Samaja Ad for admission to self financing courses at Khallikote College
November 21st, 2007
November 21st, 2007
Following is an excerpt from the PIB http://pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=32947.
The Ambedkar National Merit Scholarship is given to three students scoring highest marks in the regular Class X-level-examination conducted by the State Education Board/All India Board. Students securing highest, second highest and third highest marks are given Rs. 60,000/-, Rs. 50,000/- and Rs. 40,000/- respectively. Girl student securing highest marks in case she is not in the above three categories, is given a cash award of Rs. 40,000/-. The scheme provides for separate provisions both for scheduled castes and scheduled tribes.
7 comments November 21st, 2007
Following is from an old PIB from 2003.
Despite India’s "political triumph of democracy", deprived sections of the society continue to remain marginalised. One of the major reasons has been wide spread illiteracy among these sections. Literacy is an important indicator of human development index. The literacy rate for Scheduled Castes (SC) in 1991 was 37.4 per cent as compared to 57.7 per cent for others. Expressing concern over the plight of those living on the fringes of social spectrum, the Prime Minister, Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee said, "Independence is incomplete without social justice". It may not be out of place to mention that these marginalised sections constitute a sizable portion of our population. According to the 1991 census, the Scheduled Castes comprise 16.73 per cent. The Other Backward Castes (OBCs) constitute 52 per cent and the Minorities 18 per cent of the country’s total population.
Dr.Bhim Rao Ambedkar believed that education is everybody’s birthright and should be available to the poorest of the poor. Education is the stepping stone towards social, economic and political empowerment. In pursuance of this, the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment has accorded top priority to radical improvement in literacy rates among the weaker sections. It has taken several major initiatives during the last five years in this direction. Lauding these efforts the Prime Minister said at the National Convention of Minorities , "It is good that you are focusing on education. Education is an investment for development, for progress and for a better future".
Towards Self-Reliance
To meet the emerging challenges, the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment has embarked upon schemes to promote merit among the SC/ST students right from the beginning. One of them is the Dr. Ambedkar National Merit Scholarship Scheme for the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe students launched early this year to encourage merit and excellence among them from the school level. Under this scheme more then Rs.1.25 crore would be distributed as scholarship to 458 Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe students having secured highest marks in 26 Education Boards/ Councils in the country each year. The Social Justice & Empowerment Minister, Dr. Satyanarayan Jatiya, described it as a historic initiative for generating self-confidence and self-reliance among SC/ST students.
The other scheme provides for upgradation of Merit of SC/ST students through cent per cent Central Assistance to the States/UTs for arranging remedial and special coaching for Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe students studying in class IX to XII. While remedial coaching aims at removing deficiencies in school subjects, special coaching is provided with a view to preparing students for competitive examinations for entry into professional courses like engineering and medical.
To enable them to pursue higher studies abroad, the National Overseas Scholarship Scheme to seventeen meritorious SC and ST students has also been improved. The rate of maintenance allowance has been enhanced to US $ 7,700 per annum or Pound Sterling 5,000 per annum per candidate. The scheme also provides for US $ 500 per annum for meeting various contingency expenses besides air passage, visa fee, equipment allowance and incidental expenses charged by the institution and insurance premium.
Many students belonging to the weaker sections find it difficult to compete for entry into institutions of higher learning or for employment. Consequently, the reserved quotas for them in technical and professional courses remain under-utilized. Therefore, NGOs, universities and institutions of repute are provided 90 per cent central assistance in running coaching and allied assistance programmes to prepare such students for competitive examinations.
Initiative
For their higher education, the Central Government is running a post-matric scholarship scheme for the SC students. They are also provided financial assistance. The amount varies from Rs. 90 to Rs. 425 per month for pursuing studies beyond matriculation in recognised institutions. There are other incentives also like reimbursement of compulsory non-refundable fees and study tour charges. The coverage under this scheme has grown at a much faster rate than that of the growth rate in the SC population. More than 93 per cent of SC students in the country are now covered under this scheme. An estimated number of over 46 lakh students have benefited from this scheme since 1999-2000.
The Central assistance under the scheme is normally provided to State /UT governments on 50:50 basis over and above the committed liability. The annual committed liability of the States during the Ninth Plan under the scheme was Rs. 231 crore. It would be Rs.390 crore per annum during the Tenth Plan as per existing pattern. The Centre is actively considering to revise the rates of maintenance allowance and other norms of the Scheme in view of the rising cost of books, school fees and food.
