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Why has Pakistan failed in making its own version of the IITs?

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A Pakistani's candid report after visiting India's IITs
'Pakistan and India may be moving along divergent paths of development but their commonalities are becoming more accentuated.'
Pervez Hoodbhoy · Yesterday · 08:30 pm

Rarely are Pakistanis allowed to cross their eastern border. We are told that’s so because on the other side is the enemy. Visa restrictions ensure that only the slightest trickle of people flows in either direction. Hence ordinary academics like me rarely get to interact with their Indian counterparts. But an invitation to speak at the Hyderabad Literary Festival, and the fortuitous grant of a four-city non-police reporting visa, led to my 11-day 12-lecture marathon at Indian universities, colleges, and various public places. This unusual situation leads me here to share sundry observations.

At first blush, it seemed I hadn’t travelled far at all. My first public colloquium was delivered in Urdu at the Maulana Azad National Urdu University in Hyderabad. With most females in burqa, and most young men bearing beards, MANUU is more conservative in appearance than any Urdu university (there are several) on the Pakistani side. Established in 1998, it seeks to “promote and develop the Urdu language and to impart education and training in vocational and technical subjects”. Relative to its Pakistani counterparts, it is better endowed in terms of land, infrastructure and resources.

But there’s a still bigger difference: this university’s students are largely graduates of Indian madressahs while almost all university students in Pakistan come from secular schools. Thus, MANUU’s development of video “bridge courses” in Urdu must be considered as a significant effort to teach English and certain marketable skills to those with only religious training. I am not aware of any comparable programme in Pakistan. Shouldn’t we over here be asking how the surging output of Pakistani madressahs is to be handled? Why have we abandoned efforts to help those for whom secular schooling was never a choice?

To my embarrassment, I was unable to fulfil my host’s request to recommend good introductory textbooks in Urdu from Pakistan. But how could I? Such books don’t exist and probably never will. Although I give science lectures as often in Urdu as English, the books I use are only in English. Somehow Pakistan never summoned the necessary vigour for transplanting modern ideas into Urdu. The impetus for this has been lost forever. Urdu, as the language of Islam in undivided India, once had enormous political significance. Education in Urdu was demanded by the Muslim League as a reason for wanting Pakistan!

Modern face

A little down the road lies a different world. At the Indian Institute of Information Technology, the best and brightest of India’s young, selected after cut-throat competition, are engaged in a furious race to the top. IIIT-H boasts that its fresh graduates have recently been snapped up with fantastic Rs1.5 crore (Indian) salaries by corporate entities such as Google and Facebook.

This face of modern India is equally visible at the various Indian Institutes of Technology, whose numbers have exploded from four to 18. They are the showpieces of Indian higher education. I spoke at three ‒ Bombay, Gandhinagar, and Delhi ‒ and was not disappointed. But some Indian academics feel otherwise.

Engineering education at the IITs, says Prof Raghubir Sahran of IIT-GN, has remained “mainly mimetic of foreign models (like MIT) and captive to the demands of the market and corporate agendas”. My physicist friend, Prof Deshdeep Sahdev, agrees. He left IIT-K to start his own company that now competes with Hewlett Packard in making tunnelling electron microscopes and says IIT students are strongly drill-oriented, not innovative.

Still, even if the IITs are not top class, they are certainly good. Why has Pakistan failed in making its own version of the IITs? One essential condition is openness to the world of ideas. This mandates the physical presence of foreign visitors. Indeed, on Indian campuses one sees a large number of foreigners ‒ American, European, Japanese, and Chinese. They come for short visits as well as long stays, enriching universities and research centres.

Not so in Pakistan where foreigners are a rarity, to be regarded with suspicion. For example, at the National Centre for Physics, which is nominally a part of Quaid-i-Azam University but is actually ‘owned’ by the Strategic Plans Division (the custodian of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons), academic visitors are so tightly restricted that they seek to flee their jails soon after arrival. Those who came from Canada, Turkey and Iran to a recent conference at the NCP protested in writing and privately told us that they would never want to come back.

