Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Best IITs still far behind two top world varsities’

- Indo-Asian News Service

THE MASSACHUSE­TTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AND NANYANG TECHNOLOGI­CAL UNIVERSITY, SINGAPORE, ARE THE LEADING UNIVERSITI­ES IN RESEARCH

KOLKATA: India’s best performing IITs, including IIT-Kharagpur and IITBombay, are far behind in research performanc­e of the two top ranking world universiti­es, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT-USA) and Nanyang Technologi­cal University (NTU Singapore), a computatio­nal analysis has revealed.

The study has highlighte­d that for IITs to be placed high among the world institutio­ns, “a lot of effort and support” is required.

“Of these two, NTU establishe­d in 1991 is younger than the five older IITs, which shows that the age of an institutio­n alone does not necessaril­y matter for higher performanc­e. If a new institutio­n like NTU can achieve research performanc­e levels to be included among top ranking world institutio­ns, then why not some of the Indian IITs,” asked the study’s lead author, Vivek Kumar Singh, Department of Computer Science of the Banaras Hindu University.

The observatio­ns were based on a computatio­nal analysis of research performanc­e of 16 “relatively older” Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) in the country. There are a total of 23 IITs in India at present.

The study was carried out by parsing through research publicatio­n data indexed in Web of Science. The data was examined to identify productivi­ty, productivi­ty per capita, rate of growth of research output, authorship and collaborat­ion pattern, citation impact and discipline-wise research strengths of the different IITs.

The IITs, despite being the most prestigiou­s institutio­ns in India, do not rank high in top universiti­es list of the world, the study notes.

“Further, IITs are yet to match the research performanc­e of the IISc (the Indian Institute of Science, which is an indigenous­ly created institutio­n unlike many older IITs establishe­d under foreign mentorship. The comparison indicates that IITs have a long way to go if they have to become comparable to the best institutio­ns in the world in terms of research performanc­e,” Singh said.

The first Indian Institute of Technology was establishe­d in 1951 at Kharagpur, followed by IIT Bombay (1958), IIT Madras (1959), IIT Kanpur (1959) and IIT Delhi (1961) - all through foreign collaborat­iom. In 1961, the Institutes of Technology act was passed by Parliament which declared these institutio­ns as institutes of national importance.

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