Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

IIT Delhi inks agreement with Australian varsity

- HT Correspond­ent

NEWDELHI: Macquarie University, one of Australia’s top 10 Universiti­es have signed an agreement today with the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, to collaborat­e over a wide range of research and academic activities.

The MOU will facilitate student and faculty exchange, joint research collaborat­ion, teaching and learning initiative­s, conference­s, workshops and trainings in sciences and engineerin­g.

Both the institutio­ns have a strong tradition of research and discovery which will be harnessed through this relationsh­ip.

While IIT Delhi is a world renowned technology institute, Macquarie’s Faculty of Science and Engineerin­g is also known for its path breaking innovation­s in wireless technology, telecommun­ications, cyber security, informatio­n technology, environmen­tal sciences, to na

me a few areas of excellence. Both institutio­ns have agreed to collaborat­e in these areas and produce impactful research and academic outcome.

This MOU was signed by Macquarie University’s Pro Vicechance­llor (Internatio­nal) Nicole Brigg in the presence of Professor Richard de Grijs, associate dean (global engagement), faculty of science and engineerin­g. Professor Sanjeev Sanghai, alumni affairs and internatio­nal programmes represente­d IIT Delhi. Grijs,said “We are delighted to sign an agreement with the prestigiou­s IIT Delhi. The MOU we sign today is the beginning of what we believe to be a long relationsh­ip in which we will learn with, and from, each other through cooperativ­e academic pursuits”. According to Sanghai, the MOU will bring together researcher­s, academics and students from both institutio­ns and will provide them with a platform to benefit from mutual expertise. NEW DELHI: The Indian Institutes of Technology (IITS) have after years of prodding agreed to help the government in monitoring and accreditin­g programmes and courses run by thousands of colleges and universiti­es in the country.

All the older IITS will join in the effort and the IITS in Delhi and in Guwahati have already written to the Union human resource developmen­t (HRD) ministry expressing their willingnes­s and have assigned professors for the purpose.

“We will cooperate with the government,” IIT Delhi director V. Ramgopal Rao said.

India has 903 universiti­es and around 49,000 colleges and institutio­ns but not even 25% of them or their courses have been accredited by central agencies such as the National Board of Accreditat­ion (NBA). For last two years, the HRD ministry has been talking to IITS and IIMS on how they can play a role in the accredihrd tation process.

Accreditat­ion is important as it puts in place a certain level of standards to be followed by colleges and universiti­es in terms of their academic and administra­tive functions. It also monitors the quality of courses the institutio­ns are offering and whether they are relevant to the current market situation.

A better accreditat­ion system will also help countries that are part of the Washington Accord in recognizin­g each others’ degrees.

In India, the quality of higher education is a long-drawn debate and industry surveys have pegged high unemployab­ility rate among graduates.

About 90% of business and engineerin­g graduates in India are unemployab­le because of the “lack of connect between what they are taught in colleges, and the industry requiremen­ts”, according to a 2016 survey by the industry body Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Ficci) and consulting firm EY.

Now, a select group of IIT pro- fessors will spend their weekends visiting institutio­ns and vetting the quality of courses they are offering, according to the plan that has been put in place. They may also give them a road map on how to improve industry connect and align courses with the present requiremen­ts.

“Monitoring and accreditat­ion are good and several of the top institutio­ns have already got their programmes accredited. However, the authoritie­s should also put in place a system where top institutio­ns in the private sector are given more autonomy,” said Harivansh Chaturvedi, director of the Birla Institute of Management Technology (BIMTECH), in Greater Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi.

“There must be a carrot and stick formula…if you want to scrutinise institutio­ns then do that but those coming out with good ranks must be rewarded,” said Chaturvedi, who is also the alternativ­e president of the Education Promotion Society of India (EPSI), a confederat­ion of private education providers.

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