IITs - as overrated as it can get
The IITs are probably the most talked about institutes of higher education in India. And I am probably contributing to the volume of words that talk about these institutes but I can be excused because I am after all an alumnus of one of these prestigious institutes and talking about these institutes in general is something that I tend to almost every time I think about higher education, considering that is the only higher education I have ever had.
The IITs are perceived to be _the_ place to go to for higher education. It attracts the best minds in India, both as faculty and as students. Some of the faculty I met there were the most brilliant people in their respective fields. I am still in awe of some of them and I think I would never see such people together in one place ever again. But is education all about putting the best faculty and the best students together in one place and let them mingle in classrooms? Is that all that is required?
But before we answer all these weighty questions, what purpose do you think the IITs serve? Are they supposed to take students and mould them into people who are equipped with the knowledge and skills to innovate? Or are they supposed to create technically equipped workers for the rapidly growing industry (software industry, in particular)? Or are they supposed to create better citizens for the country?
Education is such a hard term to define. A lot of people would agree with me that education is not just the knowledge of terms and facts. But much of our school education is just that. Rote knowledge is expected and tested in our examinations that we take but higher education is supposed to go beyond that as it is expected that through the education we receive in our universities, we should be able to create new things that contributes to the progress of our society. But do the IITs help in this goal?
Abi has argued that the IIT model itself is flawed. One of the arguments that he makes against the IIOs (Indian Institutes of...) -
Ultimately, IIO blinkers us into an utterly unimaginative -- and some would say, delusional -- worldview which devalues academic disciplines that are not worthy of an Indian Institute. Isn't it absurd to even assume that anything other than technology, science, and management (and, if I may add, Hotel Management!) is unimportant for our country? Don't we need great economists to steer us through turbulence of globalization? Psychologists to help us deal with stresses from a fast-paced life? Artists to make our lives richer and more enjoyable? And philosophers to make sense of our uniquely human condition and our (almost) impending immortality?
This is something that I agree with completely. Some time ago, I read a blog post by another ex-IIT alumnus who argued about how little exposure to humanities we get in the IITs. Comparing with similar institutes in the United States like Caltech, he found that the number of credits/courses taken in the HSS department is far fewer (4 courses in the IITs vs. 12 mandatory courses in Caltech). Now that is a big difference. The IITs are very focused on the subject of study that the student has signed up for and does a pretty comprehensive job of that. But everything else is either ignored or given very little attention to.
Another area that the IITs do not pay any attention to is the students themselves. The IITs assume that the students have taken up the field of study that they are already motivated to study and would work on their courses with the appropriate amount of energy and perseverance. Therefore, there is never any effort made to involve student deeply with the field of study and to motivate them to work hard on the courses or even make the classrooms interesting enough. But is that assumption really true? well, to be very frank, not all students who come to the IITs have come there with a definite plan in their minds. Most of them have come there because that is what they have been told to do and have taken up the branch that was available to them for the rank they obtained in the JEE. ie, most of them do not really know what they have taken up till they are immersed deeply into their respective departmental courses. You cannot find more aimless, intelligent young people than in the IITs. Most of them lack direction and one would be surprised to find out that a very small number really did know what they were doing. With the amazing infrastructure that is provided to them and in particular, the incredible bandwidth that is available to them (I hear it is 36Mbps in IITK now! In my time, we had 2+2 Mbps), it is not surprising that quite a few of them get distracted and end up 'wasting' their time on a lot of non-academic stuff. This has invariably led to a dip in the grades of the students and, apparently, a suicide in IITB. Recently, IIT Bombay administration decided to ban the LAN (Local Area Network) for certain parts of the day. Would this really solve the problems that the IITs face today? That dropping student grades could be stopped by restricting access to such facilities like internet access?
I do not think so. The idea behind banning the LAN has been to discourage multiplayer LAN games that are generally played in the night and to ensure that students go to sleep at the appropriate time and are awake during lecture hours (this is something I heard from an IITB alumnus). But I am sure that the kids would find something else to distract themselves with. What about single player games and the hundreds of hours of movies, TV series, animes, etc that are readily available to be downloaded onto your computer when the LAN is active, to be watched at your own leisure? Does this really solve the issue of student motivation towards studies? My emphatic answer is "no, it doesn't!" This is the kind of knee-jerk reaction/"solution" that I have come to expect from the IIT administration. When I was still a student in one of them, the administration was more interested in adding more restriction to the entry of males to the GH ("Girl's" Hostel), painting zebra crossings on the roads that were so wide that they could crossed with three strides and other asinine things like that. There was no real effort to make the IITs a healthier place to live in for the students and there certainly was no effort made to motivate the students and inculcate in them a culture of innovation and creativity. In a recent visit to my alma mater, I found that the trend has continued. Now there are speed limit signs and more zebra crossings and other silly, non functional things like that.
