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Saturday, 22 November 2014

Madras HC puts onus on SC for delay in MBBS admissions


CHENNAI: A single judge of the Madras high court on Thursday said the Supreme Court, which had laid down a strict schedule for MBBS admissions, allowed high courts to breach it several times. As a result, no one knows where people and courts stand vis-a-vis admission schedules for medical education, Justice V Ramasubramanian said on Wednesday.

"It appears that the Supreme Court repeatedly fixed time schedules and warned statutory authorities not to violate the time schedule. But, quite a few orders passed by various courts beyond the time schedule were also upheld by the Supreme Court. Therefore, no one knows what the law is and where we stand. Our education in law appears to be inadequate to understand the law of education," he said.

The matter concerns 84 vacant MBBS seats in two private unaided medical institutions - 32 seats in Chennai Medical College & Research Centre in Trichy and 52 seats in Tagore Medical College & Hospital in Chennai. A batch of 28 students, who had earlier turned down MBBS seats in other private medical colleges owing to high fees, approached the HC saying they should have been considered for admission in these colleges.

60% rise in GRE applicants from India


BENGALURU: Indian students aspiring to go abroad for studies seem to be increasing like never before. Students appearing for the Graduate Record Examination, whose score is widely accepted for admission to colleges in the United States, saw a whopping 60% jump in the past year. Engineering continues to be the most sought after subject for Indians taking the test.

The report, `Snapshots of the individuals who took the GRE revised general test', released by ETS, the testing agency points to a huge jump in the number of Indians taking GRE even as the rest of the world shows only a marginal increase. China, a major competitor, has shown a 7% dip in number of students appearing for this exam.

In India, the number of candidates taking the exam was around 30,000 in 2011-12. The number rose to 53,505 the next year and touched 84,841 by 2013-14. The number of students vying for it tripled in two years. Physical sciences is second in demand. This includes subjects like Chemistry, Computer Science and Information, Physics and Astronomy, Mathematical Sciences and Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. Business also saw a huge increase. Around 10,000 students said they hadn't yet decided on the subject.

The US continues to be the major study destination. However, Canada and Europe are increasingly becoming popular. The percentage of women taking the test dipped marginally compared to the past two years. According to a new report released by the US immigration and customs enforcement of the department of homeland security, the total number of Indian students studying in the US shot up 28% to 1,34,292. India has the second-largest foreign student body in the US after China.

Fears grow about Hindu "Modi-fication" of education


(Reuters) - Indians were flying aeroplanes, carrying out stem cell research and may even have been using cosmic weapons 5,000 years ago, according to the chairman of India's leading historical organisation.

Professor Y. Sudershan Rao, the head of the Indian Council of Historical Research, has been criticized by fellow historians for comments that Hindu epics are adequate to understand the ancient world, rather than relying on evidence or research.

The Hindu nationalist government appointed Rao to the prestigious academic post soon after winning the biggest landslide in three decades, fuelling concerns of a push to teach the superiority of Hindu values and mythology at the cost of academic rigour, and cutting against the grain of secularism that runs through multi-faith modern India.

"We have so many proofs that these events happened," Rao, 69, said in an interview, describing events in the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, the ancient Hindu epics about love and war, truth and deceit, that feature characters using inextinguishable fire and weapons with the destructive power of a nuclear arsenal.

Similar views have won support from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and in part reflect a belief that India's history books are beholden to colonial powers, foreign invaders and Marxists.

While there is debate over the exact age of the Hindu epics, historians say they were probably written at least two millennia ago. Rao says this in itself is proof the texts are factual because humans did not develop the art of fiction writing until a few centuries back.

Many academics are horrified by such views, and describe his appointment as a blow for the history organisation set up four decades ago to guide research and hand out grants. They point to signs of a broader plan to bring more Hinduism to the classroom through changes to the curriculum.

Two states run by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party have recruited controversial Hindu nationalist Dinanath Batra to advise on writing textbooks.

In June, thousands of schools in Gujarat were given textbooks by Batra that claimed cars were invented in ancient India and told children to draw an enlarged nation to include countries including Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.

Teachers at Batra's organisation say they want the books to be in every school.

"The lessons from today's history books are that Indians are nothing and good for nothing," said Atul Kothari, secretary of Batra's Shiksha Bachao Andolan Samiti, or Save the Education Movement. "The truth is that historically we have been a far superior race."

Education Minister Smriti Irani, a former soap actress, declined to comment on what revisions will be included in a review of the curriculum planned next year.

The last time the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party was in power a decade ago it began to rewrite school books in line with Hindu-nationalist orthodoxy.

When the rival Congress party came back to power it rewrote the books again. Academics say the loser in all this are confused, and sometimes ill-informed, school children.

Modi is the first prime minister to publicly back the view that holy texts show many discoveries of modern science were made by ancient Indians. He told an audience of doctors last month that the Hindu god Ganesh's head was evidence of ancient plastic surgery. A warrior the Mahabharata describes as born outside his mother's womb was a test-tube baby, Modi said.

