Monday, October 20, 2008

Autonomy under AICTE

In the tussle with MHRD during 2003-2004 the B-Schools were complaining about autonomy on the fee hike issue. Click on this image to observe whose autonomy was really at stake then:

The story is no different even now (circa 2008). A teacher's voice continues to be choked.

KIIT University hosted the one-day national seminar on “Role of Teachers in Professional Education in the Changing Scenario” on 19 October 2008 (Sunday). The event managers did what they are good at – hosting the event at a very short notice. However, while severe faculty shortage was identified as the key issue, little moderation was done in terms of consensus building with positive outcomes for the 200 odd participating teachers.

The AICTE Chairman, Prof. Yadav, cited the imbalance in our higher education system highlighting the brand equity of IITs and IIMs over the others. Perhaps he could have acknowledged that these brands were built over decades of government support with huge funding and much greater academic autonomy. The less privileged institutions which are being regulated sans any significant government fund are struggling against regulatory pressures to impart quality education. With global pressures mounting, we did see some references about dissolving the boundaries to accommodate interdisciplinary nature of academic activities. However, we are a long way from achieving the necessary conditions (let alone sufficiency).

The former Chairman, Prof. R. Natarajan’s earlier efforts in placing Design and Innovation courses in engineering schools is yet to be accepted wholeheartedly. Schools and colleges under AICTE still need to appreciate the fact that design is a multidisciplinary activity. To foster the design culture, therefore, we need to catch students young. This calls for some changes in the engineering and management courses. It is yet to be seen when AICTE will bring back its focus for a greater emphasis of design in engineering education. Engineers and managers should be able to assume ‘multi-partite roles’.

The AICTE representation was distinctly absent after the inaugural session, leaving the house open to the other speakers for sharing their views. Prof. Binayak Rath, Vice Chancellor of Utkal University and Prof. Omkar Mohanty, Vice Chancellor BPUT, seemed to be ventilating their frustrations with the Indian regulatory bodies. While the VC-BPUT went to the extent of labeling the teachers as “TEA CHERS”, he did suggest the use of quality assurance models for education. His suggestion for going through the models of ABET and MBNQA would have been more apt if it were made to the AICTE officials. The participating teacher was left to wonder if the theme of the seminar should have been “Role of Regulators in Professional Education in the Changing Scenario”.

Prof. Devi Singh, Director-IIM Greater Noida, did make some valuable suggestions about teachers taking a holistic view of the education system and regulators creating a competitive environment for improving the quality standards. Prof. Balaveera Reddy, Former VC, VTU, made an interesting presentation extolling the virtues of Computer-Based Teaching. He came close to convincing the audience about technology solutions for overcoming the capacity constraints. He suggested models for enabling the faculty to participate in meaningful content building exercises with technology aiding the process of dissemination and evaluation. He wondered why universities (such as KIIT) were not taking the lead in replicating such models within the existing boundaries of autonomous freedom.

With constructive moderation being distinctly absent, this platform could not be used for making recommendations to AICTE for creating the much needed framework for enabling teachers to perform. The idea of suggesting the teacher to first learn and then teach was not being seen as a bottleneck for inhibiting the progress of learner-centric models where the teacher becomes a facilitator (as well as a learner). The most important role of a teacher is to be able to articulate freely. AICTE’s role, therefore, is to create an enabling environment for the teacher to be a self-starter in enlarging this role further. The suggested models of “Training the Trainers” or “Mentoring the Mentors” are dated ideas which detract the system from being proactively learner-centric. An eager learner (be it a teacher, student or an administrator) needs a conducive technology-enabled learner-centric academic environment to be a self-starter.

Unfortunately, the voice of the teacher continues to be choked – even in the new millennium!! The participating teachers were hapless observers and found little scope for interacting with the speakers to develop a shared vision. They preferred to remain mute spectators till the end.

Finally, taking a cue from the well proposed vote of thanks by the Registrar, KIIT University – no one really seems to care about what a teacher “MAKEs”. I have dedicated this blog to make people see yet another viewpoint.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Bubbles of positivism


Positive thinking needs to be supported by negative thinking. Otherwise it may lead to the formation of bubbles which hurt when they burst.

Please click on the image to enlarge the cosmic uplink by Vithal C. Nadkarni titled “Too positive for one’s own good” [Economic Times dated 18 October 2008, Saturday]. He quotes from Prof. John Mayer’s blog post titled “Was Financial Caution Undone by Positive Thinking?

Like the financial sector, the education sector is no different. The education sector in India needs to be careful in its expansion pursuits by taking lessons from the US meltdown. Keeping ears open to the dissenting voice (read negative feedback) is a must for any organization wanting to be on the path of continual improvement.

The same holds true for academic regulators who need to create an enabling environment for the changing times. After all, who will regulate the regulator?

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Grid computing yet to energize the physical world

(Click) The seven challenges (01 Nov 2001), in general, continue to be real for us in Orissa. Are we ever going to be able to overcome these challenges? Challenge #6 still poses the question: How to make the virtual space complement the physical space? Though technology is making rapid advances, organizations are lagging behind in terms of realizing the potential benefits.

The global computing grid has been unveiled by CERN to handle real-time data related to particle physics research. Click this link for details (Oct 03, 2008) titled "Computer grid links 7,000 scientists around the globe"by Jonathan Lynn, Reuters. Here is an excerpt:

[Quote]
The data flow will be about 700 megabytes per second, or 15 million gigabytes a year for 10 to 15 years – enough to fill three million DVDs a year or create a tower of CDs more than twice as high as Mount Everest.
“To analyze that amount of data, you require not only a lot of computing but a new computing paradigm – that's what we call the Grid, and that's what we're here to celebrate today,” CERN spokesman James Gillies told a press briefing.
Just as the Worldwide Web – invented in 1990 at CERN – allows users to share access to information over the Internet, computer grids allow the linking of computing resources such as data storage capacity and processing power.
CERN has only 10 per cent of the computing capacity needed for the LHC experiment, which will allow scientists to observe sub-atomic particles and probe the nature of gravity and matter. The grid will provide the rest.
[Unquote]