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NITs : Stepping up the Ladder
Is converting NITs to IITs the best solution to engineer the future of the country? The Indian academia is still divided for an answer
Shilpa Shanbhag
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
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During the second five year plan (1956-60) in India, a number of industrial projects were contemplated. To ensure that there is no dearth of engineering talent, starting 1959, seventeen regional engineering colleges (RECs) were established. The REC system served well but as time passed, some state governments showed lack of responsibility. In 2002, as per the recommendations of the All India Council for Technical Education, the Ministry of HRD decided to upgrade, in phases, all the original seventeen RECs as NITs; the count has increased to twenty.

The Government of India also introduced the NIT Act 2007, after which the NITs have been functioning as autonomous technical universities and draft their own curriculum and functioning policies. In the XIth Plan period, it is proposed to establish ten new NITs. Based on factors like request from respective state governments and feasibility, new NITs are expected to be set up by the conversion mode or as part of a greenfield project. The twenty-first NIT is being planned to be set up at Imphal at an estimated initial cost of Rs 500 crore.

After transformation to NIT, RECs have undergone a sea of change in a short span of two to three years. With a one time grant of about Rs 100 crore (for each NIT) from the central government, they have vastly improved their infrastructure. With annual fundings been increased from Rs 10 crore to Rs 30 crore per NIT, the institutions have been able to hire quality teachers. Under the guidance of IITs, NITs have revamped their curricula, established research programs and improved faculty/student ratio. Just like the IITs, NITs also admit students on the basis of an all-India level exam, AIEE, with 50% students from an all-India list and the rest of the 50% from within the state.

From NIT to IIT?
In 2002, when Roorkee University was converted into the seventh IIT (and the first college to be converted into an IIT), the race to have an IIT in its own state began in south India. After this conversion, a regional imbalance was created, with only three IITs in the north (Delhi, Kanpur, and Roorkee), and only one (Madras) in south. This led to pressure being mounted on the central government by the various state governments. Finally, the government decided to resolve the issue by announcing that some RECs would be converted to NITs.

All NITs have revamped their curricula, established research programs and improved faculty/student ratio. Are some of them ready to become IITs?

In October 2003, former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee announced the creation of five more IITs by upgrading existing academic institutions that have the necessary promise and potential. But the the NDA governments plans to announce five IITs during the general elections in May 2004, were thwarted by the enforcement of the code of conduct by the Election Commission. The current HRD Ministry will make the final selection after taking into consideration the SK Joshi Committees recommendations and consulting the IIT Board.

Apart from the pressure factor, there is another reason for the government to think about the conversion mode. All the IITs, apart from IIT Roorkee, were built from scratch. IIT Guwahati was established in 1992, with an estimated outlay of about Rs 1,000 crore; but on completion, the total cost was approximately Rs 1,500 crore. Taking this cost factor into consideration, converting an NIT to an IIT would prove inexpensive (one-time grant of Rs 300 crore paid over a period of three years and an annual funding of about Rs 100 crore) compared to building a complete new IIT (costing more than approximately Rs 2,000 crore).

"It is best to set up an IIT and bring the NITs at par with it. Some time ago there was a strong wind to convert good NITs to IITs and that is when our name figured in the list, but it did not happen. Currently, there are many NITs which are competing with the IITs in every aspect, and they will even surpass the IITs in the near future," says Dr Sandeep Sancheti, director, NIT Surathkal.

Pros and Cons
Will this conversion prove beneficial or will the quality of IITs be diluted? Considering the benefits that the nation would derive in the long run from the quality engineers produced, the initial hitch seems just an apprehension. The one-time grant received by each institute will help the institutes in upgrading their infrastructure; and the increased annual fundings would help in appointing talented faculty, research scientists, attract students for post graduate and PhD programs. After conversion, the institute would have to adhere to the educational norms laid down by the IIT Board, such as 1:1 ratio of admitting undergraduate/post graduate students; and a faculty/student ratio of 1:8 or better, etc.

But the only concern would be the fact that on becoming an IIT, these institutes would get affiliated with IIT-JEE and in the initial days several batches will pass out with the IIT tag, even without going through the rigorous IIT-JEE test. Apart from that, a newly converted college will take a few years to match the standards of the existing IITs.

The recent DQ-IDC survey ranked NIT Surathkal, NIT Warangal, NIT Tiruchirapalli, and NIT Calicut in the Top 20 list of T-Schools based on perspectives like infrastructure, faculty, HR perspective, placement, etc. Others like NIT Hamirpur, NIT Silchar, NIT Durgapur, NIT Jamshedpur, NIT Rourkela, and NIT Kurukshetra also find a place of special mention too. 100% placement even in these tough times has helped institutes like NIT Kurukshetra, NIT Warangal, NIT Surathkal, and NIT Calicut score an edge. "Companies like Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Cognizant, Tata, major PSUs, major oil sector companies have been the hirers," says YV Rao, director, NIT Warangal.

NIT Warangal, which is currently celebrating its golden jubilee year, is the first to announce plans to become a university offering courses like medicine, law as well as post graduate degrees in humanities and business economics. Each of the NITs are trying to put their best foot forwardbe it establishing a CoE or offering new courses, the list is endless. Both NIT Warangal and NIT Calicut intend to build a CoE each.

In a competitive move aimed at both IITs and NITs, NIT Calicut recently introduced engineering physics course that is mainly offered at IITs. For others like NIT Hamirpur, the plans have been made for ten years. From the feel of the competition, it can be concurred that NITs are edging over each other, and proving to be a tough competition for the IITs too.

Shilpa Shanbhag
shilpas@cybermedia.co.in

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