Sunday, February 5, 2012

Making IITK a better place

I think majority of the students clear the tough academic program and pass out. Some students find it difficult to clear all the hurdles. During my two year stay at the Institute; I have realized that the Institute literally wears you down and your performance reduces as semesters pass unless you are a real smart chap.

Still many feel they could have done better; many downsize their expectations; and many just focus to get out with a degree. I here will not take up the academic pressure as a reason for driving the students crazy; but emphasize others issues. I feel poor academic performance is a symptom that forces the students to take the extreme step.

We should work to make the institute predictable, lively and smooth in terms of living conditions. I personally think we should not blame academic pressure for the extreme behavior. We should identify the conditions which demotivate students and remove those conditions. My advice would be to work on the physical infrastructure to find out if they are up to the mark or not. We can perform comparative study of various campus facilities available in renowned institutions and IITK and streamline our facilities accordingly.

1. In my opinion, Counseling Services do not have sufficient expertise to handle the delicate cases. Full time staff should be employed. The psychiatrists hired are of poor quality and they don’t have any idea of the dyanmics of an academic institution like IIT.

2. Group of alumni should come forward and assure the troubled students and help them find a job even if they do not get the requisite degree. This initiative can reassure such students, and prevents the undesired mental agony of securing a job. It may help them perform without fear.

3. The Institute outside academic building is highly unpredictable. They should work out to smoothen the quality and services of mess, canteens and stationery shops. One of the major concerns I was having at the IIT was their proposal to privatize the staff working in mess and other similar areas.

4. The quality of staff should be ensured to a certain degree. Upon shifting the staff management to private contractor; a degree of uncertainty creeps in, they (contractors) are interested in their profits only. During my stay, I have seen various new faces in many canteens working as part time labor from time to time making IITK canteen appear like highway dhabas. There was a worker who was driving rickshaw in daytime and also working in mess. The point is that Institute should develop a system to retain a good number of staff to work outside the academic building (in the hostels, canteen etc.) of the prestigious institute. Or Institute should create a body which can ensure quality in staff members and dispose the concerns of the students in this regard. The matter should not be entirely left to the contractor in this regard as is the current practice out there.

5. The institute should teach and spread the information about healthy Ergonomic Practices as students day and night work with computers, laptops etc. From my personal experience, I can say that the Institute Computer Centre is not very well ergonomically organized. A lot of things can be done in this regard with the help of experts and lessen the wear and tear of student community.

6. We should also study the data on the basis of hostel, program, place, specialization etc, which do well to hammer out any conclusion if feasible. We should document the successful student, their working habits etc to inform the rest of the community. We should also document the risky time table, behavior etc which can create imbalance and lead to deficiency in the academic performance.

Friday, October 3, 2008

ONCE UPON A TIME IN KANPUR-1

City seems to have improved a bit in air quality, crowd appears to be busy and self-indulgent. Hope and optimism is on the faces. Govt. change has brought wind of change it appears. It shows when you pass through the main road (NH -91).
I came here year before the last year. It all seemed normal and pleasant until sign of distress started attracting my attention. It appeared to have flouted all the perceived behaviors known till now. It took considerable time to indirectly pinpoint the stuff.
Basically it gave some glimpse of the future ahead. It's the battle of survival. Not only the human have to fight it but all. Now these species cross the path of other different species and cause unwanted effects because they all are aiming for the same stuff.
Yeah the same Stuff. Stuff upon which species survive; stuff that rules them all; stuff that decides their destiny; and in the absence life eludes them all...

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Zindagi ne zindagi bhar gam diye!

Perhaps this songs seems to be a fitting tribute to my life till date and I find no reason why there would be any aberration. I know that Failures and Difficult moments teaches you more than success. But I think there should be limit of everything or in other words "Excess of everything is Bad"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AN-xtTM5mrM

Still Life goes on with whatever comes. Let us see what happens?

