scorecardresearch
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Support Our Journalism
HomeIndiaEducationNo life, no hobbies, burnout, lost childhood — the price students pay...

No life, no hobbies, burnout, lost childhood — the price students pay for a prized IIT seat

Last year, 1.5 million students took the JEE to qualify for 13,000 seats in 23 IITs across the country – in other words, for each seat there were 115 aspirants.

Follow Us :
Text Size:

New Delhi: They are the country’s premier engineering institutes and getting into them is internationally considered more difficult than admission into Princeton, America’s Ivy League university.

Last year, 1.5 million students took the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) to qualify for 13,000 seats in 23 IITs across the country — in other words, for each seat there were 115 aspirants.

So intense is the pressure and so gruelling is the preparation required that students as young as 14 start the process, often missing out on the simple joys of adolescence. Most give up extra-curricular activities, relationships with friends and peers, and all forms of entertainment to achieve the goal. By the time they achieve their aim, if they do, many realise they have lost out on social skills, ability to communicate easily with others (an attribute now known as soft skills), and of course, some part of their youth.

An IIT Delhi professor who has been teaching for the last two decades underlines this reality, saying when students come to them after two or three years of prep, they don’t even know how to behave socially.

“They have been cut off from society, they are unaware of current affairs, and are desperately in need of our induction programme for freshers where we try to re-orient them to society and the institute,” the professor said on the condition of anonymity.

This skill gap haunts them even when they graduate. Despite all the hard work engineering students put in, a survey conducted in 2019 found that 80 per cent of engineers “are not fit for any job in the knowledge economy and only 2.5 per cent of them possess technical skills in Artificial Intelligence (AI) that industry requires”. The skill gap between what they learn and what is required of them in their workspaces makes them unemployable. 

Yet, in India’s shortage economy, where everything of value is kept in limited supply, there is no end to this annual exercise of competing in the JEE.

Like a 23-year-old machine learning engineer based out of Florida, who started his JEE preparation as early as Class 8, because his peers had started as early as Class 6. The engineer says he was so engrossed in his prep that he ignored basics such as good hygiene, good grooming, or even making friends.

“It took me an entire gap year before undergraduation to recognise and overcome these shortcomings,” he now says.

Or 29-year-old Shivam Narang, now working as a procurement manager with a prominent firm in Mumbai, who spent three years preparing for JEE. An “above average student”, he had to work 12-14 hours a day to crack one of the toughest exams in the world, making him lose out on much of his teenage years.

A basketball player in high school, Narang had to quit the sport after Class 10, once he started preparing for the engineering entrance, moving to Kota from Delhi, the coaching college magnet for all IIT aspirants.

“There is no room for hobbies – even playing your favourite sport for 30 minutes comes with a feeling of guilt,” Narang says. “Add to that the shift to an alien city with a competitive environment, which is so difficult to adjust to.”

The constant pressure and fear of losing out led him to leave Kota. He took a break and took admission into a National Institute of Technology (NIT).

“The loss of my values is what affected me the most. I am still very competitive and don’t feel comfortable working in a team. My personality changed, as did my body. I gained 35 kilos in a matter of months and my weight went up to 120 kilos,” Narang remembers.


Also Read: 443 Delhi students committed suicide in 5 yrs, exam stress & failed relationships to blame


School, coaching, weekly exams

Some students such as Narang start preparing for the JEE at the age of 16, but others start as early as 12. These students, along with attending regular school, also go to coaching sessions and take weekly examinations. In the routine of coaching, school and tests, students claim that they miss out on important life skills, networking and overall personality development.

The National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) for medical college admission, which has become a political hot potato in Tamil Nadu, so much so that the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) has promised to scrap it, is only marginally less difficult. In 2020, more than 1.5 million students appeared for it, a 15 per cent rise from the number of applicants in 2018. 

Of them, under 800,000 students were able to qualify for one of the 82,026 seats at 541 medical colleges across the country. After the introduction of the examination in 2017, several students committed suicide after failing to clear it.  

The DMK has promised to do away with the examination and put back in place the previous system of admission to medical colleges in the state, based on results of the state Class 12 board exam. The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), meanwhile, has offered to provide additional training to NEET aspirants.   

According to coaching institutes, an average student spends 16 hours a week attending these extra classes, in addition to their regular school and studies. The annual financial cost of attending these sessions goes up to Rs 2 lakh.

Pragya Bhardwaj, 35, who now practises as a gynaecologist in Bengaluru, took a three-year break after school to prepare for her medical entrance test.  

