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A degree to die for: Of the 2 lakh aspirants for IIT admission, only 5% will sail through

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A degree to die for: Of the 2 lakh aspirants for IIT admission, only 5% will sail through

By Vanita Srivastava

The streets of Kota have only one story to sell: the IIT dream. The entire city, in Rajasthan, roughly 250 km south of the state capital Jaipur, is dotted with hoardings of coaching institutes, competing with each other by splashing the photos of young, cheerful boys and girls who have made it to the IITs, along with their fancy scores. Some billboards even promise to "tap them young" — start IIT coaching from Class VI.

But camouflaged behind these huge, colourful posters is a story of a less cheery kind. Be it the vegetable seller or the fruit vendor on the streets, the mention of IIT is enough to bring a gleam to their eye. Even a housemaid of this city has an IIT aspiration for her kid.

Inevitably, many of those dreams turn out to be empty ones, and it is around these extreme emotions that the city is knitted — hope that can quickly descend into frustration. In the meanwhile, housewives have gone on to become entrepreneurs, opening hostels and messes for students who have arrived in the city to be coached. Parents have sold their ancestral properties and shifted base to Kota just to give the "right" environment for their children preparing for IIT; in some cases, families are dislocated as mothers choose to accompany the children in their training endeavours. Students from Class VI have started attending coaching institutes to get a "preliminary" taste of the exam.

Kota has a population of around 12 lakh; this includes nearly 1.5 lakh students who come here for coaching.

The Big Pressure After two years of self-exile, intense sacrifice, no social life and zero entertainment, the results are mixed. A few students walk out accomplished. But a large number of them are left disenchanted and drained.

Recently, an IIT aspirant, who was studying in a coaching institute in Kota, committed suicide. It was after the Joint Entrance Examination ( JEE) Mains held in early April, a filter for the big one, JEE Advanced, which will be held on May 22.

untitled-1.jpg

Student suicides aren't unusual in Kota; there were 17 in 2015 and four till date this year.

Ravikumar Surpur, district collector of Kota, has in the recent past made several interventions to ease the pressure in the system. Through regular advice to coaching institutes, notes to children and, more recently, through a five-page letter to parents, he has spelt out the need to reduce stress and to look at life in a broader perspective.

"It is a matter of fact that today young children are facing immense amount of pressure relating to their academic performance and... many of them go through various levels of stress," Surpur wrote in his letter to the parents.

Towards the end of last year, the district administration asked the coaching institutes to introduce career and psychological counsellors, mandatory weekly holidays, easy exit options and a series of helplines. They were also asked to introduce recreational activities, yoga and meditation sessions.

Geetanjali Kumar, a Delhi-based counselling psychologist, recently got a call on her helpline from a girl studying in Kota. "She shared with me the pressure on her when she went home and mingled with her community. They would ask her: 'Aur engineer saheb, kaise ho?' Never mind that she had only just started preparing for the exam. Can one imagine the state of mind of that girl? How frustrating it must be to live under such extreme pressure," says Kumar.

She cites another case of a father who called her up and said that his son had distanced himself just because he had refused to send him to a coaching institute. In most cases, however, the pressure comes from parental expectations. "Why should we live with the notion that only those who study science are academically brilliant? Parents should help the child explore his or her interest. They will then stand a better chance of being successful," says Kumar.

Brand IIT Pramod Maheshwari, director at Career Point, a popular coaching institute in Kota, reckons that it is incorrect to attribute student suicides to pressure. "I agree there is parental and peer pressure, but how can you avoid it? Pressure is a vital ingredient of growth. But more than that I feel kids are not exposed properly to different career options. For most, engineering or medicine is an end in itself. Time has come when they should take a peek outside this world."

Kota may be the epicentre of IIT coaching, but the stress on students is building up across the cities in the country.

RL Trikha, director of the Forum for Indian Institute of Technology and Joint Entrance Examination (FIIT JEE), a coaching institute, points out that these days any prestigious competitive examination like the JEE is more of an invitation to rejection rather than selection.

untitled-1.jpg

"The number of aspirants is far higher than the number of openings/seats available. Even one mark can make a difference. IITs are institutions having international recognition but this cannot be the final destination for everyone," says Trikha.

He says that it is imperative that students and parents set — and reset — their goals in an honest and transparent manner. "They are advised to relook their goals as the preparation progresses, based on performance."


