Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
India

Steer Indian education out of mediocrity, urges President

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jun, 2014 11:08 AM
    Observing that research in the higher education structure was a neglected domain, President Pranab Mukherjee Thursday called for transformative ideas to steer India's educational institutions from the "muddy waters of mediocrity".
     
    Delivering the Sir Asutosh Mookerjee Memorial Lecture to mark his 150th birth anniversary celebrations organised by the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan and Asutosh Mookerjee Memorial Institute, Mukherjee lamented that India was lagging behind the US and China in filing patent applications.
     
    "Research is a neglected domain in our higher education structure. Our universities have to be the breeding ground for creative pursuits. While US and China file lakhs of patent applications annually, India has to be content with a few thousand.
     
    "Universities must through their inventions and discoveries lead in the registration of patents for our country. Transformative ideas are required to steer our educational institutions from the muddy waters of mediocrity," said Mukherjee.
     
    Referring to Nobel laureates like Amartya Sen and Hargovind Khurana, Mukherjee pointed out that the scholars obtained international laurels by doing their research work in foreign universities and not in Indian universities because "we could not provide necessary academic atmosphere to these talented scholars".
     
    Mukherjee also reiterated his concerns about Indian educational institutions, despite accommodating over 20 million students, not finding a place among the top 200 world class universities graded by world class agencies.
     
    "It makes me very sad and I almost repeat like a parrot in every academic congregation," said an anguished president.
     
    Asserting that academic autonomy should be preserved at all costs, Mukherjee said the governance structures have to be supportive of innovative ideas and also facilitative of faster decision-making.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win
    In a historic election that would could have far-reaching implications for India's polity and its policies, Narendra Modi, a rank outsider to Delhi's politics, was poised to become the 14th prime minister of this diverse nation of 1.2 billion people

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count
    The BJP took a big lead as millions of votes polled in the Lok Sabha election were counted Friday, with its candidates racing ahead of all others in 71 of the 122 seats.

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers
    BJP leader Narendra Modi is sure to head India's new government but he could face problems even while providing strong governance for the next five years, astrologers say.

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise
    BJP leader Narendra Modi's probable rise to the top job in India invokes both hope and uncertainty among people in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge
    History will be kinder to me, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stated at his final press conference earlier this year. As he ends his decade-long tenure as head of two successive UPA governments, his stock as a middle class hero stood severely diminished due to a floundering economy, shrinking opportunities and the acts of omission and commission of colleagues in the government and party.

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'
    Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani's skyscraper Mumbai home Antilia - named after a mythical island in the Atlantic - has been rated as the world's "most outrageously expensive property" by Forbes magazine.

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'