I have always been a great supporter of counselling and I think a lot of students could benefit from a guide who could direct them in the right direction. Even though I think that a teacher could be the best mentor that a student could have, I realise that it is always not possible. I also think that a lot of students would benefit greatly if they would see a psychiatrist when they are in trouble. They were like three suicides in IITK alone last year and I would take this as a sign of declining mental health in the institute. As a society, we are extremely wary of psychological problems and are quick to ostracize anybody who seeks the help of a therapist. Which is why most people do not seek help when they require it the most. One of the things that I have observed in most MNCs is that they all have a telephone number that people can call when they problems and not just for work related issues and the employees are encouraged to call those numbers whenever they feel like it. Even though, the IITs have a psychologist who visits every month or so, there is no such number that is readily available for a student to call whenever they are the most depressed nor are they encouraged to seek help.
The IITB decision represents the great failure of the administration to empathise with their students and a great failure of imagination of how to go about solving the problems that the IITs face today. For this reason alone, I would condemn the IITs as a abysmal place as for as education is concerned. But for corporates seeking intelligent people to do menial work for them in their cubicles, it is the ideal place. The IITs are extremely overrated and someday, I hope, people would wise up to that fact.
As Abi has argued in his long post on the IIT model, it is just not the ideal place for education in India but the problem with India is the lack of quality universities, which is quite depressing. This represents such a gross inequity of education that is so hard to bridge. IIT alumnus are so proud of declaring that the IIT selection rate is just at 1% and that 1% receive the "best" education with the best facilities. Isn't it sad that the vast majority (99%) do not receive quality education in India? Call me a pessimist but I think the IITs are the best example of the extreme kind of exclusivity and classism that our society exhibits and I find it a disease that needs to be combated.
I am not done with my crib on the IITs and hopefully I would write on "why IITs do not produce Indian citizens" sometime this week.
13 comments:
phew!
Plz do not say that the IIT's train us to do "software" jobs. I agree that there are not many core jobs in India, but that has it's own reasons. But these days we do have a lot of core jobs in elec and CS in India. I am sure all departments try their level best to expose their students all possible options available in that discipline. If the teaching in IIT's was indeed so bad I am sure we would'nt have had so many students willing to go abroad for Phd programmes instaed lucrative jobs in finance companies. I agree that students have allmost zero knowledge about their branches at the time of admission and some counselling/interaction with the faculty will certainly help. As far as HS credits are concerned I don't think it really matters, the aim of a B.Tech programme is to teach students technology. We have 4 HS courses and enthu junta can take their 2-3 free electives also in HS if they want.I agree that not everything is right in IIT but it's certainly better than what u have written about it.
S.Manohar
Well written post Apurva. The ban the LAN incident reminds me of a similar thing that happened when I was in IITB (mid 90s). The people in charge of computer center and network thought that many students were downloading porn (that was a time when IITB allowed only lynx and web was in its infancy) and for some reason my advisor complained to CC incharge that I was the gang leader (Myself and my project advisor had a cold war going on at that time). So some of these profs entrusted with the computers and network got together and they came up with a "brilliant" plan to block domain names based on keywords like xxx, sex, etc. It gave fodder to a perennial anti-establishment guy like me. Every day morning I will send one mail to CC incharge saying that a legitimate site got blocked. The sites like xxx.lanl.gov, www.middlesex.ac.uk, www.sussex.ac.uk, www.essex.ac.uk, etc. They got so pissed off with my mails that they removed that ban. The reason I am saying this story is because I want to point out that this has been happening in IITs from time immemorial. The power to control the networks goes into the hand of some old timers who doesn't even know the recent developments in network security, etc. The only way they could tackle it is by imposing a blanket ban on everything. For example, IITM doesn't allow FTP, SSH or anything from inside their network. You have to log into one of their servers outside the firewall and then ftp or ssh from there. I do agree that ftp is not the smart way for people but it is convenient way for many users. They could have atleast allowed sftp and ssh instead of putting a blanket ban. This is the unfortunate scenario in our country's elite institutions. If this is the case with elite institutions, think what our ISPs will do. Blanket ban on blogspot.com instead of banning specific users (or just allow all users and fight their propaganda politically).
Your mention of LAN ban reminded me of this event then. Good post Apurva.
@kuffir: no comment..
@manohar: I do not claim that the IITs train the students for software jobs. Of course, they do not. But somehow the vast majority of people go into software jobs and it is the favourite hunting grounds for software companies. I dont know much about 'core' EE jobs but may I ask what are these 'core' CS jobs and how many companies and more specifically, how many employees who do that kind of job?