He says that it is imperative that students and parents set — and reset — their goals in an honest and transparent manner. "They are advised to relook their goals as the preparation progresses, based on performance."

Sanjiva Dayal, who runs a coaching institute in Kanpur, says, at the end of the day, it is the survival of the mentally fittest. "I was selected for IIT in my first attempt and without any coaching. I never found the stress to be unbearable. Excellence cannot be achieved without stressful training. Those who lack calibre and passion find the stress unbearable and the IIT system cannot be blamed for that," he says.

Beat the Stress Soumya Sharma speaks fluent German, loves to play the keyboards and is an avid chess player. These days the 18-yearold is devoting a minimum of seven hours a day for the JEE Advanced. "More than the number of hours, being consistent is important for JEE. I take frequent breaks after practice sessions and am quite relaxed," says Sharma, who lives in Delhi.

After scoring 325/360 in the JEE (Mains) this year, Sharma has some pearls of advice for those contemplating a similar path. "You have to like the subject, be passionate about it, to crack the exam. I do not mean that those who do not like the subject don't succeed but the chances are slimmer." In fact, Sharma contends that the eagerness to write the exam will determine the level of stress. "If it is a personal, self-motivated choice, the stress will be less. But if you are writing the exam because of parental or peer pressure, it is bound to be more."

Sixteen-year-old Puru Mathur, an IIT aspirant in Kota, has already decided that if he is not selected this time he will spend one more year preparing for it. "My JEE (Mains) marks were a little below my expectations but I am sure that with a little more effort, I will do better next year."

Acknowledging that parental pressure should be checked, he says: "In my case, there has been no such pressure. Parents should know whether their child is oriented towards IIT or not. Blindly following what others are doing is unjustified."

Mathur feels that children should not neglect their school boards for the IIT exam. "There has to be a balance between the two. An extreme tilt towards any exam can be frustrating and depressing. There should be a system where one-year preparation in Class 12 should be enough." Stress, he says, is a natural offshoot of intense and focused preparations. "It is, therefore, essential to indulge in something that you like. I like to play the guitar and sing songs — this helps me relax."

Not the End of the World Abha Srivastava has had a flavour of Kota for more than four years — first with her elder son and now with the younger one. "It is like a self-imposed sanyas. The first time I was alone; this time my husband is with me so life is relatively easier. Both my kids were self-motivated and there was no pressure from our side. But I have seen how parents push their kids without actually analysing their capacity."

The child's mind, she explains, is fragile at this age. "A system has to be gradually evolved where cracking the exam is not linked to coaching alone. There has to be a fine balance."

Ashok Rathore, an engineer, got a posting in Kota four years back. "It was a golden opportunity" to fulfil his daughter's desire of entering an IIT, he says. Rathore insists that it is his daughter's "dream, and we have always supported her. The child has to be self-motivated. Parental pressure of any kind will not help".

So what happens if his daughter doesn't make it? "IIT is a dream, not a final destination," says Rathore. "Parents also need to explain that IIT is not the end. There are so many who have been successful despite not having an engineering degree from IIT."

As the countdown begins for the big exam, Puru Mathur picks up his music system, clears his vocal chords and belts out All izz well.... from Aamir Khan's movie 3 Idiots. His friends join in.

Life is much more than the three-letter word, grins Mathur.

(The writer is a Delhi-based freelance journalist)
 
After reading many suicide notes, Kota District Collector writes a moving letter to the parents of IIT aspirants

In his letter dedicated to all the parents of IIT aspirants, Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur has made an emotional appeal by asking them "not to force their expectations and dreams on their children."

"Let them do what they want and are able to do."

Following the tragic death of a 17-year-old IIT aspirant who committed suicide a day after clearing her exam, the Kota District Collector has written an emotional letter to parents of over 1.5 lakh students who are studying in coaching institutes, asking them not to force their expectations on children.

Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur wrote the five-page letter, which has been translated into Hindi and several other regional languages and is being forwarded to the parents and to the coaching institutes in the city as well. Talking about the suicides by young students--at least 56 students enrolled in Kota coaching centres have killed themselves in the last five years--he requests parents to let children follow their heart.


Apart from encouraging parents to let their child pursue their own dreams, the district administration has also decided to seek feedback on the stress levels of students in various institutes to check for signs of anxiety among them.

Here is the full letter.

Dear Parents,

On behalf of Kota City, I take this opportunity to welcome your child to a city of wonders which processes the young minds of this country and fuels their passion to become the architects of Modern India.

