All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) today issued a warning to private engineering colleges and some universities to avoid recruiting faculty members on contractual basis by paying a pittance. |
Speaking on the sidelines of the conference on 'Higher technical education in West Bengal: Prospects & issues' organised by the department of higher education, government of West Bengal, H P Dikshit, chairman of AICTE, alleged some private colleges are recruiting faculty on contractual basis paying them a few thousand rupees a month but in the process delivering poor quality of teaching. |
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In order to maintain the standard of teaching, AICTE approved only 180 out of 707 applications received this year. |
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AICTE is planning to send special teams with members from all stakeholders like AICTE itself, state governments and affiliating university to monitor institutes. |
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AICTE can withdraw affiliation, he warned. |
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AICTE is also thinking of permitting short duration engineering courses as required by industry. |
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"The institutes must work closely with industry and plan courses according to industry needs to enhance employability of candidates," said Dikshit. |
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The technical higher educational institutes should take a futuristic approach in popularising courses, Dikshit added. |
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"Had projections about demand for information technology or biotechnology professionals been done earlier, then there would not have been a demand supply mismatch," Dikshit said. |
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AICTE is also thinking of improving the rating system. |
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"AICTE is initiating discussions with international accrediting boards to rate Indian institutes jointly with the National Accrediting Board (NAB)," said Dikshit. |
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Biotech park |
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West Bengal is trying to involve ICICI Bank to fund the planned biotech park at Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, chief minister of the state, said here today. |
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He also said that the state is taking emerging areas like oil technology, energy science and petroleum technology much seriously. |
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"We cannot afford to neglect unconventional emerging areas, " said Bhattacharjee. |
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He also urged the higher education department to look at popularising areas like leather technology as a major leather complex was coming up at Bantala. |
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