Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

AICTE:Technical colleges to make their students job ready

- Prashant K.Nanda prashant.n@htlive.com

AICTE is now mandating that colleges must help find a suitable industry or organizati­on for students’ internship programs and asking technical schools to make their annual exams focus on concept clarity

From industry-prepared courses to mandatory shop floor training to imparting managerial and entreprene­urial knowledge, India’s apex technical education regulator, All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), is now ready with a set of must haves for technical colleges to improve their graduates’ employabil­ity.

For years, the technical education sector in India has faced criticism for lack of quality training and for its graduates not having the required efficiency to become productive at work from day one. Though the AICTE revamp is still pending despite a government panel recommendi­ng it two years back, the regulator is now trying to be pro-active in implementi­ng some basic but much required changes in technical colleges.

As per the AICTE plan, every technical college will now be required to have an industry consultati­on committee to rework the curriculum of each subject taught there.

Every year, the committee will revamp the coursework by December so that revamped courses can be taught from the next academic year, according to official documents reviewed by Mint. “Each institutio­n, while applying for approval, shall certify completion of this process, which will be mandatory,” it underlined.

The human resource developmen­t (HRD) ministry-controlled AICTE regulates more than 10,000 technical colleges, including engineerin­g and business schools. The Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) and the

ALL sTuDenTs shALL Be iMpArTeD JoB sKiLLs, LiKe MAnAgeriAL, enTreprene­uriAL, CoMMuniCAT­ion, TeAM WorKing &

LeADership sKiLLs

Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) don’t come under the purview of AICTE.

An HRD ministry official, requesting anonymity, said the effort made by AICTE is to make technical education institutio­ns contempora­ry and their graduates job-ready.

Various studies have showed that less than one-third of technical school graduates are jobready in the country, which is a hurdle for the industry in hiring them and expecting productivi­ty from the beginning.

In order to improve industry readiness, all students graduating undergradu­ate courses shall be imparted the required job skills, including “managerial skills, entreprene­urial skills, leadership skills, communicat­ion skills and team-working skills”.

The training will start at the time of admission. “Every student, on admission, shall be put through a mandatory Induction training to reinforce the fundamenta­l concepts and the language skills required” in their choice of subject.

After that students in technical schools have to undergo three internship­s of four to eight weeks each before completing their undergradu­ate course, as per the documents.

Right now students do only one summer training. In fact, in many engineerin­g and management schools, they either don’t undergo any internship or have to use their own contacts to find an internship.

AICTE is now mandating that colleges must help find a suitable industry or organizati­on for students’ internship programs, the HRD ministry official quoted above said.

Besides, AICTE will impress upon technical schools to make their annual exams focus more on clarity of concepts. It will soon share a model exam pattern that each institutio­n can adopt individual­ly.

Additional­ly, AICTE will give five years’ time to each college to achieve accreditat­ion for at least 50% subjects taught in the colleges.

The National Board of Accreditat­ion will accredit individual subjects. Institutio­ns that fail to do so will have an impact on getting AICTE’s approval.

AICTE-regulated colleges and institutio­ns will also make their own teaching and educationa­l staff undergo an annual training course and get them updated via the government’s massive open online platform.

 ?? MinT/FiLe ?? As per AICTE, every technical college will now have an industry consultati­on committee to rework the curriculum of each subject taught there, which will help to make the technical education institutio­ns more contempora­ry and students employable
MinT/FiLe As per AICTE, every technical college will now have an industry consultati­on committee to rework the curriculum of each subject taught there, which will help to make the technical education institutio­ns more contempora­ry and students employable
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