Our Stifled Students

  May 28 2008  | Views 288 |  Comments  (4)
There was a time when Indian Students routinely went abroad to study if they could afford it bec... Expand

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  matheikal posted 3 mnths ago

While many of your views are sound and I don't intend to questions them, I would like to point out one thing: I know quite many students who go to foreign universities becasue they won't get admission in any Indian university or institution of some repute.  Such students get admission abroad, and we don't really know in what kind of institutions.  When they return home, many of them manage to secure fairly good jobs merely because of the foreign tag.



  kolipakkam posted 3 mnths ago

Perhaps one way to look at the issue of higher education is through the ratio of numbers ... like "this many Ivy League products of engineering, science, commerce, arts etc. and so this many seats in high class post-graduate management courses." If one looked at the numbers from this perspective, the current numbers may not look so skewed. I don't know. It is not how many people apply for seats; rather it is how many management graduates (typically from the IIMs and other top level such institutions) who can be gainfully absorbed in the economy that should drive the number of seats available. On this score, the current situation may not be very bad. It is not the old argument of brain drain, but the affordability of underwriting education to send our manpower abroad for employment that should be looked at. Let people go abroad for their education if they can afford it; the country surely cannot afford to subsidize their education for foreign service just in the hope of gaining in remittances. This is my understanding.

Raghuram Ekambaram



  Julia Dutta posted 3 mnths ago

Mr Datta, 
You have not accounted for the goof ups in the assessment of papers at the CBSE level which then forces parents and students alike to seek admission in other Universities abroad. Also reservations. So it is not only the number of seats in universities and institutes of higher learnings that are perpetually causing brain drain in India.
Perhaps, it is the Government's policy to do so.
Julia



  Gita Khanna posted 3 mnths ago

Pretty sensible & sensitive handling of a really important issue affecting the students of our country .

Gita





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