Yet another scholarship scheme at the pre-matric level has become popular with the children of the families engaged in occupations like scavenging and leather tanning. The number of beneficiaries increased by nearly 42 per cent during the first three years of the Ninth Plan.
The implementation of the scheme of hostels for SC boys and girls has been stepped up since 1998-1999. During the last 4 years 285 hostels were sanctioned for the boys and 183 for girls. These hostels are meant to enable the SC students pursue their studies in a congenial atmosphere. To encourage mixing among students, these hostels are allowed to accommodate non-SC students upto 10 per cent.
Two new schemes are on the anvil to boost quality education among the Scheduled Castes. These include provision of assistance to the SC students for pursuing studies in residential public schools. Under it meritorious students with family incomes of less than Rs. 1 lakh per annum would be financially assisted in getting quality education. The assistance would help them in fully meeting boarding, lodging fees and cost of study material charged by the management. It would be subject to a ceiling of Rs. 80 thousand per annum per student from Class VI to XII.
Another scheme in the pipeline envisages setting up of residential schools for SC/ST students studying between Class VI and XII. One residential school would be set up in districts where the literacy rate of the SCs is much lower than the general category. Such residential schools numbering 125 would be set up in the country with the establishment of 25 schools in each year under the Tenth Plan. The enrollment target in these schools stipulates admission to at least 30 per cent SC/ST girl students and 3 per cent disabled SC/ST students.
Yet another scheme on the anvil is to provide Bridge Education for Children living in city slum or street children. Under the scheme children between the age group of 6-10 years would be provided educational material and nutrition in the shape of one glass of milk and 2 biscuits per child per day.
Schemes for Disabled
There are about 10 million children with disabilities in the country according to the National Sample Survey Organisation Report, 1991. Reportedly being considered less productive even by their own families, they often require special learning aids and financial support besides encouragement from the scommunity to get proper education.
The Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment has started the Scheme of National Scholarship for Persons with Disabilities since the last financial year. The objective of the scheme is to provide financial assistance to students with disabilities for pursuing higher and technical education. To begin with 500 scholarships have been made available under the scheme. The amount of award varies from Rs.1000 per month for post-graduate courses to Rs.400 for graduate level professional courses. The awardees are also reimbursed the course fee upto Rs.10,000 per year. They are supported with financially for acquiring special aids and appliances for pursuing their studies.
The Ministry has also been providing a new thrust to not only encouraging new enrolments in schools and preventing drop-outs among the weaker and deprived sections but also imparting them with quality education. It is a new approach to tackle the problem rooted in history.
With the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, a time-bound programme for imparting elementary education to all children in the age group of 6-14 years by 2010, it is expected that all gender and social gaps would be bridged. Coupled with the provision of facilities for quality education the deprived people would be able to compete with the rest of the country’s population on a level platform. It would also create an urge among them for achieving excellence and make themselves equal partners in the country’s march towards a better future. (PIB Features)
*Contributed by Shri M.L.Dhar, Information Officer, PIB, New Delhi
17 comments November 21st, 2007
The following table is from the PIB http://pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=32920.
State-wise list of medical colleges, which have been permitted by the Central Government for being, set up during the last three years i.e. 2005-06, 2006-07 and 2007-08
S. No. |
State |
Year |
||
2005-06 |
2006-07 |
2007-08 |
||
1 |
Andhra Pradesh |
4 |
1 |
– |
2 |
Karnataka |
1 |
4 |
3 |
3 |
Kerala |
1 |
3 |
– |
4 |
Maharashtra |
1 |
– |
1 |
5 |
Madhya Pradesh |
1 |
– |
1 |
6 |
Orissa |
1 |
– |
2 |
7 |
Tamil Nadu |
2 |
3 |
– |
8 |
Tripura |
1 |
1 |
– |
9 |
Uttar Pradesh |
1 |
3 |
– |
10 |
Chhattisgarh |
– |
1 |
– |
11 |
Pondicherry |
– |
2 |
1 |
12 |
Punjab |
– |
1 |
1 |
13 |
Uttarakhand |
– |
1 |
– |
|
Total |
13 |
20 |
9 |
November 21st, 2007
Following is a PIB on this.
Lok Sabha
AIIMS like institutions are to be set up at six places in different parts of the country. For the construction of medical college and hospital complex, the Design Detailed Project Report (DPR) consultants have been selected for all the six sites. DPR would be available by May-June, 2008.
