Reality of Engineering Education in India

Guest Article by Titus Manohar

“A Successful Engineering Graduate” has become more of a myth in India, in the recent years. The lives of the many lakhs of students are being overshadowed by the successful few, with the formers’ struggle with unemployment going unnoticed.        

         




India, when it comes to education, has majority of students who would aspire to become a Doctor or an Engineer as opposed to a Physicist or an Astronomer. Our students, even from very young age, are presented with the choice of either becoming an engineer or a doctor which has constricted their knowledge about the various other courses/fields they can excel in.

Engineering education, to start with, is a vast area of study which is evolving greatly with every single idea, notion and invention that is being propounded or introduced in one or the other corner of the world. With the number of students pursuing an engineering course increasing exponentially, the onus of revamping the curriculum and the infrastructure to suit to the modern day requirements rests on the officials at All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE). But with engineering having become more of a commercial, money making scam, the objective of various colleges has also changed from producing well equipped engineers to producing unemployable trash.

It is common knowledge that an engineer is equipped to convert theoretical ideas into practical realities and improve the quality of our day-to-day life by coming up with newer inventions which will ensure that we need not do the difficult works. However, this doesn’t seem to be the case when it comes to the engineers in India, who seem happy to be in a field of work which has got absolutely nothing to do with their educational qualification.

The Indian education system has failed to provide the students with adequate knowledge of the various other diploma streams and career choices. Every student in high school is faced with the dilemma of whether or not to pursue his/her passion or end up in an engineering college just because of the illusion of better payslips. Every Indian parent forcing their children into joining the special courses to qualify in the various entrance exams must first be aware of where their child’s interests lie.

With the number of engineering colleges in India on an upsurge, it would be better if the colleges realise that without good infrastructure and better facilities and equipment in the laboratories, every passed out student faces difficulty when it comes to applying both his theoretical and practical knowledge in the real world problems. Students are not encouraged to come up with original ideas and even if one manages to emerge with a new idea, it is more likely that the idea is suppressed due to lack of funding.

The outdated curriculum is yet another woe to the new and aspiring engineers. With no exposure to the existing techniques students are confronted with the need to explore the current advancements on their own as their syllabus sticks to the old and pre-existing methods. Students must be encouraged to work with their professors and explore their field of interest in order to gain optimum knowledge about their professional course. Colleges must insist on research and development projects headed by the students which would focus on coming up with newer theories contributing to the prospects of advancement in the field. A new, improved syllabus comprising of all the various developments with respect to the course is the need of the hour.

One of the most prevalent opinions among the employers is that the candidates lack professional knowledge of the course. The reason for such accusation is because every student is assessed based on marks and marks don’t actually reflect to the knowledge of the students. All exams are more memory based and not focused on the real world problems. Students, in their four years of engineering, are never faced with any kind of exposure to what awaits them professionally.    

The final reason why engineering graduates are not able to fare well in their careers is because of the lack of soft skills. Even with all the knowledge and the understanding of the subject, students fail to communicate their ideas to the world due to not being effective in their interaction. Many students don’t make it through the interviews because, despite their understanding of the concepts, they are not able to present their arguments with clarity.

India, though being one of the largest producers of engineers in the world, has statistics tell us that only 7% of all the engineering graduates are actually employable and that 70% of them go unemployed. With the amount of corruption prevailing in the admission process, the ambition of becoming a real engineer has become an unrealised dream in the lives of many engineering graduates in India.


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