam. “There should be some minimum
qualifying marks. What do you expect such students, who score zero mark,
to do in classrooms? Do you want to develop an inferiority complex
among such students?” he asked.
Private colleges, too, came in for criticism. Higher education had
become unaffordable for the common man with college managements
collecting huge fees, the governor said. He said: “The time has come to
fix a maximum ceiling on the fee being collected by colleges. No college
should be allowed to collect above the ceiling. The managements should
realise that they have come forward to open colleges to provide
education. They should not treat education as a business to make profits
and mint money.”
Mr Narasimhan also came down heavily on private college managements for
threatening to close down colleges whenever the state government failed
to pay scholarship and fee reimbursements. “Why have you opened the
colleges? Is it only to make money? Is it correct to threaten closure of
colleges and throw students out on the streets?” he questioned.
Earlier, Mr Narayana Murthy, who delivered the convocation address, said
even though India had the highest number of billionaires in Asia, a
large number of people were still languishing in deep poverty,
illiteracy, ill-health and malnutrition.
Mr Murthy said: “We have created a political system with incentives for
most of our politicians to keep our people poor, illiterate. We have
consistently been among lowly-ranked nations in the human development
index. Not surprisingly, we rank high in corruption.”
Source : DC
IT courses find favour again
Information technology (IT) and computer science engineering (CSE)
streams in engineering colleges are back in focus after a gap of four
years. With IT companies hiring the maximum number of engineering
graduates this year during campus placements, the demand for IT and CSE
courses in top engineering colleges has shot up drastically. Parents
have begun searching for IT and CSE seats for their wards in top
engineering colleges even before Eamcet is conducted.
Thanks to this trend, engineering colleges are demanding huge premiums
ranging between Rs 10 lakh to Rs 20 lakh for seats in the management
quota, while the government prescribed fee is Rs 95,000 per annum. The
B.Tech seats in IT and CSE streams, which were most sought-after during
2001-2008, have found few takers since 2009. For the past four years,
the colleges have been struggling to fill these seats due to reduced job
opportunities, mainly since 2009, on account of recession and global
slowdown in the IT sector. The poor response forced several colleges to
apply to the AICTE seeking permission for closure of IT and CSE
branches.
However, the situation has turned around for IT and CSE streams once
again since the placement season which began in September 2011 and ended
in March this year. “About 90 per cent of the jobs have been offered by
IT companies alone during the recently concluded placement season. The
major recruiters were Infosys, Cognizant and Wipro, while all other
sectors contributed only 10 per cent of the jobs,” said Dr Rajeshwar
Reddy, chairman of Anurag Group of Colleges.
The IT firms have also announced robust recruitment plans for the
ensuing placement season. “The positive job outlook in the IT sector has
contributed to an increased demand for IT and CSE seats. However, this
is not the case in all colleges,” pointed out P. Ravi Kumar, an
education counsellor. “Only those colleges, which figure in the top-50
list are getting enquiries since the recruiters give utmost priority to
the standards being maintained by the colleges in imparting engineering
education.
Source : DC
State varsities fail to comply with RTI
HYDERABAD: Educational institutions in the state have turned out to
be one of the biggest violators of the Right to Information Act. About
11 educational institutions, mainly universities, have failed to furnish
the mandatory information as part of section 4 (1) (b) of the RTI act
to the Information Commission. Every state government body is supposed
to provide their complete details to the commission, which then uploads
it on their website. This information includes details such as the
functions and budget allocation of the organization, role, designation
and remuneration details of all the employees, important documents held
by the department among others.
The erring institutions are JNTU, Anantapur, Jawaharlal Nehru
Architecture and Fine Arts University, Hyderabad, Yogi Vemana
University, Kadapa, Satavahana University, Karimnagar, Vikramasimha
University, Nellore, Krishna University, Machilipatnam, Mahatma Gandhi
University, Nalgonda, Palmuru University, Mahbubnagar, Rayalseema
University, Kurnool, B R Ambedkar Open University, Srikakulam and AP
Hindi academy. These institutions have also failed to provide the
details in their own website, as per the state information commission's
annual report for the year 2011.
Surprisingly, the officials of these universities displayed poor
knowledge of the Act. "We do regularly send data to the council for
higher education and not the information commission," said V Sankar of
JNTU-Anantapur when quizzed on the issue.
He later admitted that they were not aware of this particular section of
the RTI Act. "If the information commission asks us, then we will work
on it," he said. S Khaleel-ur-Rehman, registrar of Jawaharlal Nehru
Architecture and Fine Arts University (JNAFAU) said, "If the commission
wants us to send any particular information then we can just be briefed
about the format and we would oblige."
The information commission has decided to summon the university
representatives soon. Jannat Hussain, chief information commissioner of
the state, said, "Since they have not been complying with the Act, we
will now force them to do so. We will summon them soon and give a time
limit to get their act right. Even after several years of the Act, how
can they be not aware of it?", Hussain said.
Source : TOI