“I could not get an MBBS seat in the first attempt and it required two more attempts. Finally, after the third attempt, I got a seat in a reputed medical college in Karnataka. But the journey to get there was gruelling and took a toll on my personality, my health, mental well-being and social connections, almost everything,” Bhardwaj recalls.

Students are allowed two attempts at JEE, but there is no cap for the number of NEET attempts — there is, however, an age bar of 25. 

The problem is not individual but systemic. As Dr Soumitra Pathare, director of the Pune-based Centre for Mental Health Law and Policy, puts it: “If you create a scarcity for something and push young students to try and get that scarce product in a restricted environment, it is bound to affect them mentally.

“Premier institutes in our country have an admission rate of about 0.1 per cent, so what kind of outcome can you expect? No matter how resilient an individual is, when the system is rigged against them, it is criminal when the individual breaks down.”  

Parents go to the extent of disconnecting their children from the outer world to “help them focus”. Activities such as watching television, surfing the Internet, and participating in social events, sports and hobbies are placed at the bottom of the list of priorities. Shweta Garg, 50, a homemaker based out of Ahmedabad, says the two years her son spent preparing for the JEE meant the entire family put a pause on normal life.  

“Those two years were not only difficult for my son but for the entire family as well. To ensure that he was able to focus on boards and competitive exams, we removed the cable connection so that there were zero disturbances for him. Family vacations and social events were given a skip and a serious environment was created in the house,” she told ThePrint.  

Yet, her son was unable to make it to an IIT. Garg sidesteps that, saying she thinks her son matured during the period. Although he missed meeting his friends and cousins, he knew he had to prioritise.  


Also Read: IIT-Hyderabad students blame isolated campus and academic pressure for suicides


The role of coaching classes

Coaching institutes make things worse for aspirants. Kishore Kumar, an IIT Kharagpur alumnus based out of Delhi, who has been coaching JEE and NEET students for the past 11 years, says the institutes create an atmosphere where students are divided into batches based on their performance.

If a student spends five years training in a ‘low-performing’ batch, it conditions the child to not think of himself/herself beyond a low-performing student. He/she will then hesitate to take part in group activities or anything else to assist his/her personality growth.

Anand Kumar of ‘Super 30’ fame says he ensures the focus of his students is on enhancing their creativity so that they don’t become another cog in the wheel.

“Most of my students are from rural backgrounds with poor financial stability,” he said. “Whoever shows a flair for scientific learning turns up for coaching. My focus largely remains on enhancing the ability of students to grasp concepts. They need to learn about real-life applications of their studies to ensure success even after getting into an IIT.”

Speaking about the types of skills he imparts, Kumar said, “Instead of just going by textbook examples, I try to relate the concepts with their real life situations. This helps students understand things better. I also need to prepare them for a massive shift, from a rural setting to a college, and then a formal workplace. To do so, we pick examples of world leaders with humble beginnings and read from their biographies.”

Of the 510 students he has trained over 19 years, 410 have got into IITs, NITs and other notable engineering colleges.   

Some experts even question the necessity of coaching classes. Meeta Sengupta, founder of the Centre for Education Strategy, a Delhi-based think tank dealing in education policy issues, said: “Although experts say that coaching helps students take the exams, it is not healthy for children. They lose the space for discovery and innovation during the course of such training.” 

Several students, because of the lack of an outlet and no mindspace for anything other than studies, experience a burnout by the time they reach a university. This leads to several mental health problems.

A mental health expert with an IIT, who chose to remain anonymous, said, “The most common problem among IIT students, who have all their lives been seen as high achievers, is the sense of a vacuum. It can also be called an ‘existential crisis’. After years of rigorous training, students start searching for a deeper meaning in life. This can either happen because of anxiety issues or depression, or exacerbate them as well.” 


Also Read: ‘We didn’t do enough’ — AIIMS faculty and students say after suicides by doctors


(This report has been updated to accurately reflect that last year 1.5 million students took the JEE to qualify for 13,000 seats in 23 IITs across the country – and for each seat there were 115 aspirants, not 1,000. The error is regretted.)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube, Telegram & WhatsApp

Support Our Journalism

India needs fair, non-hyphenated and questioning journalism, packed with on-ground reporting. ThePrint – with exceptional reporters, columnists and editors – is doing just that.

Sustaining this needs support from wonderful readers like you.

Whether you live in India or overseas, you can take a paid subscription by clicking here.

Support Our Journalism

282 COMMENTS

  1. The Print should bring out a survey about the percentage of IITgraduates doing engineering jobs and other jobs such as banking . It is easy to criticize, but one should propose solutions also. The admission criteria has to change. At present physics, chemistry, matches questions are asked. Questions about ancient Indian history, civics, social sciences should also be included. So that children reading those things may also get selected with lot less mugging of physics.In parallel large number of IITs should be established on PPP MODEL AFFILIATED TO EXISTING IITs so that pressure to go to Kota is removed.