My humble request at the beginning of this letter is to read this with some patience and time and it would be ideal if both the parents can read this together.

It is the dream of every parent to see his child touch the pinnacles of success and reach places which only few can afford. Every parent plants a seed in the mind of the child which over a period of time bears fruits but after careful nourishment and tendering since the seed is so tender that any mishandling may fail us from realizing our dream.

It is a very difficult situation for parents to leave their child in a place where they do not live and things become still difficult when the purpose for which the child is left behind is for dedicated and committed efforts in scaling excellence in education.

When parents look at the huge billboard signage/hoarding/ newspaper clips depicting pictures of young beautiful children who have achieved what they dream for their child, the resolution to inspire and motivate their children becomes still stronger.

Good career in the field of Engineering & Medicine, as the case may be, is more or less like certain insurance in terms of decent earning and living standards. I sincerely think that in most of the cases, this is the very reason that makes us dream such careers for our children.

There is nothing wrong in thinking on a certain kind of Assured Career Insurance for one's child since limited resources and high degree of competition demands one to think ahead of times.

However, I think we all agree that the world too has changed drastically in the last 15-20 years so much so, that most of the facilities and services that were available for a limited few are now available to many due to the huge progress in technology which was witnessed in this period.

Art, Entertainment, Professional Sports, Literature, Health & Fitness, Entrepreneurship, Journalism, Photography, Event management, Music, Adventure, Destination tourism, etc, to name a few too witnessed immense growth in comparison to the bygone era.

Many of these even created a new niche which not just nurtured creative potential of the human mind and its capabilities but also were very successful career options.

Well, the point is not about asking you to see them as better options but certainly to see them also as options.

It is a matter of fact that today, young children are facing immense amount of pressure relating to their academic performance and due to the same many of them go through various levels of stress.

Even if we consider that a certain element of stress would exist in competition parental support, care and the right kind of family situations would help the child to cope with any difficult situation.

However, current reality is that due to the lack of right kind of conditions and support systems, many children are going through stress uncared and unattended for and in a few cases such situations disabled the children to such an extreme extent that they committed suicide...

Don't get frightened suddenly as to what is being said about your child... Your child is perfectly safe and sound and you have no reasons to worry, but you have reasons to have concern of your child which I believe you will understand as we read my letter further.

I consider myself a very unfortunate person because I got a chance to read around 20-25 Suicide Notes of Young, Brilliant, Beautiful and Wonderful Children.

Am I giving so many adjectives to such children because they committed Suicide?

I am sorry. Answer is No... They were in fact, as I said earlier, Young, Brilliant, Beautiful and Wonderful Children.

A Girl with an amazing command of English language in her suicide note (grammatically perfect 5-page Suicide Note with beautiful running handwriting) thanks her mother for giving up her career for raising the children... Subtle hint that she was pricked on this matter again and again.

Another girl wants her grandmother to become her mother in her next birth. Another requests her parents to allow her younger sister to do what she likes and not what they like. One tells candidly that he was manipulated to study science which was not his taste. Many simply write in fewer lines that they could not fulfil the expectations of their parents. Rather few say they were not really capable of doing what is being asked for by them.

All of them thought that Death was a much peaceful and effortless action than going through this dilemma of artificially doing what parents want them to do.

As they say "Tip of the Iceberg" reveals little and hides mountains within, similarly apparent Suicide Cases reflect numbers but reality or the hidden mountain is all those children who did not opt to take this extreme step but certainly are going through stress/worry/anxiety due to pressure on performance.

Many Parents cannot believe after the disaster that it was their own child who took such a drastic measure and I don't mean to hurt their sentiments any further but the reality is that the child was mentally looking for some blade of grass which a drowning man searches for. That blade of grass could have been your simple appreciation of his efforts... your solacing words of comforts of asking him to do his best and forget the results your absolute unconditioned appreciation of his extraordinariness.

In return, what the child got was threats of performing still better...psychological manipulation by repeat and re-telecasting of the hardships you have gone through for the sake of family. comparison with better performers (neighbors, relatives, children of colleague, ancestors...could be anyone) sharing imagination on the loss/notional gain of social status being dependent on child' s performance.

We need to understand that statistically speaking not many children commit suicide in comparison to the total number of children coping with such academic pressure if we analyze the numbers but life analysis tells us that their hopes and dreams are overlooked and hurt many a times. So it is high time we pause and contemplate a bit. I need to take a pause here since I hear many of you saying kids do not like many things which are good for them. So the question I tend to hear from you is... Should parents go children’s immature ways? Not necessarily.

