Dear Mr Baruah ? Thanks for your response.My background is extremely limited?in order to contribute to an informed and intelligent discussion on the subject. But your attachment enlightened me on one aspect that Indian smcience is itself in a crisis. It surprises me that so many students can now afford an education abroad.As I find not many students go for studies in the sciences. Students for economics and the media?are abundant. Perhaps an MBA helps?obtain?employment. ? Regards ? bhuban?sam
-----Original Message----- From: Sanjib Baruah <[email protected]> To: bbaruah <[email protected]> Sent: Sat, 6 Aug 2011 14:54 Subject: Re: [Assam] (no subject) Dear Baruah, I have followed your posting on the comments of the Indian scientist about studying in the US with interest. I am not a scientist. But I follow the state of Indian education. My sense is that Indian science itself is some kind of a crisis. I read this article recently that takes that position. It is by a former director of the TIFR - so someone who is as familiar with the state of Indian science as the scientist that the Times of India story cites. The article is too long for a discussion group. But I am sending you a copy -- thought it might be of interest. Good wishes, Sanjib Baruah ----- Original Message ----- From: To: [email protected] Cc: FriendsofAssamNE'@yahoogroups.com Sent: Saturday, August 6, 2011 7:44:47 AM Subject: [Assam] (no subject) Dear Netters: ? On 4 8 2011 I posted a piece from the Times of India under the heading:US not good for education:says Top Indian scientist. Today in the same paper there is article saying that more than 20% students than last year are applying for places in US universities.. ? >From other sources I learnt that in 2006 as many as 123,000 students went >abroad for studies mostly in the US, Canada and Australia. In Britain between 1999 and 2009 there were said to be 19,205 students in the United Kingdom from India. India needs 300 universities more, my source indicates An official UK report says that because if immigration problems the number of student visas for foreign students will be cut. - bhuban ? ? ? Data released by the US embassy reveals that the number of Indian students who have applied for visas to study in the US is up 20% over last year. MUMBAI: The intimidating barriers for entry to India's top colleges have had an unexpected fallout. If the rise in student visa applications this year is anything to go by, students, instead of downgrading their choices and settling for second- or third-best, are increasingly looking westwards and flooding American universities with admission applications. Data released by the US embassy reveals that the number of Indian students who have applied for visas to study in the US is up 20% over last year. Education counsellors say they are seeing large crowds again, the vital difference being that the students seeking advice are much younger. While 24,500 Indian students were granted visas to join American universities last year, most went there for a Masters and 14.5% joined a grad school. "But this year has seen a phenomenal rise in the number of undergraduate students," said counselor Pratibha Jain. Officials at the American embassy confirmed that the number of student visa applications in India was already significantly higher than at this point last year. "The US has greatly expanded its consular staffing and educational outreach initiatives to ensure that prospective students can get the visa appointments and information they need," said an official. "This effort includes significantly increased funding for the Education-USA advising centers." Jain said she had noticed a shift in the attitude of students. "Earlier, they all wanted to go to the famous 10 to 15 universities," she said. "Now there is a range of good second-tier colleges they are willing to go to. Community colleges that charge about Rs 12-15 lakh annually are also on the Indian students' radar now." However, experts said it was too early to forecast the number of actual entrants to American universities this fall. "It depends on how many are accepted at universities and how many meet with consular approval," said an education consultant. ? ? _______________________________________________ assam mailing list [email protected] http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org _______________________________________________ assam mailing list [email protected] http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org
