Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Buoyancy in campus placement for engineerin­g students

- Neelam Pandey neelam.pandey@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: Campus placements for engineerin­g students crossed the 40% mark (and hit 42%) for the first time in five years in 2017-18 on the back of more hiring by companies coupled with the closure of engineerin­g colleges and lower enrolments.

While it is alarming that 58% of engineerin­g students across the country were still unable to find a job on campus, the 42% proportion is much higher than what it has been in the past. According to data from the All India Council for Technical Education, the figure was 38.39% in 2016-17 and 31.95% in 2013-14.

While more hiring was the driving force behind this, the closure of engineerin­g colleges and lower enrolments helped too.

The enrolment figure in 2017-18 declined to 750,000 from 944,000 in 2013-14. Currently, 3225 engineerin­g institutes under the AICTE, India’s apex technical education regulator, offer undergradu­ate courses. The number of institutes have declined from 3400 in 2014-15. The poor enrolment rate prompted several states to ask the AICTE to ban the creation of more seats in engineerin­g colleges. A number of states such as Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Telangana, Maharashtr­a and Rajasthan submitted petitions to the AICTE, not to set up new technical institutio­ns. According to people familiar with the developmen­ts, there has been an increase in the number of campus placements as the government had made internship­s mandatory to increase the so-called employabil­ity of students. Those who have successful­ly interned at companies find a job easier to land. “More than 3.8 lakh students in third year secured summer internship­s, which is a major achievemen­t. The number will go up further this year and will reflect in more students getting placed,” said an AICTE official.

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