I think every person who gets into the IITs is capable of working towards a PhD. The reason why dont could be several including personal reasons and I would never consider a PhD as the ultimate goal of an 'innovator'. Heck, Edison did not even have a degree.
I would say that making the coursework a great experience for everybody is an impossibility but part of the problem of the IITs is the lack of freedom to choose coursework other than your departments. You are stuck with a department for four years and there is not much to choose from either, other than other engineering divisions. This is quite unlike an university and one of the major inherent problems of the IITs.
The problem with the IITs is not that they are not good or that they dont have facilities or that they dont attract the best minds or that they dont have autonomy but that they are not getting better (in fact, they are getting worse) and are unable to come up with constructive ideas to tackle the problems they face today. In fact, they are not even thinking about making the institute better in a manner that would benefit the students, who are really the greatest asset (and not just of the IITs). The problem is not even the blanket ban on the LAN but the thinking behind it which is symptomatic of a ailing and diseased administration.
@Krish: lynx porn? :D
This post was really a release of a lot of anger from my latest visit to IITK a couple of months ago. They have done some really ridiculous things. One of the pioneering Directors of IITK, PK Kelkar, is reputed to have been against walls around the academic area. While walls around the academic area was constructed a long time ago, there were other decisions that were taken during my time that I thought were quite detrimental to the spirit of Kelkar's ideas.
Dont think you are doing justice when you say that students dont get to take courses from departments other than their own. These days, the concept of "minors" have been coming up quitte well, and there are a fairly large number of students opting for minors of their choice.
What I do feel though is that there should be reduction in the number of courses on needs to take with a corresponding increase in the intensity of the courses.
Also, I personally thibk that one of the key causes of disillusionment of many of the students is that often what they read for the entrance exams are actually much more challenging than what they are faced with in the engineering curriculum. This definitely serves to reduce the enthu of the junta.
"Isn't it sad that the vast majority (99%) do not receive quality education in India? Call me a pessimist but I think the IITs are the best example of the extreme kind of exclusivity and classism that our society exhibits and I find it a disease that needs to be combated."
Congratulations, you've earned my respect with that one line.
Still it is sad to see that other than a lone blogger nobody seems to notice the atrocity of statements such as: "only 1% of India's population, the cream of the cream, manage to make it into this institute of excellence". Of course, we Indians don't use our minds all that often. Because if we did, there wouldn't be so much of a fuss regarding the supposed difficulty of the JEE. Concept-based learning seems to be an alien concept to most Indian kids raised primarily on rote-based education.
Consider the not-so-cream-of-the-cream students - the 99% that didn't get in. Great. What now? It doesn't help to slog your balls off for two years only to be told that you'll be receiving "sub-standard education". Neither does it help to know that you'll never be as "brilliant", as "talented", as "godly" as the IITians. But being an IITian yourself, you're probably alien to such feelings.
To sum it up, I believe that individual skills matter far more than some stupid college degree - IIT or the college-next-door. Look at it this way - if you're good at what you do and you ENJOY doing it (something not stressed enough by India's "elite" education system), it logically follows that you get into some good college (if not IIT). And then, for once, studies will cease to become a chore - something that you must do - and metamorphose into a pleasant pastime - something that you enjoy doing.
It takes a little shift in focus, minus all the teeth-gnashing, knuckle-breaking effort it takes to prepare for the JEE (which doesn't even guarantee success).
But then again if we were capable of thinking, neither would IITians be treated as gods nor would millions of youths have to waste the best years of their lives only to meet with disappointment.
Don't even get me started on ragging and the measures taken to control it (or the lack thereof).
Ayush, you make a valid point. I agree that there are assumptions people make about you when they come to know you are an IITian. Partly the reason why we IITians seem to have a bloated ego.
In one of your observations, you compared IITs to Caltech for their ignorance to humanities courses. Do you have any evidence supporting that a given number of humanities courses must be incorporated?
I do not generally defend any institution, but like to see factual evidences than comparative evidences. Caltech is a great institution, but a number of humanities course need not necessarily make it great. Facts missing....
If you are not serious about posting comments ,please do not ask to write comments, it is a waste of time for people who write the comments. You can mention that only Pro-IIT comments are acceptable and when there is a criticism, it should be indirect praise of the greatness of IIT people.
What you did was awesome.
What you did was awesome.
As a scientist of reputed in dian scientific institute I have experiences of my colleagues who have faced many IIT professors in their Docs as external. They have costed careers and delayed promotions to people who have presented practical work by asking outdated and stubborn questions which naturally had spoiled ambience. Few may be exceptions . But many fall in to self righteous class and fail to appreciate extant viewpoints. We just pray often for a no nonsense profs.
Please read Docs as DPC. Dept Promotional committee. Sorry for auto typo.
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