Well let us try to see what all good things they resisted... Eating right, sleeping right, talking right, behaving right, seeing right, listening right, reading right etc.

Child actually observes parents and never follows anything blindly. Moreover, there is one thing which is certain... Child analyses and looks at the parents to see whether in case any of those things preached are followed by parents to begin with and if so..Whether their parents are really loving, joyful, peaceful and happy by doing so.

They tend to pick up only those habits of their parents that make them happy and peaceful...In case you have seriously messed up situations, your child may even not like you.

It may appear strange and extremely annoying... But there is a possibility of your child not liking you... This comes in many forms and shades. Absolute dislike, not liking few traits of yours, not liking you by comparing you with someone better, not liking you for your over protective care and concern which you may think as love but is suffocating for the child, not liking you for your double standards (we may have...) etc.

So, is it the objective of this letter to make you realise that your child dislikes you?

Answer again is a big No.. Your child does not dislike you... I am just making a point that unconsciously we may have created such a situation, which we need to undo...

Children are parents' responsibility and we are no one to teach a parent their responsibility nor do we intend to do so... Parents really think good for their children's future but the point I need to make is that your dreams are always limited to your experience of what is good... what is successful... what is the best thing... Well, the truth is your child may surpass your imagination and reach places which you never even dreamed of...

We all come from different segments of the society in terms of social & economic status, culture, religion, belief systems etc. However as far the natural principle of upbringing a child is concerned they remain the same everywhere.

I am not an expert in Parenting nor have many credentials in "Right Child Care Practices" and I fully understand that different kind of children need different kind of interventions yet I would request you to divert little attention to these fundamental aspects relating to child management.

Creating the right kind of atmosphere for the child to grow and flower in home by making home a really happy, loving and peaceful place to live.
Understanding the needs of the children. There are two extremes in this case...Making the child go through terrible hardships to realise "Your" dreams is one end and the other end is over-pampered care... Both of them definitely do not work.

Take time to switch from teaching mode to learning mode from the child since children show you the way to be really happy and peaceful at times...Instead of learning form them we tend to always assume the role of teacher/preacher.

Allow the child "to be" on his own terms and here I mean especially the child's engagement with nature and world around and empower them with the right kind of communication skills which are more accommodative. Interaction with the other gender due to their coming of age is not an aberration but a normal process, which you can keep a note on but not try to prevent it totally.

Spend time with children without complaining of your office, life situation, problems, hardships all the time…. It may be really too late before you want to spend and there is no more time available with the child. Why? Because we may have made him just like ourselves in an effort to tutor him. We certainly are not the benchmark for the child. Many a times, we may be regressive rudimentary types in comparison to the ability of the child.

Just a final thought. Are we interested in making the child realise "Your Dreams" at any cost or should it be like creating such situations that the child realises "His/Her" Dreams?

I could have simply attended a Parents Counselling Session during admission and spoken on these issues but usually it so happens that in such gatherings we are conditioned and influenced more by impression of the person sitting next to you or people who think different.

Nothing wrong in disagreeing but it is best to disagree on own terms instead of getting influenced by others. Finally, I would like to tender my unconditional apology for taking your time and telling you things about Child Management in which I am no expert and my words in this letter have been gathered by my limited experience in Kota dealing with similar cases and certainly there are great men who have inspired me to put my thoughts before you.

Be the Best Parent in the World!!!!
I am sure there is no competition there

Yours Sincerely,
Dr Ravi Kumar
District Collector, Kota
 
A degree to die for: Of the 2 lakh aspirants for IIT admission, only 5% will sail through

By Vanita Srivastava

The streets of Kota have only one story to sell: the IIT dream. The entire city, in Rajasthan, roughly 250 km south of the state capital Jaipur, is dotted with hoardings of coaching institutes, competing with each other by splashing the photos of young, cheerful boys and girls who have made it to the IITs, along with their fancy scores. Some billboards even promise to "tap them young" — start IIT coaching from Class VI.

But camouflaged behind these huge, colourful posters is a story of a less cheery kind. Be it the vegetable seller or the fruit vendor on the streets, the mention of IIT is enough to bring a gleam to their eye. Even a housemaid of this city has an IIT aspiration for her kid.