Tensions apparent

Tensions between secular and religious forces appear high in Modi’s India. Although an outsider cannot accurately judge the extent, I saw sparks fly when Nayantara Sahgal, the celebrated novelist who was the first of 35 Indian intellectuals to hand back their government awards, shared the stage with the governor of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. After she spoke on the threats to writers, the murder of three Indian rationalists, and the lynching of a Muslim man falsely accused of possessing beef, the enraged governor threw aside his prepared speech and excoriated her for siding with terrorists.

Hindutva ideology has put the ‘scientific temper’ of Nehruvian times under visible stress. My presentations on science and rationality sometimes resulted in a number of polite, but obviously unfriendly, comments from the audience. Legitimate cultural pride over path-breaking achievements of ancient Hindu scholars is being seamlessly mixed with pseudoscience. Shockingly, an invited paper at the recent Indian Science Congress claimed that Lord Shiva was the world’s greatest environmentalist. Another delegate blew on a ‘conch’ shell for a full two minutes because it would exercise the rectal muscles of Congress delegates!

Pakistan and India may be moving along divergent paths of development but their commonalities are becoming more accentuated as well. Engaging with the other is vital ‒ and certainly possible. Although I sometimes took unpopular political positions at no point did I, as a Pakistani, experience hostility. The mature response of both governments to the Pathankot attack gives hope that Pakistan and India might yet learn to live with each other as normal neighbours. This in spite of the awful reality that terrorism is here to stay.

This article was first published on Dawn.com.
 
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True education legend of Pakistan is Dr. Atta ur Rehman not Mr. Pervez Hoodabhoy. Dr. Atta ur Rehman drew up an excellent plan to energise education sector. He managed to convince world's leading technical universities to open their campuses in Pakistan in specially established education parks all across Pakistan. At the same time, any Pakistani student who could get admission in Ph.D in world's leading universities would be funded from UGC (University Grants Commission). Large number of Pakistani students benefitted from it and are still benefitting. Anyways, then came the Zardari gang. His government put the plan on hold and diverted already allocated funds to other stupid things. Nawaz Sharif did not go ahead either. Both parties joined forces against UGC after a series of revelations that many politicians were holding fake degrees. As a result, competent educationalist were removed from UGC and its funds were stopped. Ultimately its powers were also taken away. So here we are now. Higher education reforms were one of the best things Musharraf initiated but politicians torpedoed the effort.

One thing to remember is that Dr. Atta ur Rehman and Hoodabhoy had always been at odds with each other. Dr. Atta ur Rehman never let him come even close to policy decisions on education and for a good reason. Hoodabhoy is all talk and pursues personal glorification. He has never done anything practical to improve education systems. All he is good at is criticism to bring himself in good light. He sure writes well and speaks well but that's all he does. Don't get sold on his words.
 
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The author of this article is Pervez Hoodbhoy, a zealot secularist who has many times written against Pakistan's nuclear programs and our militarily institutions in the past of-course he will praise India in any field imaginable.

He is clearly promoting such propaganda even now when the Indians are funding TTP and killing our children.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1203511

https://www.princeton.edu/sgs/faculty-staff/zia-mian/Hoodbhoy-Mian-Changing-Nuclear-Thinking.pdf

https://www.facebook.com/DrPervezHoodbhoy/posts/298624516916408

 
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We will when our education sector is getting its proposed 5% share of the GDP. We need to invest in STREAM education.

We already had it planned and funds were made available too. It was grand plan but then came PPP. They stopped the entire plan in 2008. Funds were diverted to 'other stuff'!
 
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India doesn't gain too much from these IITs, top IITians don't stay and work in India....therefore, Pakistan is not losing much by not having such premier educational institutions..........
 
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Overall the country has not gained much yet. But the start-up scene is just starting to pick up. Many are founded by IITians. You are looking at the top percentile of over one billion, some very talented and ambitious people. Ditto for IIMs.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/646f7384-b623-11e5-b147-e5e5bba42e51.html#axzz3yHfV83oA
Top for career progress: IIMA
85c22cde-b9c0-11e5-bf7e-8a339b6f2164.img


Created just a decade ago, the one-year, full-time residential PGPX programme from the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad is ranked number one for the career progress of its alumni this year.

Widely regarded as the top business school in India, a reputation earned for its two-year pre-experience PGP programme, and ranked 15th in the world in the FT’s 2015 Masters in Management rankings, IIMA is also famous for its 100-acre campus and its teaching space designed by American architect Louis Kahn. The school, founded by local entrepreneurs with Harvard Business School, has followed the HBS lead and favours case-based teaching.
 
