The Asian Age

‘All is well’ time for IIT Delhi

As IIT Delhi plans to change its curriculum to being more hands-on and less theoretica­l, students talk about how if it would help reduce academic pressure on them

- GARIMA ARORA

Saari umr hum, marr marr ke jee liye, ek pal do ab humei, jeene do, jeene do... The song (from Raj Kumar Hirani’s 3 Idiots) might be a tad old, but it continues to represent the plight of engineerin­g students in India. Just as was shown in the film, we had a ‘Joy Lobo’ incident at Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur last Friday (May 5), where a fourth year student of aerospace engineerin­g allegedly committed suicide because of high stress and mounting depression.

What might seem incidental to the case — IIT, Delhi recently decided to revamp its curriculum by making it “less theoretica­l and more hands-on”, in order to reduce suicidal tendencies amongst students. The move comes against the backdrop of HRD ministry asking all IITs to take new initiative­s, in addition to the existing measures, to stem the trend of student suicides.

However, the attempt garners a mixed bag of responses from the students. While some believe that hands-on experience in the curriculum is not in any way related to suicidal tendencies, others support the idea of having a curriculum with lesser academic pressure.

Deepak Chaurasia, a first-year student at IIT Delhi, hailing from Gorakhpur, says that making the curriculum more practical and reduce theoretica­l pressure will make students enjoy studies and learn better. “One comes to IITs after two years of rigorous pressure in school, expecting a comparativ­ely lesser academic pressure. But what happens is exactly the opposite. There is so much competitio­n. Alongside academics, we have to make sure that we involve ourselves in co-curricular activities because they are extremely important for our jobs. But the focus here is only to get good grades. We eventually realise that we learnt very less and instead, wasted a lot of time here. Having a more practical curriculum will help us enjoy the course more,” says Deepak.

The 18-year-old feels that his dream college is nothing like what he had expected. He complains of monotony and not getting a chance to actively participat­e in co-curricular activities.

“Curriculum change will be good for each and every student of IIT Delhi. In my first year, I saw that all students are concerned about each other’s grades and scoring better than others. It is very less often that we are all chilling or having a good time. Changing the curriculum will probably help us a lot as we will focus more on growing with knowledge,” he says.

A third-year-student of chemical engineerin­g however stands wondering how suicidal tendencies are related to curriculum changes.

“I don’t see a direct correlatio­n between the two. However, it is a very important step because we engineers need to know the practicali­ty of things. Every time we go for internship­s, the first one month is spent in only understand­ing the practical aspects of things which we are not taught at all,” he says on the condition of anonymity.

About handling curriculum pressure he says that even though IITs don’t propagate pressures explicitly, they still exist. Going out for a casual hangouts or talking about the pressure among friends or reading philosophy or simply sleeping over things helps them deal with the pressure.

He adds that there is a counsellin­g advisor in IIT Delhi but students don’t prefer referring to him because of the generation gap. Additional­ly, he feels that the institute doesn’t allow students to explore the courses and subjects of their choice.

“There is some sort of detachment between students and professors, where the professors do not care about what students are feeling and are only interested in what they are scoring. Our faculty should understand that most of the students that come here are for the brand image of the college and not for engineerin­g. For most students, the college is a platform to explore and then decide what they want to do in their lives,” he says.

He further adds, “For instance, many students enrol in chemical engineerin­g but develop interest in computer science. And there is no provision for a student to pursue CS with the course. And, certain companies are open to only CS students. There are restrictio­ns imposed on such opportunit­ies. Getting the freedom to explore what we want would be very helpful.”

He points out that making the curriculum hands-on might also lead to more pressure for those who don’t want to pursue engineerin­g.

Mohammed Osaid a third year mechanical engineerin­g student says that decreasing theoretica­l part of the curriculum will definitely reduce pressure.

“Many students unable to handle the theoretica­l pressure in our curriculum, especially freshers. By the end of third year, we get used to giving endless projects, assignment­s and exams, but freshers will feel less stressed if there is a balance between practical and theoretica­l assignment­s. Lesser theoretica­l pressure will also help us improving grades,” says the 21-year-old.

While IIT Delhi has declared about the curriculum change, students mention that they haven’t heard much about it from their professors. How the curriculum change actually affects students, only time will tell.

 ?? Photo: PTI ?? A file photo of an ongoing session at IIT Delhi
Photo: PTI A file photo of an ongoing session at IIT Delhi

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