  2. Our premier engg technical institutions (both govt and private) have focussed more on producing employable graduates rather than capable researchers. While this may have been perfect in the Nehruvian era and the Indira/Rajiv era , this approach may not suffice the needs of future generations.

    The result of current approach to education – unhealthy competition, lack of exploration, low risk taking, too much bookish learning is telling on the nation’s entrepreneurial spirits in the engineering space.

    Parents also share equal responsibility for this state of affairs. Parents seem to want employable graduates so that their wards can be “settled” soon and married off. Basically they view education (coaching fees, college fees) as an investment to be paid back with good return!

  3. This article is exactly what jee is and those who are saying the facts are exaggerated then go ask an jee aspirant he will tell you the ground reality. The social skill part, Missing all the fun ? . It is much more harsh on your mind then it looks like and if you fail you stop believing in yourself.

  4. That’s why India stands far behind in research and innovations. Cause a certificate of being an IIT graduate is more important than being competent. And I really regret wasting my 2-3 valuable years in such a sheep race. Cause that shit that we studied was never used after the JEE exam, neither in Engineering nor in Job. If a person learns some skills like trading/coding/communication/ business strategy or Anything that he wants to learn. He/She will earn much more than those IIT graduates and will be much more successful, I have seen such real examples.

    • Some American kids start programming computer games by the time they are 16. The world’s richest man Bill Gates started working on his unused school computer during his teens. He dropped out of college to start Microsoft. Some even drop out of college to start companies. Take stories of Michael Dell, Mark Zuckerberg etc…

      A college degree should be viewed as a journey not the destination. Sometimes life takes turns that no one can predict so one has to be prepared always to do something very different from what one studied in college.

      Meanwhile our young middle class kids are being trained to crack objective questions in science and maths. No opportunity for them to do self discovery with any hobbies like coding, electronics, digital art, machines or developing some practical and useful skills through school level physics or chemistry.. But I know it is an unthinkable proposition for Indian parents to let their kids pursue something they enjoy or even let their wards just be normal teenagers.

  5. Thanks to Sony, Somebody has to say this and you said it. Putting so much extra effort the student becomes anything other than what he ought to be. Not for himself , for the whole world it would be disaster . But this happens not just in India alone.

  6. I think the problem inside IITs are very big, students here are depressed, confused. Students at IITs are better than top ivy leagues when they start 1st year, when they leave they are far lower than them. They are again put into a ratrace which is unfortunately about higher grades rather than learning.

    • In fact the depth of phy, chem and maths one gets exposed to during an IIT prep is the level at which a first year engg. student takes in the US or Korea.
      So academically in our country we STUFF in more phy,chem and math into our 17-18 year olds, so some are possibly burnt out by the time they are 19-20. It is not a coincidence that in such a PRESSURE KEG some will hate their engineering courses mid-way through their UG and move to on to other lines like MBA.

      But I am no academic expert but common sense in me dictates one serious question is to measure the outcome: why are our engineers not able to build world class engineering companies in India? Look at Korea and China – Samsung, LG, Xiaomi or Huawei – how does the academic rigour in their premier institutes compare to IIT? What is it their premier institutes do in their academics that makes even their average engineers READY to do the world class things (within their countries) once they graduate?

  7. I think problem is more inside IIT these days. Students at IIT are better than top ivy leagues when they enter IITs, when they leave they are far lower than them. Students are again put into a ratrace inside which is unfortunately about grades rather than learning and excelling.

  8. Similar or more difficult price are paid by Medicos also not only during preparation but in colleges also and later on in life too

  9. it is a pseudo competition. if there are 100 bright indian boys and girls who can become excellent engineers, why not give all of them a chance ? why eliminate some of them just because i have no seats.? why not there be a minimum threshold for entry into IIT , instead of a maximum earned. let people pursue what they want if they satisfy a minimum creiteria.
    if there are 100 boys and girls who can become excellent doctors why fail them in entry-competition ? because you have not enough seats ? damn increase them. let us have excellent professionals in this country.