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University education in India is mostly relegated to providing degrees and nothing more. Vast majority of graduates learn job skills on the job for which the education seems ill prepared.
 
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At the same time, any Pakistani student who could get admission in Ph.D in world's leading universities would be funded from UGC (University Grants Commission).
That looks very good, will enable a lot of financially deprived students to pursue higher education.

Does it come with any quota /restrictions ? like once they complete the course they should serve the pakistan govt for these many years.
 
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India doesn't gain too much from these IITs, top IITians don't stay and work in India....therefore, Pakistan is not losing much by not having such premier educational institutions..........
That may be true for now. As more and more Indians go abroad and study at many world class institutions (after studying at IITs) they will achieve critical mass and start returning back. This has happened in China and is (and will) happening in India. A 'reverse brain-drain'.

When a country sends maybe a 0.01% of its graduates abroad they stay abroad. When it sends more and more like 10%-30% abroad a significant proportion of that starts coming back bringing back with them technology, skills and a better work ethos with them. I believe this will or is already happening with India. I personally know many many Indians that have chosen to go back to India. Sadly, not many Pakistanis here (University of Michigan) want to go back (there aren't many either). I would say this would come down to how many actually come abroad. If many more Pakistanis studied abroad as well and reached a 'critical mass' a reverse brain drain would also begin for Pakistan.

At UMich I see a 200 Indians for every Pakistani. And before you say their population is larger, its not 200 times ours. It is only 7 times as much. Even if 10 of the 200 Indians choose to go back they will have a huge impact.
 
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let me lay it out very clear, the one single problem because of which Pakistan is always in shit : political instability.
this continuous cat and mouse game of martial law and democracy really stunts institutional growth and development, which is why our higher education standards are not as good as India's (on average). give it maybe 10 more years, and after long lasting peace and stability we'll definitely get there.
also to the people criticizing and making personal attacks on Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy, can anyone tell me if he's wrong? any one point to counter his argument instead of baselessly bringing out his history which is entirely irrelevant to the topic at hand?
 
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I just think that Pakistanis are not hands-on enough. Their institutions dont give them rigorous practical training. When i had to hire a programmer recently. One candidate was from a very well reputed university and other was from punjab university. I thought one from the well reputed university was just very well trained. His education was practical. He was hands-on and could work very well. Punjab university student was not that well trained practically. I mean this is the state of education here.By only giving their students a decent practical training their reputation is enhanced manifolds. Theoretical brilliance is beyond vision as yet. Higher education needs to be brought up to mark practically, first. Much later the universities will be able to compete against each other theoretically like they do in the developed world.
 
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I believe NUST is pretty reputed, and have seen many Pakistanis is west from that university. The question should be, Pakistan failed to make aNY business institute in the leagues of IIM.
 
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That looks very good, will enable a lot of financially deprived students to pursue higher education.

Does it come with any quota /restrictions ? like once they complete the course they should serve the pakistan govt for these many years.

No quota. It was based on merit and recommendation from local universities where they earned their masters. Merit was based on tests by UGC to ensure these students would make it through in Ph.D programs (it isn't easy making it in Western Universities). Top of merit would go to best of Western Universities while the last ones to make it would enroll in local Ph.D programs. At the completion of Ph.D they have to serve 3 years in local university and/ or a research project. Depending on performance they were offered permanent jobs which they are free to decline. All Ph.Ds are entitled to an allowance from government. I think it's 10,000 or there about. Not much but still.

It has helped a lot of poor students I personally know of. It has actually created too many Ph.Ds which wasn't the original plan of Dr. Atta ur Rehman. He wanted two layers of education. Ph.Ds for high end theoretical work and masters in applied fields who would fulfil requirements of skilled industrial experts working in fields not labs. Unfortunately for us PPP won the elections! Revenge of democracy is truly ruthless!
 
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Pakistan failed to make aNY business institute in the leagues of IIM.
What is the "the thing" about IIM that pakistan doesnt have. I see IIM and IIT's as relics of past. In earlier days when India was a closed economy with scarce resources it made some sense. But even then most of the ppl ended up overseas. Now the economy is open and so should the education.
 
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