AIICTE revising curriculum to meet industry needs
All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) aid it is taking steps to periodically revise the curriculum to meet the needs of industry and other sectors.
AICTE chairman Anil D. Sahasrabudhe said this was being done considering complaints that 60% of those passing out of technical education institutions are not industry-ready and still require honing.
Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the AICTE-sponsored workshop “teacher training workshop on +E learning: challenges and opportunities,” he said the council has taken various initiatives to transform education at all levels.One was to revise the curriculum at regular intervals to make it a model one, so that industry benefited with changing technologies.
Similarly it would be mandatory for students to have internship in industry for about two to three months, even during summer vacation, so that they imbibe skills before taking up jobs, he said. SKCET (the Sri Krishna College of Engineering and Technology has been selected as a centre for differently-abled persons and a grant would be announced soon.
The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) asked private schools affiliated to it to stop commercial activities and follow the education bylaws on appointments and daily functioning, a move that has annoyed the schools. In one communication, the board asked schools to “run as community services and not as business, and ensure that commercialization does not take place in the school in any shape whatsoever”.
The board warned schools that it has received several complaints from parents and students about how schools are “indulging in commercial activities by way of selling of books, uniforms etc, within the school premise or through selected vendors”.
“The board has taken a serious view of the above violations. Hence, once again your attention is drawn that educational institutions are not commercial establishments and their sole responsibility is to provide quality education,” CBSE said in its communication underlining further that they should desist from such “unhealthy practices”. It asked the school management to ensure “strict compliance” with its communication.
CBSE also asked recognized unaided schools to refrain from reappointing retired teachers and took note of certain schools that have done so in the recent past. Predictably, schools aren’t happy. A school association said the CBSE has issued a circular seeking confidential data pertaining to the day-to-day operations of all affiliated schools.
The National Independent Schools Alliance (NISA) accused the CBSE of harassing schools and said that if required, it will not hesitate to take legal action.