IIT-Delhi and Bombay, and IISc Bangalore, along with most of India’s higher education institutions slipped in the 2021 QS World University Rankings released Wednesday.
The crisis also puts DGCA’s vacancies in the eye of the storm. Naidu told the Rajya Sabha in July this year that 190 out of 410 DGCA vacancies would be filled this year.
Data shows re-alignment in India’s exports, with Tamil Nadu & Telangana posting strong growth in 2024-25 as traditional heavyweights Gujarat & Maharashtra see declines. Gujarat still leads, though.
Of the total package, $649 million will be utilised for additional hardware, software, and support services, and the remaining for Major Defence Equipment (MDE).
Don’t blame misfortune. This is colossal incompetence and insensitivity. So bad, heads would have rolled even in the old PSU-era Indian Airlines and Air India.
Why would anybody in their senses want to study in India’s IITs and IISc or any other Indian university when foreign students have better options in their own countries or elsewhere. None of India’s hallowed institutes have done anything worthwhile in their decades of existence. At best they select excellent manpower for supply to richer countries, at the cost of the Indian taxpayer. In the last so many decades not a single discovery, invention or creative idea has emerged from these institutions if eminence, where even academics are more interested in bureaucratese then any pioneering academic work.
Better salaries for faculty, high enough to attract some talented people from abroad. More students from SAARC countries, not necessarily to boost rankings, although that may be a welcome result, but as a conscious foreign policy choice. Our son’s tuition fee at IIM A was fifty thousand rupees per month, ten years ago, IITs may be comparable, so many should not be a constraint. This may well be a subjective assessment but my feeling is that IITs – especially the older ones – are very well regarded globally. Read today that 12% of people working on Artificial Intelligence in the US are from these institutions.
What is the ratings of Anil Ambani Institute of Aerospace
Why would anybody in their senses want to study in India’s IITs and IISc or any other Indian university when foreign students have better options in their own countries or elsewhere. None of India’s hallowed institutes have done anything worthwhile in their decades of existence. At best they select excellent manpower for supply to richer countries, at the cost of the Indian taxpayer. In the last so many decades not a single discovery, invention or creative idea has emerged from these institutions if eminence, where even academics are more interested in bureaucratese then any pioneering academic work.
Better salaries for faculty, high enough to attract some talented people from abroad. More students from SAARC countries, not necessarily to boost rankings, although that may be a welcome result, but as a conscious foreign policy choice. Our son’s tuition fee at IIM A was fifty thousand rupees per month, ten years ago, IITs may be comparable, so many should not be a constraint. This may well be a subjective assessment but my feeling is that IITs – especially the older ones – are very well regarded globally. Read today that 12% of people working on Artificial Intelligence in the US are from these institutions.