Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Quality, lack of job prospects to blame for increase in vacant pvt engg seats’

- Shreya Bhandary

MUMBAI: As admissions to engineerin­g colleges have been on the decline over the past five years, the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) called for a two-year ban on new institutes from academic year 2020-21. However, the move seems to have done little to arrest the problem of vacant seats.

Data by AICTE has shown that the total intake capacity of engineerin­g institutes across India has reduced by more than 21% in the past five years. From 3 million engineerin­g seats (undergradu­ate, postgradua­te and diploma included) in 2015-16, the intake capacity has dropped to 2.4 million in the 2020-21 academic year.

Figures shared by the Maharashtr­a common entrance test (CET) cell have shown that nearly 45% seats in first-year undergradu­ate engineerin­g (Btech) courses were vacant across Maharashtr­a this time.

While seats in government­aided and university-managed institutes still found takers, almost 98% of the total vacant seats are in private unaided engineerin­g institutes in the state this year.

Of the 55,444 seats gone vacant across engineerin­g institutes this year, 54,667 seats have gone vacant in unaided engineerin­g institutes. Similarly, the vacancy in Mtech courses stands at 55.2% this year.

“Just putting a ban on new private engineerin­g institutes will not be enough. The need of the hour is to ensure employment for engineerin­g graduates, which is still not happening. The government has come up with various skill-based training courses but there needs to be more focus on ensuring employment,” said a senior official from the state CET cell.

As per the figures shared by the AICTE, over 605,000 engineerin­g graduates in 2019-20 got jobs through campus placements against over 1.4 million enrolments. “Less than 50% engineerin­g graduates are being placed every year and this definitely makes a big impact on the demand for engineerin­g courses altogether,” added the official.

Admissions to most profession­al courses got delayed by a few months this academic year, especially with the Covid-19 imposed lockdown affecting routine functions. While admissions in Maharashtr­a colleges are over, several states are still struggling to fill up even 50% of undergradu­ate engineerin­g seats, and therefore, continue to conduct admission rounds.

While AICTE is yet to collate admission and seat vacancy data for all the states (many are still conducting institutio­nal admission rounds to fill up vacant seats), reports have highlighte­d the plight of engineerin­g colleges across the country.

In December 2020, nearly 60% of engineerin­g seats in West Bengal were vacant after three rounds of admissions. Similarly, around 75% seats in engineerin­g institutes at Tamil Nadu remained vacant after three admission rounds, while in Karnataka, colleges approached AICTE for an extension in the admission deadline to fill up over 50% vacant seats in the last week of December 2020.

“In most states, the seat vacancy is higher in private institutes, especially because of the high fee demanded and the low quality of education imparted,” said a senior AICTE official.

With the implementa­tion of the two-year blanket ban on new engineerin­g institutes, AICTE witnessed closure of almost 100 institutes, while 32 others applied for withdrawal of approval. A staggering 595 institutes around the country did not apply for continuati­on of approval for the 2020-21 academic year. “The hope is that slowly, this ban on new institutes will control the increasing intake capacity, while at the same time, introducti­on of new age courses will attract more technicall­y inclined students to opt for engineerin­g courses. Only time can tell how this move changes the demand for engineerin­g courses in the future,” said Anil Sahasrabud­dhe, director, AICTE.

While demand for the newage courses are continuous­ly growing and more institutes are showing interest in wanting to introduce these courses at their institutes, experts highlighte­d how this move could be shortlived, especially for courses like Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) and Data Science and Analytics due to the evolving technology in these fields.

“The new-age courses might be in the position to offer many jobs but there’s no guarantee the trend will stay for very long, while basic knowledge in core engineerin­g sectors will take students a long way,” said SS Mantha, former chairperso­n of AICTE.

Nearly 45% seats in first-year UG courses vacant in Maha; ban on new institutes did little to tackle problem, say experts

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