Sunday, July 29, 2007

Colleges or Schools?


People who are aware of the situation will appreciate how an increasingly large number of engineering colleges in Tamil Nadu are being run like schools. One can find these colleges enforce strict and in many cases ridiculous rules and regulations which often infringe on some of the basic rights given to an Indian citizen. One should not be surprised to see engineering colleges in chennai that do not allow guys and girls to talk to each other. Yes, you heard me right. It may be tough to believe, but this actually happens in many places. Yours truly can bear evidence to the same, having spent four years in one of the strictest engineering ‘colleges’ of the country. Of course, its an irony that this was followed by a 2 yr stint in one of the most lenient and ‘chill’ b schools of the country!


Coming back to the topic of discussion, I believe that the 3-4 years of college life completes a person’s journey to adulthood. These years are crucial for a man in shaping his personality, which will be his asset for the rest of his life. College life is the time when a boy encounters a lot of new things in life. For the first time he realises how close he is to adulthood. He gets the perks that come with adulthood and also the responsibilities. He experiences freedom- it is exciting and sometimes scary too. The experiences at this age- the friends he makes, the enemies he makes, the situations he encounters, the first love, the second love, the college strike, the secret drink sessions with mates, the third love, the leaked exam papers, the ragging sessions, etc- determine the kind of man he will be for the rest of his life.


South India, especially Tamil Nadu is well known for its ‘intellectual’ tradition. The educational footing is strong in these states and as a result the region is a favourite with the industry. This positive environment has resulted in a virtuous cycle where the people have a strong faith in the power of education as a means to reach prosperity. This has resulted in a large number of higher educational institutes based out of the south. The number of engineering institutes is astonishing. Tamil Nadu alone has more than one lakh (100,000) engineering seats to offer every year. Of course, the quality of most institutes is very questionable. Nevertheless, the economic environment in the state and the country at large is such that any half decent engineering graduate gets a well paying job. People from rural regions of Tamil Nadu have suffered for a long time with an unreliable monsoon and an unfriendly neighbour when it comes to sharing of water resources. After years of a downhill ride in the state’s agricultural fortunes, many people have lost faith in agriculture as a means of livelihood. People want their sons to go to the city and enter the industry and see prosperity. An engineering seat is a very good means to achieve this.


The opportunists have capitalised on this opportunity by opening engineering colleges in every nook and corner. But the most important ingredient to lure students to a college is by having a credible placement record. The colleges try to ensure that they achieve a good academic record (read examination results) every year. There are regular exams and assignments. Failing in these will result in heavy impositions and other punishments. Academics is not just the most prominent issue in the agenda, it is the Agenda for these colleges. Things like sports and cultural activities are given only a cursory treatment. They also enforce strict rules like 100% attendance, no interaction between the sexes, formal wear (I heard that there is one college in chennai which requires students to wear ties 5 days a week! Now beat that… ties in chennai!!), no funky haircuts allowed, clean-shaven faces becoming mandatory. Such measures usually convince parents that here is a good college which will ensure that their son will not end up going in the wrong path and will get a good job in the end. The thing about no interaction between the sexes is a major selling point with parents of girls who are usually more worried about leaving their ward in a hostel far away from their hometown.


Things have come to such a turn that colleges are now competing with each other to impose stricter and more ridiculous rules. And these rules are actually enforced with a high degree of success. The end result is that at the end of four years you get a boy- not a man- who is seemingly bright chap with 80% in his engineering degree, but doesn’t know the fundamental engineering concepts. This kid is a very disciplined person, is used to formal wear and a can talk English. This is enough for a recruiter from an IT company to come and recruit him.

These ridiculous rules will not only cause students to forget about the fun element in college life, but it will also result in producing men of inferior quality. Men who are bound by the system. Men who believe that the system is insurmountable and do not even wish to change it for the better. Men who are cowards, because they have never gone through a ragging session where you learn to tackle bullying. Men who can never respect a woman because they never interacted enough with them. Men who cannot tolerate a rebel because they could never be one. Men who loathe optimists because they were never allowed to be one. Of Course there will be a few exceptions who come out of the system unscathed as normal human beings, but those numbers are unsignificant.


