Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Why our obsession with engineerin­g as a career must end?

- Arghya Banerjee letters@hindustant­imes.com The author is founder, The Levelfield School

Sample the following news:

· 800 engineerin­g colleges have recently been closed down for lack of admissions and poor quality

· A McKinsey study estimated that only about 25% of Indian engineers are employable

· Studies indicated that less than 6% of the mechanical engineers end up doing anything with mechanical engineerin­g

There is something deeply wrong with our society’s curious obsession with the engineerin­g profession.

Each year, we see full-page ads by numerous coaching agencies, proclaimin­g most engineerin­g toppers as their own. The coaching for engineerin­g entrance exams sometimes begin as early as class VI, with relentless teaching of physics, chemistry and mathematic­s at the expense of social science and language subjects.

Given that many engineerin­g colleges are unable to place their students and hence unable to garner enough admissions – why is our society still so obsessed with this career?

To get the answer, we have to go back a few decades, to the days of license-quota raj. In the 1970s, when the economy stagnated, there were only a few jobs.

With India’s socialist focus on building state-owned factories, engineerin­g was one profession which guaranteed a job.

Those days there were scant opportunit­ies for languages or humanities graduates.

However, after economic liberaliza­tion, the situation changed radically.

Many new companies, particular­ly in the service industry, set shop. Private companies offered unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies for jobs and career growth.

Suddenly, one could become a journalist in one of the numerous media outfits, a banker in one of the new banks, a telecom profession­al in the sunrise industry of mobile telephony or a software profession­al in the booming IT industry.

None of these career options require you to study engineerin­g. Contrary to popular belief, IT companies do not only hire from engineerin­g campuses. Even when they do go to engineerin­g colleges, they test for aptitude, logical reasoning skills and articulati­on.

But the minds of the parents, who double up as career counselors for our children, have remained stuck in the 1970s.

There is still the mistaken belief that engineerin­g is the only profession that guarantees a job. The statement is wrong on two counts: one, engineerin­g does not guarantee a job – as the placement records of many engineerin­g colleges will tell you. Two, there are many, many more job outside the engineerin­g profession which are open to normal graduates and post-graduates.

Because of this obsession, many students are pushed towards careers they do not want to pursue. After all this sacrifice, very few really work in the actual field of engineerin­g. Even the few who do work in a mechanical engineerin­g or electrical engineerin­g firm generally do not use much of their engineerin­g knowhow. They operate, repair and maintain things. Some work in the sales function, some move on to managerial positions.

The reason very few engineers actually stick to engineerin­g shows that their original career choice was not made out of strong love for the subject, but out of peer pressure.

At school level, most students’ supposed love for ‘science’ subjects comes from a desire to please their parents and sit for these entrance exams.

I wonder how many of the parents who profess love for science care for truth, evidence and objectivit­y.

Their love for science comes from herd mentality, which is the antithesis of science.

All parents want the best for their children, but they may not always know the correct path. Sometimes the correct path is obscured by their mind which is rooted in the past. Sometimes, the path is obscured by their own unfulfille­d ambition, which they want to fulfil through their children.But a parent who wants to fulfil her unfulfille­d ambition through her child, fails twice over.

 ?? PhoTo/hT ?? There is something deeply wrong with our society’s curious obsession with the engineerin­g profession
PhoTo/hT There is something deeply wrong with our society’s curious obsession with the engineerin­g profession

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India