In so far as construction of housing complex is concerned, the bid process for selecting the turnkey developer was carried out for all sites. However, only 2 bids were received, of which one was found responsive. The work has been awarded to developer (M/s. Rajasthan State Road Development Corporation) for Jodhpur. The work relating to construction of housing complex at Rishikesh and Patna has been entrusted to HLL and for Bhubaneswar and Raipur to HSCC, on nomination basis. For Bhopal site, housing complex work would be awarded alongside with the hospital-medical college work.
The state-wise progress regarding construction of AIIMS like institutions can be seen at Annexure.
This information was given by the Minister for Health & Family Welfare, Dr. Anbumani Ramadoss in a reply to a question in the Lok Sabha.
KR/SK/166 – LS
ANNEXURE
S. No. |
AIIMS like Institutions |
Likely date for starting construction work |
Likely date for completion of construction work |
1. |
Jodhpur |
December, 2007 |
End 2010 |
2. |
Bhubaneswar |
February, 2008 |
End 2010 |
3. |
Rishikesh |
February, 2008 |
End 2010 |
4. |
Patna |
February, 2008 |
End 2010 |
5. |
Raipur |
February, 2008 |
End 2010 |
6. |
Bhopal |
July, 2008 |
End 2010 |
November 21st, 2007
Following is from the PIB http://pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=32762.
Requests have been received from the State Governments of Kerala and Gujarat for setting up of satellite campuses of IIT-Madras and IIT-Bombay respectively in their States. However, the Government has taken a decision that establishment of large satellite campuses with regular Bachelor and Master Programmes amount to setting up of new IITs should be avoided. The Government, however, has no objection to the setting up of small extension centres of existing IITs outside their main campuses, devoted to continuing education, diploma courses, finishing schools, incubation programmes, etc.
This information was given by the Minister of State for Human Resource Development, Smt. D. Purandeswari in a written reply to a question by Smt. N.P. Durga in the Rajya Sabha today.
In this regard, one may note that, IIT Kharagpur has an extension center in Bhubaneswar and had earlier signed an MOU with Govt. of Orissa to make a branch campus in Bhubaneswar. It had submitted a proposal to MHRD on this. But with the above clarification, IIT Kharagpur’s branch campus proposal in Bhubaneswar goes to cold storage for now.
1 comment November 19th, 2007
Following is from Samaja and it suggests that Orissa missed out on funding for DIETs by not establishing one DIET in each district. However, it does not mention that there are many CT trained people still looking for a teacher’s job (see http://orissagov.nic.in/e-magazine/Orissareview/sept-oct2006/engpdf/51-55.pdf) and perhaps because of that the state government did not establish additional DIETs.
November 19th, 2007
Following is from http://www.ncte-in.org/inst/instlist.asp?statecode=ORISSA&cour=CT. (CT certification is needed to become teacher in lower primary schools. B.Ed is needed for becoming teachers in middle and high schools.)
NAME OF INSTITUTION AND ADDRESS | CITY |
Ph | # |
|
1 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,CHENDIPADA CHHENDIPADA, ANGUL-759124 |
ANGUL | 50 | |
2 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,KISHORENAGAR KISHORE NAGAR, RAJ KISHORENAGAR, ANGUL-759126 |
ANGUL | 50 | |
3 | D.I.E.T. BALANGIR BALANGIR, BALANGIR-767001 |
BALANGIR |
(06652)- 232009 |
50 |
4 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, BALANGIR BALANGIR, BALANGIR-767001 |
BALANGIR |
06652- 230861 |
50 |
5 | D.I.E.T. REMUNA,BALASORE REMUNA, KHIRACHORA, GOPINATH, BALASORE-756018 |
BALASORE |
(06782)- 224309 |
50 |
6 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,LANGALESWAR LANGALESWAR, BALASORE-756024 |
BALASORE |
(06781)- 257011 |
50 |
7 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,RAGADI RAGADI, CUTTACK, BANKI-754008 |
BANKI |
956723- 240807 |
50 |