Inevitably, many of those dreams turn out to be empty ones, and it is around these extreme emotions that the city is knitted — hope that can quickly descend into frustration. In the meanwhile, housewives have gone on to become entrepreneurs, opening hostels and messes for students who have arrived in the city to be coached. Parents have sold their ancestral properties and shifted base to Kota just to give the "right" environment for their children preparing for IIT; in some cases, families are dislocated as mothers choose to accompany the children in their training endeavours. Students from Class VI have started attending coaching institutes to get a "preliminary" taste of the exam.

Kota has a population of around 12 lakh; this includes nearly 1.5 lakh students who come here for coaching.

The Big Pressure After two years of self-exile, intense sacrifice, no social life and zero entertainment, the results are mixed. A few students walk out accomplished. But a large number of them are left disenchanted and drained.

Recently, an IIT aspirant, who was studying in a coaching institute in Kota, committed suicide. It was after the Joint Entrance Examination ( JEE) Mains held in early April, a filter for the big one, JEE Advanced, which will be held on May 22.

untitled-1.jpg

Student suicides aren't unusual in Kota; there were 17 in 2015 and four till date this year.

Ravikumar Surpur, district collector of Kota, has in the recent past made several interventions to ease the pressure in the system. Through regular advice to coaching institutes, notes to children and, more recently, through a five-page letter to parents, he has spelt out the need to reduce stress and to look at life in a broader perspective.

"It is a matter of fact that today young children are facing immense amount of pressure relating to their academic performance and... many of them go through various levels of stress," Surpur wrote in his letter to the parents.

Towards the end of last year, the district administration asked the coaching institutes to introduce career and psychological counsellors, mandatory weekly holidays, easy exit options and a series of helplines. They were also asked to introduce recreational activities, yoga and meditation sessions.

Geetanjali Kumar, a Delhi-based counselling psychologist, recently got a call on her helpline from a girl studying in Kota. "She shared with me the pressure on her when she went home and mingled with her community. They would ask her: 'Aur engineer saheb, kaise ho?' Never mind that she had only just started preparing for the exam. Can one imagine the state of mind of that girl? How frustrating it must be to live under such extreme pressure," says Kumar.

She cites another case of a father who called her up and said that his son had distanced himself just because he had refused to send him to a coaching institute. In most cases, however, the pressure comes from parental expectations. "Why should we live with the notion that only those who study science are academically brilliant? Parents should help the child explore his or her interest. They will then stand a better chance of being successful," says Kumar.

Brand IIT Pramod Maheshwari, director at Career Point, a popular coaching institute in Kota, reckons that it is incorrect to attribute student suicides to pressure. "I agree there is parental and peer pressure, but how can you avoid it? Pressure is a vital ingredient of growth. But more than that I feel kids are not exposed properly to different career options. For most, engineering or medicine is an end in itself. Time has come when they should take a peek outside this world."

Kota may be the epicentre of IIT coaching, but the stress on students is building up across the cities in the country.

RL Trikha, director of the Forum for Indian Institute of Technology and Joint Entrance Examination (FIIT JEE), a coaching institute, points out that these days any prestigious competitive examination like the JEE is more of an invitation to rejection rather than selection.

untitled-1.jpg

"The number of aspirants is far higher than the number of openings/seats available. Even one mark can make a difference. IITs are institutions having international recognition but this cannot be the final destination for everyone," says Trikha.

He says that it is imperative that students and parents set — and reset — their goals in an honest and transparent manner. "They are advised to relook their goals as the preparation progresses, based on performance."


He says that it is imperative that students and parents set — and reset — their goals in an honest and transparent manner. "They are advised to relook their goals as the preparation progresses, based on performance."

Sanjiva Dayal, who runs a coaching institute in Kanpur, says, at the end of the day, it is the survival of the mentally fittest. "I was selected for IIT in my first attempt and without any coaching. I never found the stress to be unbearable. Excellence cannot be achieved without stressful training. Those who lack calibre and passion find the stress unbearable and the IIT system cannot be blamed for that," he says.

Beat the Stress Soumya Sharma speaks fluent German, loves to play the keyboards and is an avid chess player. These days the 18-yearold is devoting a minimum of seven hours a day for the JEE Advanced. "More than the number of hours, being consistent is important for JEE. I take frequent breaks after practice sessions and am quite relaxed," says Sharma, who lives in Delhi.