    • This is not the way to get good professional
      There is certay rule a/q to which student have to take admission
      Competition is to choose best among best

    • There is not enough infrastructure to support any of this. No jobs to support the ever increasing entry of students into the job market… Dearth of not only good quality jobs but well paying jobs. As competition increase (due to high population and very very limited resources) there is a natural flight towards security from money and thus, it is easy to blame that a child didn’t study hard enough (because IITs exists) rather than saying and improving the system as a whole. (Still the new NEP policy is a positive step in this place, hope it helps the young in the coming future)

  10. Not many people start the prep at early age..most of them give just 2 years to the prep.. get your facts ryt..don’t extrapolate unnecessarily

  11. Survival of the fittest. Any profession whether Engineering, Medicine, IAS etc needs preparation for many years right from childhood. It is said that if you study with interest rather than study hard will make you achieve your goals.
    A person who doesn’t work hard in Teenage is bound to suffer later. A person who enjoys teenage without studying will curse himself later seeing the success of hard workers.
    Yes you can play any game for an hour which gives you strength and happiness and gives impetus to study. You have to schedule your time of study. I used to study from 9.00 Am to 1 pm sleep from 2 -4 pm play football 4-6 pm have supper at 6 pm and study upto 11 pm for my PG preparation. Every weekend I used to watch movies.
    It’s all how you prioritise your life. If you study upto X std you get lesser job and XII you get a clerical job or call centre job and if you study MBBS , MD , IIT or IAS your life is different. Choice is yours. Enjoy now or never.

    • I think you could not understand the crux of the article. They are not emphasizing the need to not study, instead they are saying what I’ll effects this system has on the minds of students. The point is even if a person who studies the same way as u have written may not be able to clear the exam. That means despite having the potential, the person is tagged as being ineligible. Is that’d right. Studying is an essential part of everbody’s life but the aim of studying should not be jobs and life after the jobs but the satisfaction and happiness that one gets through it. I am surprised that such thoughts are coming from a doctor!!

    • Dear Learned Dr Vinay Kumar Dawson MS. AIIMS,

      Your prognosis

      “.. person who doesn’t work hard in Teenage is bound to suffer later .. person who enjoys teenage without studying will curse himself later ..”

      is advice that yours truly disregarded when he was a teenager. 

      Maybe that is why I occupy a small corner office in a distant backwater of Europe pushing papers as a small cog in a gigantic bureaucracy whilst luminaries like you become the movers, shakers and shapers of society !  Your detailed prescription for what needs to be done when the clock strikes 9 am, 1 pm, 2 pm, 4pm  etc. is precisely what I lacked. 

      You see learned Doctor, when I was a teenager, I dedicated a lot of my time to ogling at pretty girls and extrapolating from their visible curves, contours and protrusions and other anatomical assets to their more invisible anatomical assets.  Perhaps my methodologies are not particularly “sanskaari” in today’s Hindutva centric world. But boy, they were pleasurable ! Odd that you did not indulge in that sort activity … maybe you didn’t have the right hormones …

      But learned Doctor, I do not find myself cursing myself despite my having thoroughly enjoyed my teenage life. On the contrary, I am immensely glad I did not become a hormoneless automaton and slave of a bloody clock …

  12. Problem is not iit,problem is mentality of mostly indians, people think iit is only way to safe future,
    But no one this about this precious life. Not only iit’s Jee but any other competitive exam aspirant has same problem, From childhood we all learn only one thing “life is a race and I am a horse, If I loss I will die.”

  13. The communists & the brown British in India have hatred of Hindus & this nation!! NO Wonder why they don’t shift to China where writing anti Han or anti national rubbish will put them in jail!!

    The west stole Hindu science, knowledge & wealth to label them as theirs!! Today’s communists & brown British are doing much worse!!

    • Well, Do you even think before writing? Ancient Indian scholars had put forward various scientific concepts which is well known and acknowledged. Even, tons of ancient records are been looked upon. But, Pseudoscience can’t be accepted, whether you associate it with nationalism, culture or religion. Hatred for any religion lies in its representation.Hinduism is not much acknowledged, just, because people like you only brag about culture, and do nothing to the core.

  14. Absolutely right…. Even I have also faced this all things when I was preparing for jee……
    Competitive exam HAVE importance in our life BUT they are NOT more important than our LIFE…….

  15. The Print reports always try to make every issue, a scandal.
    I am father of an IITian.
    I never put pressure on him for study. He is absolutely normal person physically, socially, mentally and spiritually.
    He has spent his childhood as normal child.

    Stop writing and publishing such fictitious bullshit articles……

    • you may be the father of an IITian there are many who are not. Your life experiences are not reflective of the society at large. And just because you think you gave him a normal childhood doesn’t mean he feels the same way.