8 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, BARGARH BARGARH, BARGARH-768028 |
BARGARH |
06646- 233063 |
50 |
9 | D.I.E.T. MAYURBHANJ,BARIPADA BARIPADA, BARIPADA-757002 |
BARIPADA |
(06742)- 260283 |
50 |
10 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BARIPADA BAGHRA ROAD, MAYURBHANJ, BARIPADA-757001 |
BARIPADA |
(06792)- 252443 |
50 |
11 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL(WOMEN),BERHAMPUR GANJAM, GANJAM, BERHAMPUR-760001 |
BERHAMPUR | 50 | |
12 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,AGARPARA AGARPADA, B.T.PUR, BHADRAK-756115 |
BHADRAK | 50 | |
13 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BAGUDI BAGUDI, SORO, BHADRAK-756045 |
BHADRAK |
06788- 242217 |
50 |
14 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PAHIMAHURA PAHIMAHURA, BARIKPUR BAZAR, BHADRAK-756112 |
BHADRAK | 50 | |
15 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BHANJANAGAR GANJAM, BHANJANAGAR-761126 |
BHANJANAGAR |
06281- 240770 |
50 |
16 | D.I.E.T. KALAHANDI KALAHANDI, BHAWANIPATNA-766001 |
BHAWANIPATNA |
(06670)- 320230 |
50 |
17 | DISTANCE EDUCATION UNIT, DIRECTORATE OF TE&SCERT BHUBANESHWAR, BHUBANESHWAR-0 |
BHUBANESHWAR | 2250 | |
18 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL(WOMEN),BHUBANESWAR UNIT-6, KHURDA, BHUBANESWAR-751003 |
BHUBANESWAR |
0674- 2419673 |
50 |
19 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,TITILAGARH, TITILAGARH, BOLANGIR |
BOLANGIR |
(06655)- 20837 |
50 |
20 | GOVT.SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PATNAGARH PATNAGARH, BOLANGIR-767025 |
BOLANGIR |
06658- 222181 |
50 |
21 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BOUDH DIST-PHULBANI, BOUDH(NEW), BOUDH-762014 |
BOUDH |
(06841)- 222210 |
50 |
22 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, ATHAGARH ATHAGARH, CUTTACK-754002 |
CUTTACK |
06723- 20438 |
50 |
23 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINNIG SCHOOL NARASINGHPUR, CUTTACK-0 |
CUTTACK | 50 | |
24 | RADHANATH SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL CHANDINCHOWK, CUTTACK-753002 |
CUTTACK |
0671- 2621258 |
50 |
25 | THOMSON WOMEN’S SECONDARY TRAINING INSTITUTE, MADHUSUDAN ROAD, G.P.O., BUXI BAZAR, CUTTACK-753001 |
CUTTACK |
(0671)- 23651 |
50 |
26 | URDU SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, CUTTACK SHAIKH BAZAR, TULASHIPUR, CUTTACK-753008 |
CUTTACK |
0674- 2607149 |
50 |
27 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,DEOGARH PURUNAGARH, PURUNAGARH, DEOGARH-768119 |
DEOGARH |
06641- 226165 |
50 |
28 | D.I.E.T.DHENKANAL DHENKANAL, DHENKANAL-759001 |
DHENKANAL |
(06762)- 224725 |
50 |
29 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PARALAKHEMUNDI PARALAKHEMUNDI, GAJAPATI-761200 |
GAJAPATI |
(06815)- 222382 |
50 |
30 | D.I.E.T. KHALIKOTE KHALIKOTE, GANJAM-761030 |
GANJAM |
(0681)- 256420 |
50 |
31 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,POLASARA POLASARA, GANJAM-761105 |
GANJAM |
(06810)- 282272 |
50 |
32 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,JAGATSINGHPUR JAGATSINGHPUR, JAGATSINGHPUR-754032 |
JAGATSINGHPUR | 50 | |
33 | D.I.E.T. CUTTACK DOLIPUR, NAGUA, JAJPUR ROAD, JAJPUR-755019 |
JAJPUR |
(06726)- 220761 |
50 |
34 | D.I.E.T. JAYPORE KORAPUT, JAYPORE-764001 |
JAYPORE |
(06854)- 232400 |
50 |
35 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PANCHAPARA PANCHAPARA, NUAPARA, JHARSUGUDA-768204 |
JHARSUGUDA | 50 | |
36 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,DHARMAGARH DHARAMGARH, KALAHANDI-766015 |
KALAHANDI |
0674- 2414873 |
50 |
37 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BALIA BALIA, BHAGABATPUR, KENDRAPARA-754234 |
KENDRAPARA | 50 | |
38 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,KENDRAPADA P.O. & DIST – KENDRAPARA, KENDRAPARA-754211 |
KENDRAPARA | 50 | |
39 | D.I.E.T. KEONJHAR OLD TOWN, KEONJHAR-758002 |
KEONJHAR |
(06766)- 253076 |
50 |
40 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,FAKIRPUR FAKIRPUR, KEONJHAR-758022 |
KEONJHAR |
956731- 20753 |
50 |
41 | D.I.E.T. KHURDA KHURDA, KHURDA-752055 |
