Business Standard

IITS hope to ease final year stress on students

- VINAY UMARJI

In a bid to ease the pressure on students in their final year, the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITS) are mulling over a rejig in their placement model.

Faculty members have been sharing their feedback with the IIT placement committees on how the rigorous process that takes place close to the end of term cuts into students’ academic work, causing them to under-perform at times.

The feedback has prompted the All IITS Placement Committee (AIPC) to try to find ways to streamline the placement model to reduce the burden on students.

“AIPC is trying to review the existing placement process under which students undergo a tiring process to get placed…aipc is taking initiative­s to collect informatio­n from stakeholde­rs and then brainstorm on alternativ­e models,” said G P Raja Sekhar, chairman, career developmen­t centre, IIT Kharagpur and AIPC head.

The final placement process at most IITS begins on December 1. The first few days sees a flurry of recruiters flying down to their campuses. Some campuses have the concept of ‘Slot Day Zero’ in which the selection begins at midnight on December 1. Companies eager to choose the best compete with one another and this results in multiple rounds of interviews for students.

While it’s not known what

alternativ­e process will eventually be chosen, it could take some time to be introduced and won’t be possible this year.

In the past, the idea of outsourcin­g the entire process to a third party has been aired. However, since campus placements are largely student-driven, this idea might militate against students taking a call on who to invite and when.

Experts believe modifying the placement model is a good decision given the changes that campus recruitmen­t has undergone globally.

“The model of the employer coming to the campus and doing interviews is an old model. There could be more emphasis on summer internship­s leading to more reliance on pre-placement offers. Electronic assessment is also becoming popular where, over a month, at their leisure, students can complete the evaluation process,” said Narayanan Ramaswamy, Partner & Leader for the Education & Skill Developmen­t Sector, KPMG India.

Further, according to Ramaswamy, simpler changes such as video conference­s could go a long way to easing the pressure on both the college administra­tion and students.

As it is, IITS encourage students to become entreprene­urs by pursuing their own business ideas and as this grows, fewer and fewer students will in any case be involved in the placement process.

In the meantime, IITS are also looking to inject more transparen­cy into the placement process, especially in terms of joining dates and the number of offers.

“AIPC is strengthen­ing the guidelines to be followed at both ends. In particular, a support system is needed when companies go for a deferred joining date or revoke the offers,” Raja Sekhar added.

In the past, IITS have altered the rules, such as relaxing the ‘one student one offer’ norm. Introduced in the wake of recruiters such as Flipkart deferring joining dates, IITS allowed students to sit for multiple interviews to ensure they had ample offers in hand.

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