    • We all put on a happy face hiding our pain and emotions …have you ever asked your child if he was happy or not , by the nature of your comment you look like a person with a bullshit boomer mentaltity , stop boasting your stupid rules in our modern world you take all the colours for our success ( the skills through which we can become successful but we couldn’t just because of people like you and this moron society boasting it’s shitty rules and regulations and you know what we don’t give a f*ck of what you think ) and put us in the annoying race of “who’s the best, who is the all India topper” …. I always wonder why people in other countries like America are happy and successful….because the do what they feel good in doing and people supports them there ….but here in India if you have a hobby , forget about it …. and If someone is not good in studyjng he/she is seen as a criminal in society just like he/she did a herenious act , instead of supporting him mentally we start killing him/her because in India we only want to support the powerful , we don’t want to make anyone powerful we just want to be with the powerful and that’s why you sick ass people are not happy

    • Stop pretending like your know your child. I am a 17 year old aspirant and almost no one I know, senior or friend or anyone who has gotten into IIT is open to their parents about the mental trauma they had to face in the journey. Especially Indian Children, we never share anything with our parents because we will most probably get bad rep for it, or you will dismiss like it’s nothing. So please stop. Its sickening to see. No one is in a good mental state at the end of jee because of how absolutely toxic it is.

    • With all due respect, I admire that you have never pressured your son for academics, but open your eyes to the struggles of other people. Just because it’s not happened to your son, or your Neighbors. Doesn’t mean it’s not happening to other kids.

    • Sir I respect your opinion but firstly make your ward read this article and decide if it’s relevant or not. U are not an IITian your son is one. According to you everything is going well but ask your ward about this too.
      Indian education system ranks 133 off 180 in the world making it one of the worse systems across the world. ( USA ranks 19 )
      I am going through this phase of preparation for JEE and can certainly say that this article is 90% relevant. Seat for an IIT comes with an expense of many other things which may eventually be more important in life rather than an IITian tag.

      • Please do whatever you believe is more important. But, do not scandalise important things just because you are not able to do it.

    • You are a lucky parent. Most parents have to force their children to study. In some cases parents even pack their wards off to Kota or Hyderabad for 3-4 years. I can understand IIT or NEET prep classes give the child an edge if the child is talented, or wants to aim for IIT or AIIMS. But if the child is an average learner in science/maths and does not enjoy it then the parent should withdraw the child from such pressure.

  16. Life at IIT is a mess. It’s not worth of the hard work we put in to get here. Once ypu reach IIT you have administration controlling and giving no freedom to the students. We are bombarded with so much work and here is such a pressurized environment, one can’t survive. Yes this is the life after wasting two good years of your life. You get a ratrace going in here, where everyone is following one or another, trying things they don’t even know they wnat to do, just that they get relevant skills to apply for certain internship or certain project. People in IIT have no life. Given now ONLINE SEMESTER, it killing the inside of everyone, everyone wants to be back in campus enjoy atleast being with friends to live thorugh this hell hole of IIT, but they can’t. Even after alp the sacrifices made by us, Undergraduates are not even checkwd once for what they want. I tink people who didn’t get into IITs should thank god that they are alive and can enjoy their life and are not rotting up here in a rat race for fake excellence.

  17. The madness to get into one of the iits is understandable but sadly reflects the systemic rot that has taken place in the name of education for all involved.
    The basic problem that has brought in this systemic rot is a callous and almost irreverent attitude towards what constitutes education and what it stands for. Right now what passes off in the name of education or rather what is packaged as education is an almost mindless ritual whose only purpose is a promise to get an attractive paycheck and hence secure the future.
    The very purpose of education should be an appreciation and an endeavour to understand and explore one’s chosen field of interest, where the only guiding light should be to enhance one’s faculty to the extent that one can not only enrich his understanding of the subject but also make meaningful contribution to the chosen field.
    All this gets lost in the mindless rush to grab a seat in some imagined premier institute which may not enhance one’s knowledge and abilities but may ensure a well paying job.
    What is dismaying is an almost comical mindset that a well paying job is a yardstick of knowledge and hence ability.
    True knowledge and hence ability can only be measured by how much a person is able to contribute meaningfully in the enhancement of his field of interest or activity. To put it simply how much a person can innovate or contribute in technological terms in his field of activity, determines a person’s knowledge and ability. But sadly, most people
    judge their ability by how much repetitive work they do seating in their office cubicle.
    Very recently, the IITs have adopted a policy where, if any student fails to complete his four years graduation in engineering, he will be awarded a three years bachelor in science degree. I was utterly dismayed, that how come a student of an IIT cannot complete his engineering graduation. Then what good is this mad rush for a seat in an IIT.
    This shows engineering education in India is a failure. When a field of knowledge like engineering is sought after for the only purpose of a well paid job, quality is bound to suffer.
    Now then what is the way out of this rot. One option may be to make engineering education two- tiered. Just like there is premedical training in medical sciences, similarly a three year diploma in engineering should be made mandatory for all engineering aspirants. For those students who are aspiring for an engineering job, a diploma in engineering is enough. Those students who want to get into a graduation course in engineering should be required to submit an original work in his branch of engineering to an autonomous commitee who will examine and approve it as original and of high quality. Only such students should be allowed to get into a graduation course in engineering.
    Many more such options may be explored and discussed. Only then can the engineering education in this country be improved.