KHURDA |
(06755)- 220219 |
50 |
42 | PAN SCHOOL OF EDUCATION, BANKOI, KHURDA BANKOI, HATABASTA, KHURDA, KHURDA-752066 |
KHURDA |
06755- 234749 |
50 |
43 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, CHITRAKONDA CHITRAKONDA, MALKANAGIR-764052 |
MALKANAGIR | 50 | |
44 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, GORUMAHISANI GORUMAHISANI, MAYURBHANJ-757042 |
MAYURBHANJ |
(06794)- 274205 |
50 |
45 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,KUSHALDA KUSHALDA, MAYURBHANJ-757055 |
MAYURBHANJ |
06795- 236064 |
50 |
46 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,NABARANGAPUR MIRGANGUDA, NABARANGAPUR-751001 |
NABARANGAPUR | 50 | |
47 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,UMERKOTE UMERKOTE, NABARANGPUR-764073 |
NABARANGPUR |
06866- 270115 |
50 |
48 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,NUWAPARA NAWAPARA, NAWAPARA-766105 |
NAWAPARA |
06628- 223620 |
50 |
49 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,RAJSUNAKHALA RAJSUNAKHALA, NAYAGARH-752065 |
NAYAGARH |
0675- 234089 |
50 |
50 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,NIMAPARA PURI, PURI, NIMAPARA-752106 |
NIMAPARA | 50 | |
51 | D.I.E.T. TIKABALI UNDIVIDED PHULBANI, TIKABALI, KANDHAMAL, PHULBANI-762010 |
PHULBANI |
(06847)- 263720 |
50 |
52 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, SAKHIGOPAL SAKHIGOPAL, PURI-752014 |
PURI |
06752- 272029 |
50 |
53 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PIPLI PIPILI, PURI-752104 |
PURI |
06758- 240594 |
50 |
54 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,PURI DIST – PURI, PURI-752001 |
PURI |
06752- 232756 |
50 |
55 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,BISSAM CUTTACK BISSAM CUTTACK, RAYAGADA-765019 |
RAYAGADA |
06863- 247637 |
50 |
56 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,GUNUPUR GUNUPUR, RAYAGADA-765022 |
RAYAGADA |
(06857)- 20261 20367(Fax) |
50 |
57 | D.I.E.T. SAMBALPUR BUDHARAYA, SAMBALPUR-768004 |
SAMBALPUR |
(0663)- 2540789 |
50 |
58 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,TUDIGADIA TUDIGADIA, BALASORE, SORO-756047 |
SORO | 50 | |
59 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,SONEPUR SONEPUR, SUBARNAPUR-767017 |
SUBARNAPUR |
(06722)- 220642 |
50 |
60 | DISTRICT INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION & TRAINING SANKARA, SUNDARGARH-770020 |
SUNDARGARH |
(06622)- 273636 |
50 |
61 | GOVT SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL, BHALULATA BHALULATA, BISRA, SUNDARGARH, SUNDARGARH-770036 |
SUNDARGARH |
95661- 2612527 |
40 |
62 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,KUARMUNDA KUARMUNDA, SUNDARGARH-770039 |
SUNDARGARH | 50 | |
63 | GOVT.SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,KUNDUKELA KUNDUKELA, SUNDARGARH-770019 |
SUNDARGARH | 50 | |
64 | GOVT. SECONDARY TRAINING SCHOOL,TANGI KHURDA, TANGI-752023 |
TANGI | 50 |
150 comments November 19th, 2007
November 19th, 2007
Following is an excerpt from a report in New Indian Express.
The proposed medical college on PPP (public private participation) mode at Rourkela continues to be an election promise. In 2004, Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik announced about it at a pre-poll rally.
Still there is no headway in the project as the government allegedly continues with its dillydallying attitude under the plea that the proposed site is disputed.
In the face of intense public pressure, while Rourkela BJD MLA S P Nayak assured to expedite the issue, a demand has gained ground that the proposed medical college and hospital be attached to the Rourkela Government Hospital (RGH).
Reliable sources said earlier the project got delayed for two years as a clause made it mandatory for the private partner to accept the proposals for Rourkela and Balangir simultaneously.
After much persuasion one GSL Trust came forward to be the partner but later made a quiet exit. The 650-bed medical college and hospital envisages to have 150 medical seats in the initial year.