After scoring 325/360 in the JEE (Mains) this year, Sharma has some pearls of advice for those contemplating a similar path. "You have to like the subject, be passionate about it, to crack the exam. I do not mean that those who do not like the subject don't succeed but the chances are slimmer." In fact, Sharma contends that the eagerness to write the exam will determine the level of stress. "If it is a personal, self-motivated choice, the stress will be less. But if you are writing the exam because of parental or peer pressure, it is bound to be more."

Sixteen-year-old Puru Mathur, an IIT aspirant in Kota, has already decided that if he is not selected this time he will spend one more year preparing for it. "My JEE (Mains) marks were a little below my expectations but I am sure that with a little more effort, I will do better next year."

Acknowledging that parental pressure should be checked, he says: "In my case, there has been no such pressure. Parents should know whether their child is oriented towards IIT or not. Blindly following what others are doing is unjustified."

Mathur feels that children should not neglect their school boards for the IIT exam. "There has to be a balance between the two. An extreme tilt towards any exam can be frustrating and depressing. There should be a system where one-year preparation in Class 12 should be enough." Stress, he says, is a natural offshoot of intense and focused preparations. "It is, therefore, essential to indulge in something that you like. I like to play the guitar and sing songs — this helps me relax."

Not the End of the World Abha Srivastava has had a flavour of Kota for more than four years — first with her elder son and now with the younger one. "It is like a self-imposed sanyas. The first time I was alone; this time my husband is with me so life is relatively easier. Both my kids were self-motivated and there was no pressure from our side. But I have seen how parents push their kids without actually analysing their capacity."

The child's mind, she explains, is fragile at this age. "A system has to be gradually evolved where cracking the exam is not linked to coaching alone. There has to be a fine balance."

Ashok Rathore, an engineer, got a posting in Kota four years back. "It was a golden opportunity" to fulfil his daughter's desire of entering an IIT, he says. Rathore insists that it is his daughter's "dream, and we have always supported her. The child has to be self-motivated. Parental pressure of any kind will not help".

So what happens if his daughter doesn't make it? "IIT is a dream, not a final destination," says Rathore. "Parents also need to explain that IIT is not the end. There are so many who have been successful despite not having an engineering degree from IIT."

As the countdown begins for the big exam, Puru Mathur picks up his music system, clears his vocal chords and belts out All izz well.... from Aamir Khan's movie 3 Idiots. His friends join in.

Life is much more than the three-letter word, grins Mathur.

(The writer is a Delhi-based freelance journalist)

There are a lot of suicides every year in almost all IITs.
 
Modi would not roll out many such IITs the way China has.
But will write off huge loans to his cronies a la Ambani & Adanis.

Farmers & students are always at receiving ends in India.

This man has only single goal - To enrich Gujarat & its people.
 
Modi would not roll out many such IITs the way China has.
But will write off huge loans to his cronies a la Ambani & Adanis.

Farmers & students are always at receiving ends in India.

This man has only single goal - To enrich Gujarat & its people.

I lost my faith in IITs after seeing Kejriwal. Please stay on the topic, we have a thread for political discussions.
 
I lost my faith in IITs after seeing Kejriwal.

Many IIT ians go into Management and Civil services
That is those who stay in India

And we already know those who go abroad

We have only One Kejriwal --At least he is from IIT
unlike Rahul Gandhi who has not done anything so far
 
kudos to the good collector, it should be read by all Indian parents....
 
No doubt that the entrance tests for the IITs are one of the toughest competitive exams of the world and being an IITans is the dream of many young aspiring Indians.
 
No doubt that the entrance tests for the IITs are one of the toughest competitive exams of the world and being an IITans is the dream of many young aspiring Indians.
what is the point of it, it just produces some engineers and managers... its sad that its like a blackhole that attracts talents from every place in India and makes managers out of them.. think of brilliant painters, poets, singers, dancers, artists, architects, scientists we lost to IITs... its success is also a big problem for India.
 
what is the point of it, it just produces some engineers and managers... its sad that its like a blackhole that attracts talents from every place in India and makes managers out of them.. think of brilliant painters, poets, singers, dancers, artists, architects, scientists we lost to IITs... its success is also a big problem for India.
Nobody forces anyone to get into IITs and even if they do only those who have the capacity to clear the entrance tests gets a chance to be their. Only those who wish to become a manager takes the exams for the B schools afterwards.
The real problem starts with the way of teaching in these institutions. The general idea here is to learn what the world already knows and then use it to clear the semisters and increase your GPAs. The students with new ideas or those who wish to create something new doesn't have much opportunities here.
 

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