    • Engineering education is fine in this country.

      It is just what an IIT aspirant wants to get out of it. If an aspirant is looking for quick riches or a great position then he/she is likely to run out of gas sooner than later. This IIT mania has been created by society and coaching institutes which have glorified the difficulty of the exam to countless average and below average school students. But if he/she is of above average intellect and genuinely interested in knowing how machines work and fixing them or improving them, he/she will be able to step on the gas pedal and do something worthwhile in his/her life.

    • Here we go again. Another condemnation of the haves by the have-nots. The article preaches intellectual communism of the clueless.
      The selective process in education in India has worked. After all, this is the only place where education is venerated through the image of a goddess. It has worked to transform a country spat out to be a primitive servant population by the British in 1947 into a leading tech savvy nation in 2021- better than most in the world and better than what the one-time masters have currently.
      It took institutions like the IIT to achieve such transformation. The Congress government has partially achieved the invalidation of an IIT degree by quadrupling their numbers. Still, the brand endures and survives.
      All the sweaty preparation to enter the IITs transform young minds for intellectual pursuits. To say otherwise is to spew hatred by the liberal left. Institutions like JNU and St. Stephens mold leftist guerrillas lining up for protests. These lightweights coming mostly from affluent families eventually wither away in life where as the IIT graduates survive and sustain in our increasingly technological world.
      The criticism comes from those who cannot get into IITs. Sort of sour grapes. Please go away and continue your protests. By the way, the chief of your dream land, Xi Jinping conducts an even tougher exam than JEE- the Gaokao. Please do some research. Chairman Xi will not help your cause since he wants to tell Chinese students what to do based on their test scores.

      • OMG how can you be so narrow minded? According to you everyone should experience each and everything before giving any opinion? Have you heard about learning by observation? Humans grow as a collective society no single person knows everything but everyone can have a opinion about everything. Anyhow ITTs are not everything a Phd in Physics or A Masters in CS is more credible then an ITTian. The issue is real and you can’t deny it.

      • To each his own! Evaluate your child’s competencies and then decide what he/she is cut out for. High IQ individuals please do make a bee-line for such ‘holier than thou’ institutions…by all means! Neither is the IIT the ‘be all and end all’ of things nor is it as hallowed as made out to be. We have a plethora of sound options where we can lead a balanced, cheerful and sane life! BTW, Corona doesn’t make any distinctions, does it? !

  18. We are paying price after prized IIT seat rather than for prized IIT seat. couldn’t pursue my hobbies fully because of online education

  19. I really don’t blame anyone for this. It’s just that parents(and all others) think that education is something used to become rich. And being rich is having a successful life. And yes, the definition of success changes from person to person. As of now, money can buy almost anything, be it friends( pseudo-friends to be precise), relatives, happiness, yeah kind of everything. We can’t blame them too. The next generation would be doing something similar (achieving everything they couldn’t get through their children). But it can also be the likes of children and sometimes not.
    But I do believe that the major issue we are facing is that, not getting equal opportunities, do you all really believe that a poor kid can really achieve something he wished for like that. The Government tries hard to get education free for all. But what about its quality? Our whole system(not just the education sector) is built in such a way that the poor remain in the slums forever (maybe there is an exception, like one in a million) and the rich get richer.

  20. This article is total misleading. What The Print expecting from this article? Do you want students too addict too useless social media and do useless videos.

    • You can’t say that it is totally misleading because there are many things that we also observe coaching institute and the environment in which the students are put a lot of mental pressure on then and at last they decide to give up or the students who are not able to give up due to family pressure choose to attempt suicide. Because they it is more easy then the pressure they get during the preparation. I am also an jee preparing student and I have also encountered such thing from last 1.5 years till 10th class I was a football player and play very well then the students of my age but from last 1.5 years I have not even seen the ground.

    • No the article just reminds you that you need all round development to lead a fuller, richer life and that just graduating from an IIT does not guarantee success. It does not mean that you waste time on social media or keep watching meaningless videos endlessly. Take up a sport, read books, develop a hobby or simply take time to think and let your mind develop. These are essential to growing up, building personality and overall becoming a better human being.

