Foreign students, medical courses likely in IITs (Lead)
September 10th, 2010 - 9:56 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Sep 10 (IANS) Foreign students and faculty, medical courses and a new pattern for entrance exams are among the reforms planned for Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal said Friday.
Talking to reporters after a nearly three-hour-long meeting of the council of IITs, Sibal said the decisions were taken to bring IITs at par with the international institutes and to make them global in every sense.
“It was in principle agreed that IITs will have foreign students as well as faculties,” Sibal said.
Foreign students will be admitted only to post-graduate courses and their strength will be limited to 25 percent. The minister also informed that these admissions will not affect the present number of Indian students in IITs.
For the faculty, the minister said that consultations will be held with the home ministry to decided the modalities of allowing foreign teachers in IITs.
“As security concerns are there, the mechanism to appoint foreign faculty will be decided in consultation with the home ministry,” he said.
The strength of foreign faculty will be capped at 10 percent.
In another major decision, the minister said that medicine and medical research will be added to the field of IITs. The minister said that the decision was taken as the field of medicine involves large number of engineering techniques.
“Appropriate amendment in the Indian Institute of Technology Act may be considered to enable IITs offer courses in medicine with the approval of the Medical Council of India,” Sibal said.
He clarified that while the MCI approval will be needed for awarding medical degrees, it will not be needed for research in allied fields related to medical technology.
Sibal said IIT entrance exams needed an overhaul to discourage coaching institutes.
“The present system of coaching must go as it is detrimental to the quality of intake,” Sibal said.
“Weightage will be given to class 12th exam marks, and that marks will be based on the performance through the year. It will automatically discourage coaching,” he said.
The minister said a committee has been formed under Science and Technology Secretary T. Ramasami and it will submit its report in three months. “After that we’ll involve all IITs and have a full discussion,” he said.
Sibal added that the IITs have said they wanted to continue with the joint entrance exam (JEE).
“The IITs don’t want to do away with the JEE but they have said that if an alternative is provided they will discuss it with their faculty,” he added.
It was also decided to enable IITs to undertake broad-based collaboration with institutions across the world and start centres for policy studies to serve as advisory fora in such strategic areas.
- IITs to enrol foreign students, offer medical courses - Sep 10, 2010
- New IIT entrance format to get brighter students: Sibal - Feb 24, 2012
- Sibal mulls changes in engineering entrance exam - Sep 10, 2010
- 'India should have single engineering entrance exam' - Apr 25, 2012
- Medicine to be taught at IIT, says Sibal - Sep 10, 2010
- IIT alumni to lobby against new entrance test pattern - Jun 01, 2012
- New fee structure for IITs discussed - Sep 14, 2011
- Single test for engineering courses from 2013 - May 28, 2012
- Super 30 founder welcomes IIT test reforms - Mar 27, 2011
- Dissent grows over new pattern of IIT-JEE - May 30, 2012
- 27/30: Bihar's Super 30 shines again in IIT-JEE results - May 18, 2012
- War of words over Jairam Ramesh slamming IITs, IIMs (Lead) - May 24, 2011
- Can't quit IIT, reappear in entrance test: Court - Apr 05, 2012
- What ails the IITs (Comment) - Oct 25, 2011
- 80 percent marks not a must for IIT entrance exam: Sibal (Lead) - Oct 20, 2009
Tags: allied fields, development minister, foreign students, graduate courses, home ministry, human resource development, indian institute of technology, indian institutes of technology, indian students, institutes of technology, international institutes, kapil sibal, medical council of india, medical courses, medical degrees, meeting of the council, present system, security concerns, technology act, technology iits