The situation can be rectified only when the mindset of parents change. This change can only happen in the coming generation of parents who have grown up in relative prosperity and who realise that there is more to education in life than can be obtained in text books and class rooms. I hope that this happens sooner than later.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Irritating Headlights!


I ride a bike and wear a helmet with visor. One of the most irritating things I encounter while on the roads is the high beam headlights of motorists in the nights. Most vehicles that I encounter in the roads in the city use high beam headlights which are actually meant for the highways. When the light from these headlights falls on the glass visor of the helmet, it spreads all over the glass surface and the glare is so much that one has to close his eyes till the vehicle from the opposite direction has past. Even if one manages to keep the eyes open, it is hardly useful as one cannot see anything in the road except the light beams. This forces one to slow down considerably in order to avoid an accident. Since such a thing keeps happening, it is highly irritating. I am sure a lot many accidents in the night would've been caused by such things.

Cars and two wheelers are equally guilty of using high beam headlights in the city. Apparently, motorists in India need to be educated in driving etiquettes such as this and others like lane changing. I hope that atleast the few readers of this blog will keep these things in mind and make the life of bikers and drivers in the generally bad Indian roads a little easier!

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Enjoying every moment of IT!

A few days back I heard a colleague in office saying, “I am working in general insurance, my cousin is in health insurance, my sister is also in insurance. Only my brother in law is in retail. We are trying to convince him to join insurance too!”. A closer inspection of the conversation revealed that this person was implying that all his family members are working in the insurance domain of various IT companies.

We Indians are living in an era in which the demographics of middle class urban population is increasingly becoming homogenous. Almost every family has someone working in the IT sector. This is even more evident in the southern states. When you hear that a particular IT company hires over a thousand students from Anna University (which is around half of its student strength), you know that something strange is happening. As most of you know, I am talking about TCS which hired 1006 students from Anna University this June. TCS might as well consider setting up a strategic business unit for Anna University students. Incidentally this is not a one off case. Similar figures of campus placements have been emerging from many reputed engineering institutes in Tamil Nadu and other South Indian states. Things have come to such a state that the sole purpose of students enrolling for B.E. courses is now getting into the IT bandwagon.

The students or their parents are not the reason behind this phenomenon. They are simply reacting to the market situation. Who would want to pursue a career in electrical engineering today? Getting a job in the first place is itself difficult. Even if one manages to get into a decent company, the chances of his starting salary being more than that of his friends in Infosys and Wipro are extremely slim. To add to things, our electrical engineer most likely has a 6 day working week and has to spend a substantial part of his day in the workshop in the sweltering heat while his friend in Infosys is comfortable in his A/C cubicle, checking emails and chatting to friends. The Infosys friend also has pretty female colleagues around him to provide him with some entertainment. After two years of struggle and slogging, the electrical engineer proves his capabilities in his workplace. He gets good salary raises and is now proud to be earning almost twice his starting salary. But his ego comes crashing down when he sees that his Infy friend is now with Wipro and is earning thrice his starting salary. To add salt to the would, this guy announces that he is going to the US next month on a H1B visa. The only worry in his life is that he will be leaving behind his latest Wipro girlfriend. The electrical engineer comes home and finds that his parents have been unsuccessfully searching for a marriage alliance for him. The good candidates are either software engineers and prefer marrying another software engineer or they are not software engineers but still would prefer marrying a software engineer. The poor electrical engineer thinks that enough is enough and enrols himself for a Mainframes course.

We Indians are proud of our rich and diverse culture and heritage. But in 3000 A.D., archaeologists will find that urban India- especially southern India in circa 2000 – 2050 A.D. was a boringly bland society and was largely a softwarian (an analogy to agrarian) economy.