The project requires a minimum capital investment of Rs 100 crore. While the Western Orissa Development Council (WODC) will arrange 25 acre cost-free land and Rs 10 crore, the rest fund would be raised through private participation.
Wasting much time in locating land, the WODC finally decided to use the surplus land of RGH. But, the local displaced persons staked claims on proposed site in court. A high-power committee is now looking into the project.
1 comment November 19th, 2007
Following is an excerpt from a news report in New Indian Express.
… If sources are to be believed, the varsity is seriously planning to raise the intake capacity of the government institutions.
The technical university’s four constituent colleges – University College of Engineering (UCE), Burla, College of Engineering and Technology (CET), Bhubaneswar, Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology (IGIT), Saranga, and Orissa School of Mining Engineering (OSME), Keonjhar – impart different courses in engineering streams.
While UCE has seven disciplines with an intake capacity of about 270, annual approved strength of CET is 340 in as many as nine streams. Similarly, IGIT admits 150 students in five programmes, while OSME’s degree streams intake is about 90.
However, the BPUT management appears to believe that the government colleges are in need of increasing their intake capacity which will strengthen them financially.
While UCE, Burla and CET, Bhubaneswar, are primarily dependent on government, it is OSME (degree stream) which is self-sufficient.
In the last board of management meeting of the varsity, it was strongly felt that the private colleges have a much larger student strength compared to their government counterparts that contribute significantly to their solvency.
It has agreed that an increased intake in government constituent colleges is the need of the hour where the number of qualified teachers and overall infrastructure is better compared to those available in the private colleges.
A way out is to introduce self-financing models for the programmes. In fact, two engineering streams in UCE, Burla and four subjects in CET here are self-financing but the funds are not sufficient to support the increasing needs.
1 comment November 19th, 2007
Following is an excerpt from a MIT News item on this.
MIT and the government of India’s Department of Biotechnology today launched a partnership that will result in the creation of a new Translational Health Science and Technology Institute (THSTI) in India.
This new institute, which will be modeled after the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST), will include faculty from multiple disciplines and professions, offer degrees through multidisciplinary programs and develop strong ties with other institutions. Funded by the Indian government, the Indian HST will be a multidisciplinary, multiprofessional research and training center that is highly interconnected with regional centers of excellence.
The institute will increase India’s capacity for translating scientific and technological advancements into medical innovations that have the potential to improve healthcare both in India and around the world.
HST Director Martha Gray and Dr. M. K. Bhan, Secretary, Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science & Technology, Government of India, signed a letter of intent for this partnership today at a symposium in New Delhi titled "India and MIT: A Conversation about the Future."
…
"Launching this new partnership with India’s Department of Biotechnology will build on HST’s pioneering model of medical education that integrates science, medicine and engineering to solve problems of human health," said Susan Hockfield, president of MIT. "We look forward to a future of significant collaboration across disciplines, across institutions and around the world."
To foster a culture of innovation in THSTI, HST will help recruit and train new THSTI faculty members. Each year starting in September 2008 and continuing until 2011, four recruited THSTI faculty fellows will join the HST faculty. These faculty fellows will train at HST for two years. During their stay they will develop translational research programs, design courses and curricula for THSTI, and develop close relationships with HST faculty and students.
These fellows will benefit from HST’s nearly 40 years of experience bringing together science, engineering and medicine in education and translational medical research. HST’s success stories include medical innovations such as functional magnetic resonance imaging, a low-cost AIDS detection kit and novel implantable drug delivery mechanisms.
HST and MIT will also benefit from having these fellows on campus. "We will have people immersed in our program who actually know about the unmet medical needs in India and who will expose our students and faculty to those needs," said Gray.
November 19th, 2007
Following is an excerpt from a report in Pioneer.
BJP leader and former Union Minister Murli Manohar Joshi on Sunday met Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik at his residence, Naveen Niwas, and had breakfast with him. Sources said that both leaders discussed many issues pertaining to the interests of the State’s coalition Government and the interests of the State. “Yes, we are good friends,” he later told reporters.
Addressing a Press conference, he said the Congress-led Governments at the Centre have constantly neglected Orissa’s interests.
During the NDA regime, the foundation stone of the AIIMS was laid. But no work has yet been taken up to give it a formal shape, he said.
Though the NDA gave its nod for establishment of an international standard educational institute like National Institute of Sciences in Bhubaneswar, the UPA shifted it to Kolkata,” he pointed out.
November 19th, 2007
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