    • This article wants the students not get addicted to the useless education. Not that everything is useless, even the smallest things have a value in life, whether it be studying or time on social media.

    • Bro any addiction results from the feeling of .hopelessness whether it is an addiction to social media or any other thing. And a success rate of 0.1 seems pretty hopeless to me

  21. Indian education leads to the destruction of the childhood,social life,enjoyness,and the last and the most important thing is the creativity which is continuously destroying by this fucking indian education. I’m sorry for using this language but seriously they have made us a robo who can’t even think in the social issue.

  22. I’m a student at IIT Kanpur and I’m pretty sure we’re not socially awkward or anything what this article makes us out to be. If you wanna blame anyone blame the system ,i.e., the coaching institutes.

  23. I would say that studying hard doesn’t destroy childhood or deteriorate social lives in any way.And you just know how to show he negative side of something.Think positively.How proud would a child’s parents be when he/she clears JEE/NEET/IIT or any other great exam.Other csreer options are also nice but once you have a good degree,your future is safe.And the thing that you said about friends,instead of studying if i will play whole day with my friends then i will also end up as a simple graduate with no experience.It is not that you have to study whole day in a small room.If you concentrate and study just for 5-6 hours daily,you can easily crack the hardest exams in the world.All you need is intrest in the subject/topic which you are learning.And as far as it is about the childhood, you tell me what would someone acheive in their lives just by playing games and watching tv whole day?you have to sacrifice something small in order to achieve something greater.This is the rule of life.Nothing comes for free.Everything has a price to pay.If you study hard in your teenage,your future will be bright and your life will become more easier.If you spend your teenage playing games,making girlfriends,or getting involved into other useless things,then your entire future will be ruined and you will end up with a small job that is not permanent.Remember this.

    • You could spend your teens doing interesting things with your hands. Like building things and applying the science and maths you learnt in school and showcasing your work in science competitions. Or take an internship in a sales job during your vacations. That will teach you social skills and practical skills. Otherwise you are just cramming equations and formulas which will anyway be forgotten in the future.

      There is a saying – I hear and I forget, I see and I remember. I do and I understand.
      True learning is when knowledge is put into action.

  24. This is utter crap !! I am an IITian and know several hundred others. Most of us have a hobby and have not gone through what you have mentioned in the article.

    Journalists like you screw up the image of media. Sigh. There should be an IIT kind of screening for becoming journalists.

      • Yes only a few are endowed with ability, attitude and blessed with conducive atmosphere to join IITs. Parents or a student who aspires to be among IITs bandwagon will have to put super effort. All other issues are coincidental. If you don’t get a job or unable to earn after IIT graduation what’s IIT?

  25. I went through the same thing when i was preparing for neet in kota,i felt as if i was living on a different planet the institutions make u believe and think that these exams r the end of the world,a girl from my batch of 200 students committed suicide during the first month of our coaching, my parents didn’t give me a smart phone while i was living in kota so that i could focus better it helped but the routine there is so rigorous , tiring and frustrating its toxic for teens like us

    • Yes true,
      what after getting good score and getting admission in the IIT like institutes. Your entire further career is depend on the jugad… because we are living in the jugad country…. No relation, no selection…. whether you are bright students or whatever you are…….
      I don’t know what this education system want’s to make people’s ….

  26. Mixing things much?
    “This skill gap haunts them even when they graduate. Despite all the hard work engineering students put in, a survey conducted in 2019 found that 80 per cent of engineers “are not fit for any job in the knowledge economy and only 2.5 per cent of them possess technical skills in Artificial Intelligence (AI) that industry requires”.
    Repeat after me:
    IIT engineers aren a tiny subset of All Engineers.
    Soft Skills and hard skills aren’t same. [what article was supposed to be talking about).
    Engineering is not just coding.
    All coding is not AI.

    Simple, eh!

  27. Correct article .due to the parents force the children want to study with high burden .we have to change the parents sence and develop their thoughts

  28. As a student at IIT Bombay, I can completely agree upon this. I had to quit my hobby of playing the Keyboard after class 10th, as I started preparing for JEE.
    But even after so many sacrifices and studying for 12hrs+ every single day, all what we got is online classes with stress even more than that of during JEE days.
    Life of a JEE aspirant is tough. Whether it be while preparing for JEE or after getting selected at IIT. We still have to grind every single day to get an okayish grade. Online IIT is just like an extended JEE with more stress and competition (as you are competing with the best).
    Please don’t glorify IIT. It is nice, but doesn’t deserve the disappointment and depression of those 99% students who didn’t make it through.

