What is the use of having more of world class universities and IIMs etc. if
Assam government is not able to maintain the institutions which they already
have? I don't know about other places but I have seen a few engineering
institutions at Jorhat in very pathetic conditions crying for attention. 


Wahid Saleh
 


-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Namens
Buljit Buragohain
Verzonden: vrijdag 28 maart 2008 13:42
Aan: [email protected]
Onderwerp: [Assam] World Class Central University at Guwahati

7 New IIMs, 8 IITs, 14 World Class Universities:
   
  As many as 45 new higher education institutions, including 15 schools of
technology and management and 14 world class universities, will be set up in
the 11th Five Year Plan, it was announced today. 
   
  ''This is the first time'' the government is setting up so many new
institutions costing thousands of crores of rupees, Human Resource
Development Minister Arjun Singh told journalists .
  The new institutions include eight Indian Institutes of Technology, seven
Indian Institutes of Management and 30 Central universities, 14 of them
''aiming at world class standards.'' India currently has seven IITs, six
IIMs and 19 CUs. 
  Besides four new IITs-- in Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar, Himachal
Pradesh-- already announced, four more will be set up in Orissa, Madhya
Pradesh, Gujarat and Punjab, Singh said. 
  In Madhya Pradesh, the IIT will be set up at Indore, but the location in
other States is yet to be finalised, Singh told a news conference. 
  Additionally, Banaras Hindu University's Institute of Technology,
admission to which is made through an IIT Joint Entrance Examination, will
be converted into an IIT, he said. 
  Besides a new IIM at Shillong already announced, seven more IIMs will be
set up in Tamil Nadu, Jammu and Kashmir, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh,
Uttarakhand and Haryana. 
  In Chhattisgarh, the IIM will be set up at Raipur. 
   
   
  The 14 world class Central Universities will be set up at Pune, Kolkata,
Coimbatore, Mysore, Vishakapatanam, Gandhinagar, Jaipur, Patna, Bhopal,
Kochi, Amritsar, Bhubaneshwar, Greater NOIDA and Guwahati. 
   
   
  Authorities picked locations ''in or near'' large cities to automatically
ensure ''conectivity and infrastructure which such universities would
need,'' the HRD Minister said. 
  Singh said each concerned State government was being requested to identify
adequate land in or near selected cities and offer land accordingly. 
  Singh also announced plans to set up Central Universities in 16 States
which currently do not have one. 
   
  These include Bihar, Jharkhand, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh,
Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir,
Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Goa. 
   
  This will include converting three existing universities-- Dr Hari Singh
Gaur University at Sagar, Guru Ghasidas University at Bilaspur and Goa
university-- into CUs. 
   
  The government will spend Rs 2,000 crores on the new IITs, Rs 660 crores
on the IIMs and Rs 2,800 crores on CUs during the 11th Plan, Higher
Education Secretary R P Agrawal said. 
  Singh was emphatic that establishing IITs, IIMs and CUs was ''subject to
State governments offering adequate land at suitable locations, free of
cost, for the purpose.'' He made it clear that their ''actual
establishment'' would depend ''among other things on how quickly the
concerned State governments respond by allotting adequate land at suitable
locations.'' In reply to a question, Singh acknowledged the shortage of
faculty, but indicated that it would be overcome through recruitment. 
   
  Top HRD officials say that India is estimated to have some 500,000 higher
education teachers-- roughly 20-25 per cent short of the required number. 
   
  Agrawal outlined a bouquet of measures-- which include upgrading training,
summer teachers' schools, better fellowships and research facilities and
higher retirement age. 
  Asked if the idea was to match Harvard or Oxford, some of the leading
Western academic centres, Agrawal replied the aim would be to do better than
what exist. 
   
  On delay in pursuing Foreign Educational Institutions Bill, Singh
indicated the move was caught up in differences with Left groups which
advocate proper regulation of private institutions. 
  ''A dialogue is on,'' Singh told questioners, without going into any
reservations the government may have to such a demand, but added that the
Ministry was trying to bring the Bill to Parliament soon. 
  On a controversial Ramayan essay in a reading list recommended for Delhi
University undergraduates, Singh said a review committee was going into the
matter. 
  Asked about his bid to reserve higher education seats for Other Backward
Classes, Singh responded: ''Please pray for it.'' 



       
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