The Maharashtra numbers are from http://www.dte.org.in/degree/statistics/regionwisetotal.asp?inst_type=ENGINEERING. For Odisha I calculated the numbers using 2009 AICTE data. (Thanks to Bagdu for inspiring us to make this comparison.)
|
Population |
Number of Seats
(BE level)
|
Number of Colleges |
Maharashtra |
10.061 crores |
88300 |
|
Pune |
52.73 lakhs |
32280 |
|
Mumbai |
213.47 lakhs |
20332 |
|
Nagpur |
25.70 lakhs |
17599 |
|
Nashik |
17.42 lakhs |
13460 |
|
Aurangabad |
11.95 lakhs |
8907 |
|
Amravati |
6.74 lakhs |
6504 |
|
|
|
|
|
Odisha |
3.7762 crores |
30666 |
99 |
Bhubaneswar |
16.66 lakhs |
19306 |
62 |
Berhampur |
6 lakhs appx |
2550 |
9 |
Sambalpur-Baragarh- Jharsuguda |
5 lakhs appx |
1716 |
6 |
Rourkela |
7 lakhs appx |
1341 |
3 |
Couple of points to note from the above:
- The number of B.Engg seats in Bhubaneswar is not bad in comparison with the much larger cities of Mumbai and Pune.
- The other three metropolitan areas of Odisha mentioned above need to get to the level of at least 5000 seats (if not 10,000 seats) to make them attractive to IT companies.
- The increasing M.Tech seats will help improve the quality of faculty in the engineering colleges.
April 22nd, 2010
Following is an excerpt from a report in Times of India.
In a written reply in Lok Sabha on Wednesday, minister of state for HRD D Purandeshwari said the ministry has decided to amend the IIT Act, the law that governs IITs, to include medical science. The health ministry had said that IITs should not be allowed to start conventional courses in medicine.
The amendment, Purandeshwari said, would help IITs to offer programmes bringing together the diverse disciplines of medicine and engineering. Referring to the health ministry’s objection, she said, "However, appreciating the fact that the modern trends in medical education and research in technology and medicine in all the developed and most of the developing countries are seen hand-in-hand, the government proposes to incorporate `medicine’ in the IIT Act."
Purandeswari said the programme would bring the two important disciplines of medicine and engineering together.
… IIT Kharagpur has come up with a concrete proposal in this regard and plans to start a medical college in collaboration with Indian Railways. At a meeting of experts in the health ministry in February this year, it was observed that IITs should start courses on health information technology, biomedical engineering and e-health rather than running a hospital or starting MBBS courses.
There are several lessons that Odisha can draw from this.
- As Purna Mishra suggested in a comment, VSSUT and the VSS Medical College in Burla should combine to form a single university.
- NIT Rourkela and IIT Bhubaneswar should consider adding a medical college as part of the institute; NIT could include the proposed ESI medical college and IIT could include the proposed Railways medical college.
April 22nd, 2010