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Life at Hostel

People will be surprised after reading this article. As it put question mark over one of the finest abode and country's best institute in Engineering and Technology. Well I am not going to discuss anything academic as it's superiority is undoubted. It's all about Hostel where we spend most of our time that I am going to discuss.

For past few months I have been feeling some strange and unusual things. In these months I have done a kind of Preliminary survey of their occurrence places, behavior, affinity profile, after effects et. etc. Certainly they are harmful to say the least.
This thing can never be ACCEPTED in any where human beings thrives.

Friday, December 7, 2007

It happened one night

For seven years the US maintained that Iran was attempting to develop nuclear weapons. However, a new US national intelligence estimate (NIE), released on December 3, 2007, has concluded that Iran halted its nuclear weapons programme in 2003.

The assessment that the programme remains frozen represents the consensus view of 16 US intelligence agencies. This finding of the US intelligence community is consistent with that of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The Iranian foreign ministry has welcomed the US report.

The finding, however, challenges the views of President Bush and vice-president Dick Cheney who warned in October this year that if Iran continued on the present course the international community would impose serious strictures.

The French foreign minister talked about the inevitability of war if Iran did not stop its uranium enrichment and efforts to acquire nuclear weapons.

The Security Council, with unanimous support of five permanent members, imposed two rounds of sanctions on Iran on the ground that Iran was defying the international community’s demand to halt its uranium enrichment programme.

In 2005, the NIE of US assessed with high confidence that Iran was very keen to develop nuclear weapons. However, there was a caveat that Iran was not unmovable in this respect. The NIE also assessed that Iran was unlikely to reach weapon capability before early or the middle of the next decade.

In 2007, the NIE concludes with high confidence that Iran halted its nuclear programme in the fall of 2003. It says that the programme was not restarted and that Iran would be able to accumulate enough enriched uranium for a possible weapon between 2010-15.

It is possible that there is a gap between the occurrence of an event and information agencies collecting information about it and assessing it. It is obvious that during 2005 intelligence on the Iranian decision to halt its weapon acquisition effort had not reached Washington and that intelligence became available only in the current year. When the report of the director-general of IAEA was considered in the board of governors in September 2005 the agency could not certify that there were no clandestine activities or equipment in Iran. At that stage it was clear that Iranians had not come clear and told IAEA about their transactions with A Q Khan of Pakistan.

Iran decided to halt the weapon acquisition effort in the fall of 2003. On October 4, 2003, US and British intelligence services boarded the ship BBC China and seized centrifuge equipment which was on its way to Libya from Dubai where Khan’s nuclear Walmart was headquartered. The Iranian nuclear weapon effort was based on collaboration with Khan. Iran’s centrifuges — the two models P-1 and P-2 — originated from Khan’s laboratory.

Therefore, one wonders whether the boarding of the ship BBC China, winding up of Khan’s Dubai-based operations and halting of Iran’s weapons effort are related developments.

In February 2004, Khan publicly confessed on Pakistan TV about his proliferation activity. With the capture of the cargo of BBC China, Libya publicly gave up all nuclear ambitions and cooperated with the Central Intelligence Agency and MI-6.

All this happened soon after the US invasion and occupation of Iraq. This flurry of developments within a short period perhaps goes to explain why Iran halted its nuclear weapons effort in the fall of 2003.

It is obvious that Iranian cooperation with IAEA was less than optimal and continues to be so. The director-general in his statement on the NIE has said that it tallies with IAEA’s consistent statements over the last few years.

Although Iran still needs to clarify some important aspects of its past and present nuclear activities, the agency has no concrete evidence of an ongoing nuclear weapons programme or undeclared nuclear facilities in Iran. Iranians have clarified many of the issues raised by IAEA since the discovery of the clandestine centrifuge programme and improved their credibility vis-a-vis the IAEA.

Perhaps, if IAEA and US had been allowed direct access to Khan the status of Iran’s nuclear weapons programme could have been clear at an earlier stage.

