Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Hindi engineerin­g courses a flop

- Shruti Tomar shruti.tomar@hindustant­imes.com

NO TAKERS Bhopal’s Atal Bihari Vajpayee Hindi University is on the verge of discontinu­ing programmes due to lack of students, infrastruc­ture WHILE IN ITS YEAR OF INCEPTION ONLY FOUR STUDENTS TOOK ADMISSION FOR THE THREE COURSES, THERE WERE NO

TAKERS THIS YEAR

Though not proficient in English, Rajesh Kumar (name changed) wished to be an engineer. His eyes lit up when the Madhya Pradesh government started engineerin­g courses in Hindi at the Atal Bihari Vajpayee Hindi University of Bhopal and Kumar was one of the first students to enrol last year.

A year later, Kumar’s hopes of becoming an engineer lie in tatters. The concept of learning engineerin­g in Hindi has not caught on and the university is on the verge of shutting down engineerin­g courses for the want of students and also infrastruc­ture.

In its year of inception, only four students took admission for the three engineerin­g courses offered by the university. This year, no students have taken admission, leaving the engineerin­g faculty with just 11 students, including seven diploma holders who have taken lateral admissions into the second year of the engineerin­g courses.

The three engineerin­g courses offered at the university incidental­ly have 180 seats.

The lack of students’ response has put the university authoritie­s in a bind, prompting them to wonder whether the courses should be abandoned.

“The concept is very good, but due to want of awareness, people don’t understand it well. I don’t think we should continue the course. Spending crores of rupees in developing infrastruc­ture, constructi­ng 20 classes and appointing 20 teachers for just a few students don’t appear feasible,” said Ramdev Bhardwaj, the university’s newly appointed vice-chancellor.

“The university academic council will soon sit to decide whether we should continue running the courses or not,” Bhardwaj added.

When establishe­d, the university had lofty objectives, including developing engineers who would contribute to the developmen­t of the state as well as their country. The university had also written to various IITs last year that it was ready to enrol students who were struggling to learn engineerin­g in English at their institutes.

Learning engineerin­g in Hindi, however, is proving to be an extremely daunting task. Text books on engineerin­g subjects are rare and teachers rarer. The university currently has around four ad-hoc teachers and not a single permanent engineerin­g teacher.

However, the engineerin­g department staff feels the courses should not be discontinu­ed in a huff. For, any new concept takes years to bloom, they say.

“Without a good infrastruc­ture and faculty, the university should not expect good enrolment of students,” said an administra­tor in the engineerin­g department who didn’t wish to be named.

The Madhya Pradesh government, however, has left it to the university authoritie­s to take a call.

“Now, Atal Bihari Vajpayee University is an autonomous body and they can take their decision on their own,” said the minister of state for technical education minister, Deepak Joshi.

 ?? HT ?? The university had written to various IITs that it was ready to enrol students who were struggling to learn engineerin­g in English.
HT The university had written to various IITs that it was ready to enrol students who were struggling to learn engineerin­g in English.

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