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Original Knowledge to be Created at IIMs, Suggests HRD Minister



The Union Minister for Human Resource Development, Smriti Irani has told the IIMs in the country to focus on the development of original knowledge among the students. Irani urged the IIMs in the recently held conclave meet with the IIMs where she discussed about the 13-point agenda which can channelize the efforts of IIMs to create mechanisms which would help dealing with the challenges faced by the nation in the economic and industrial sectors. The conclave was a part of Pan IIM World Management Conference which was supported by the Ministry of HRD and organized collectively by all the 13 IIMs at the IIM-Kozhikode campus.

Irani said, "The IIMs have been the vanguard of management thinking. Members of the faculty of these institutes have been contributing to global knowledge in management. However, there is a lot that these institutes can do by generating original knowledge in order to contribute to management science. This requires more coordinated, organised and well-planned effort to dovetail with national and international priorities."

Six Karnataka Universities Functioning Without VCs


Due to various reasons like, retirement, suspension and tenure completion, presently six Karnataka Universities are running without any Vice Chancellor to handle the duties in these universities. Most of the posts have remained vacant for almost half and year now, which is hindering the smooth functioning of the academic and learning procedures in the university.

Among these six universities, five have remained headless for last six months. These universities are: Karnataka State Sanskrit University, Bengaluru; Kuvempu University, Shivamogga; Shri Krishnadevaraya University, Ballari; Rani Channamma University, Belagavi; and Gulbarga University, Kalaburgi. In another university, Karnatak University, Dharwad, the post has remained vacant from October 23 as the Vice Chancellor was suspended and arrested recently by Lokayukta police under the Prevention of Corruption Act.

The University Grants Commission (UGC) has not yet decided the nominees for the panels which in return is affecting the selection procedure and making it delayed unnecessarily. The government has planned to constitute search committees for the four out of six universities and has asked the UGC via official letter to name the nominees as soon as possible, on which they haven’t got any responses yet.

Job Fair Organized by DU for Undergraduates


Delhi University recently concluded a job fair where over 5,000 students were given opportunity to secure employment, who are going to get graduated in the year 2015. During the first of the placement drives of the session, three companies came in to the campus and around 100 students got hired. 35 students secured jobs for themselves.

Not only the fair produced good job opportunities, it kept the remuneration of these students in mind as well. Among various jobs that were on offer at the fair there were profiles like content writing, business development, nutritionist, customer care executives and academic coordinators which remained favorite. The average package offered to the students was Rs. 4.8 Lakh per annum. Some of the companies which visited the fair were, Litchi Knowledge Centre, Experts Intellectual Solutions Pvt Ltd and EXL Service.

Delhi University has its Central Placement Cell (CPC) where it conducts such placement drives every year where students from different courses can register and find out job openings provided by the companies through the cell. The job fairs at CPC are open to all the undergraduate students irrespective of which department they belong to.

JM Khurana, Dean Student’s Welfare DU said, "Online registrations for the placements began on 18 September this year. Over 5,000 students registered for the first placement drive. We plan to conduct a placement drive in December after the exams. Another one is likely to be held in January."
Last year around 1,200 students got placed during sessions of placement drives conducted by CPC. 

IGNOU: Admission open for January 2015 cycle


Indira Gandhi National Open University is offering admissions for its January 2015 session in MA (Philosophy), MA (Gandhi and Peace Studies), MA (Extension & Development Studies), MA (Education), MA (Anthropology), MA (Gender & Development Studies) , Master of Social Work, Master of Social Work (Counseling), MA (Distance Education), MA (Economics), MA (English), MA (Hindi), MA (History), MA (Political Science), MA (Psychology), MA (Public Admin.), MA (Rural Development), MA (Sociology), MA (Tourism Management), MA(Translation Studies),Master of Commerce(M.Com.), Master of Computer Applications (MCA), Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS), MSc (Dietetics and Food Services Management), M.Sc. Mathematics with Applications in Computer Science(MSCMACS).

The university also inviting applications for Bachelor degree programmes, Bachelor of Science (BSc) (with major in Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics, Botany and Zoology), Bachelor of Arts (BA), (with major in Hindi, English, Urdu, Economics, History, Mathematics, Philosophy, Psychology, Public Administration, Political Science, Sociology), BA (Tourism Studies), Bachelor of Commerce (BCom), Bachelor of Computer Applications (BCA), Bachelor of Library & Information Science (BLIS), Bachelor of Social Work (BSW). Bachelor Preparatory Programme (BPP) (preparing students for taking admission in IGNOU’s selected programmes).

Admission to other programmes at the level of PG DIPLOMA,  DIPLOMA, ADVANCED CERTIFICATE, PG CERTIFICATE & CERTIFICATE  are also on offer.

Student Handbook and Prospectus is available in all the Regional Centers/ Study Centers of the university which can be obtained in person for Rs. 200/- . For further details please visit www.ignou.ac.in.