    (And thanks for showing the real life of “Sharma Ji ka Beta”)

  29. One has a right to decide once own future – one can throw away their childhood for immediate happiness or struggle in childhood for a better future. Childhood is the foundation on which life is built. When you struggle for iit, AIIMS or something like that you may reach somewhere if not iit or aiims. Success in life depends on struggle.

  30. There is a toll to be paid for families, even the much older generation!
    I hear about grandparents staying with their grandchildren in Kota for the entire IIT JEE exam coaching of 2 years or more.
    Do any of these kids who get into IIT bother to acknowledge the sacrifices of their parents and grandparents after they graduate from IIT and go abroad?

  31. Rather than reading whole year without a PLAN, you should have a PLAN and then Learn to get a sense of accomplishment and motivation as student. LearnLite (learnlite.in) is first and only app which has PLAN and then Learn for JEE/NEET.

  32. Well.. they are far far better than the jehidis you promote and support who contribute nothing to the society. This stupid article was expected from jehadis like you

  33. Our governments past and present cannot adequately stimulate creation of new businesses and jobs for the millions born in this country. So they have created this competitive exam addiction to keep students minds busy. After cramming bookish knowledge for years , most students eventually find not many jobs exist in private sector where they can apply their learnt bookish skills. And then they start preparing for govt exams to get govt jobs…our society is truly in a rat race.

  34. Missed childhood compensates with better adult hood…
    Good girl, car, bank balance, luxury House, vacations trip… What else you need…

  35. Even in developed countries such a competitive exam does not exist. Teenagers in USA and Europe simply do not face this kind of pressure. Most of them enjoy their last year’s of schooling doing the normal things teenagers are expected to do.

    Any exam can only be a test of past knowledge.
    No exam can ensure the selected candidate can invent or discover something new. Our education (and society) should be actually be geared towards asking, exploring and probing skills and behaviour that lead to creation of new knowledge. No wonder new technologies, products or ideas in any field are not usually created in India.

  36. Trust me, NEET is no big deal. Of course, you need to store insane amount of information. But for JEE, you need the grey cells working!

  37. This is a known social problem. Nothing new that parents do not know. I suggest the Print should instead give us data and stories on those who made it into IIT but could not pass out of IIT. Also stories on IIT dropouts who went on to do well in life or career.

  38. If you don’t move to the first batch in a couple of months in a coaching institute, then you are not making it. It’s just that the parents do not or not willing to accept it. I’ve heard all kinds of things from parents waiting outside during the exams, like, ‘trying our luck’, ‘worked very hard’, ‘brilliant’ only to find from their wards returning from the exam that they are only expecting 10-20%. It’s their parents to be blamed for having forced them to study. You can’t blame the coaching institutes, for these are the students giving them money!

  39. A journalist writing about cracking IIT exams ??
    Dude/behenji you kindly focus on your writing. Don’t worry yourself with something as elite as IIT exams.

    And do you know something called making sacrifices to achieve something bigger in life. I’m sure no one forces anyone to get into these institutions. Its the person’s own aspirations, so they better fulfill it.

    And if they can’t, then let them not act like a cry baby. World is meant to be ruthless and tough, no space for papa ki pari…

    Do or go and die.

    • That is the point of journalism, shitskin, the writer has clearly asked opinions of many experts and wrote it down. Yet, Indians don’t accept reality, a backward country for backward people, eat your own crap, third worlder cunt, you will quiver at the feet of us due to how inferior your kind is.

  40. wp_die()
    I really appreciate the writer for this article.
    People just see if we got a seat in IIT or some medical college. If didn’t get a seat, they just consider us a loser.
    They don’t think that it’s not just a seat we have lost but, our teen age joys, health, valuable years etc.

    Hatsoff to this writer ?

  41. In my opinion,the parents should be made aware of all this.
    They realise much later in life that due to this pressure of cracking any kind of professional exam creates a big gap between the child n parents.
    Heading a school myself, I have always been vocal about it.
    Parents lose out on beautiful relationship with their children

  42. The survey you used to support your statement that 80% of IIT graduates are unprepared for the workplace is for all engineering graduates, not just IIT. Also, not every engineering graduate goes on to work in AI, so the 2.5% metric is meaningless as well. Overall I found the quality of this article to be very one-sided, and it reads more like someone trying to confirm their own worldview rather than examine the system critically.

  43. Students need to do some yoga for 15 mins and also have to carry out some house work such as cleaning home/ house/rooms/toilets regularly, washing their own clothes and also going in the nature sometimes.
    By doing this we get an extra energy to carry out extra work.
    Also it builds respect towards work and automatically personality get developed.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular