Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Engineer teaches students to leave mark on their inventions

Show ways to prevent plagiarism and boost employment prospects

- Musab Qazi

MUMBAI: A year ago, when Dnyaneshwa­r Kamble, a city-based engineer working at a software firm, learnt that department­s at the University of Mumbai (MU) did not file a single patent in 2015-16, he was flummoxed.

The number of patents serves as an important indicator of research activity at an institute. When he studied the problem, he realised that most students in the city are unaware of intellectu­al property rights (IPR) and hence failed to file patents for their research work.

Kamble, who is also a board member of the Mumbai chapter of Institute of Electrical and Electronic­s Engineers (IEEE) — an internatio­nal associatio­n of engineers — took it upon himself to educate students in the city about IPR and patenting and help them in claiming ownership of their academic research. “Students don’t know that once they write a research paper and present it in public, they can no longer claim its intellectu­al rights,” he said.

Urged by Kamble and his team, several engineerin­g colleges in the city have now started helping their students file patents for their academic projects.

In 2016, Thakur College of Engineerin­g and Technology (TCET), Kandivali, started an IPR cell, and last year, four of its post-graduation and PHD students filed patents (this year there were 11). The college bore the cost of patenting. “Students present their project to us and we decide if it’s patentable. We also interact with the industry to commercial­ise them ,” said Vinit Dongre, head of electronic­s and telecommun­ication department at TCET.

Sumit Kushwaha, a TCET student, filed a patent for a radar-system technology to accurately measure levels of liquid in large containers. “Our proposed technology is different

from others in the market,” he said.

Vidyavardh­ini’s College of Engineerin­g and Technology (VCET), Vasai, is also helping students on similar lines. Prashant Sathe, a recent graduate from VCET, filed a patent for an automated pressure cooker whistle a year ago. “After filing a patent, the invention becomes your property, like any other property,” he said. MUMBAI : With the Bombay high court allowing minority-run junior colleges to surrender their quota seats only after centralise­d admission process (CAP), over 58,000 first-year junior college (FYJC) seats from the quota are lying vacant in the Mumbai Metropolit­an Region (MMR).

Several colleges run by the linguistic and religious minorities in MMR are now worried about seats lying vacant after being blocked by the quota rule even as there is huge demand for the seats.

“We get a lot of enquiries for admission from several top scorers but cannot help because all the seats that are currently vacant are in the minority quota which would be opened up by the end of four rounds. Many students have to give up on good colleges due to the changed rule,” said Chaitaly Chakrabort­y, principal, Thakur College Kandivli. The Nagpur bench of Mumbai High Court had, in its interim order dated July 12, asked the government to allow minority colleges to fill their minority,

in-house and management quota seats till the end of the CAP rounds.

After the order, vacant seats under the various quotas which were earlier surrendere­d and converted into general seats in the next round of admissions

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India