However, there is no denying that Iran had a clandestine nuclear weapons programme supported by Khan and kept IAEA out of the picture. Therefore, India’s votes in the IAEA in 2005-06 were fully justified.

Fortunately, a realistic intelligence assessment on Iranian nuclear programme has emerged and the kind of motivated misassessment as was seen in the case of Iraqi WMD programme has been averted. Given the kind of political pressure being exerted by the US president, vice-president, the administration and legislative leaders on the Iranian nuclear issue, NIE assessors have displayed enormous courage in coming out with their finding.

The credibility of the US intelligence process has taken a beating in recent times. Their assessments on Iraq’s and Iran’s nuclear programmes were off the mark.

Recent books such as Shopping for Bombs by Gordon Corera and Deception by Adrian Levy and Catherine Scott-Clark have brought to light US’s acceptance of Pakistan’s China-supported nuclear programme.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Can India handle Terrorist attack?

Nothing better and logical should be expected from highly corrupt politicians & political parties, equally corrupt officials and bureaucrats. All is for sale with money and terrorists have plenty of funds to throw to these corrupt people.

Monday, December 3, 2007

A reality Check for IITs -An expert's Views/Still, Miles to go!!!!!!!!!!!

He Bhagwan! When we Indians learn to be modest! I am a post graduate from IIT:Kharagpur; a Masters in Aluminium Technology from Volgograd: Russia and an MBA from Leeds :UK and a very senior PSU working executive for 35 years who has travelled the length and width of the world and have been interacting with Delhi and Mumbai IITs regarding industrial research over last 5 years. How many noble lauriates teach in our IITs or have received guest lectures from them over last deacde? What is the volume strength of the reference library? How confortable and hygenic are the working and living conditions of students and research scholors at our IITs? In PG studies- what is the ratio of students to sq ft area? Do the corridors of Worton have 'paan' stained corridors and dingy teachers' rooms and smelly canteens and dining halls? Yes- the students are 'creame-da-la- creame' and our IITs are great basically for the quality of students it gets- but teachers- infrastructure and reasearch quality would take centuries and not just decades to catch up with an average western universities, what to talk of Worton, Harvard, Princetan, California, Pardue, Oxford, Cambridge, Manchester,Leeds, Yorks, Edinburg, Shefield, Moscow, Beijing, Shanghai, Sydney, Christchurch, Toranto, Waterloo, Amesterdam, geneve, Lion, Paris, Rio etc.etc. etc. (Yes- I have visited most of them! There are three places I always make it a point to visit in every city and country - the fish market, the acheological meuseum and the university campus!). For heavens sake - stop singing in parise of our self proclaimed great institutions. We have a long way to go to catch up with the best! As for salaries- Engineers are needed in Finance depts of banks and financial institutions as project analysts and venture caapital evaluatore. All our Indian banks also recruit Engineers for such job. There is no competition to pure engineering graduates from CAs or MBAs for such jobs. Engineer MBAs with project finance and operations research specialisations and relevant work experience are ver expensive and command 2-3 times the salararies you have quoted. In USA- a simple fresh graduate, from any art, humanities or science backgroung, without any brilliant academic achievementw ould expect a salary of $35 to 60,000 PA when placed in a smaller and a less expensive location. At the high end of placement, say New York, Chicago, California etc, the salary range would be $50,000 to 75,000 for the same job. Atop achiever or a student with graduate degrees or a product from the top 5-10 schools in USA, can expect double of these annual wages. All in all- the wage structure in the west is drived from a complicated formula covering mnay factors. Top Indian brains comming out of IITs are excellent raw material fro retraining for any enterprise anywhere in the world. Thats all and no More!!!!!!!!! I know it since my only son- s super brain - has been out of India with full scholorships since he was 14 yrs old and is currently working in the USA after a triple major graduation with 'Mortor Award"! So this mental block that 'we are the graetest' is doing nothing but only making us Indians vunerable to flattery and international