It
is a really sad state of affairs in the country at the moment so far as
higher education is concerned. It is more of a chore, a must do
something rather than pursuing your field of interest, or striving for
academic excellence. The de-facto standard in the country at the moment
is to pursue a course in engineering irrespective of the field and the
college, so long as it helps one get a degree at the end of four years.
Which by the way, not many are interested in by the time those four
years come to an end. The realization dawns a bit too late, that they
were not cut up for it. The ones who lagged due to disinterest are
doomed, the ones who persevered despite disinterest choose rosier
avenues. At the end of which, everyone ends up on the losing side. The
student loses years of his life struggling with something he hardly
considered important. The college, faculty and administration spent
resources on a no-returns venture.
The time has come, when parents need to lose hold of their control on
the kids. It is their life, and with all due respect, the new
generation is far smarter than the older one. It knows for sure what it
wants. It may be a little out-of-control, but it is understanding, and
given the field of interest, it is hard working. Perhaps more than the
older generation. A burgeoning economy offers more career opportunities
than probably there were in the pre-liberalization era. The time for
‘only doctors/engineers need apply’ in matrimonial ads is long past.
Today the youth is beating out new paths for itself,
testing unchartered waters, dreaming big, following their dreams,
chasing offbeat careers and making it big. While a degree in engineering
or medical may still guarantee you that fat package, but the question
is, is that what I want to be doing for the rest of my life.? You will
not be the first, nor will be the last to ask that question.
Chetan Bhagat being the most ‘appealing’ example for the case in hand
– an IIT graduate turned investment banker turned ‘ahem’ popular
author. What went wrong with all those guys who chose investment banking
after years at engineering. Or with Devendra Purbiya, who took to
photography full time. There are examples galore. What went wrong with
all these guys? Lack of realisation? Forced will? Lack of opportunity?
Lack of information?
Another problem facing the country at the moment is the lack of
structured guidance and information system to help equip students with
the correct information at the right time. Getting to know about
admission process in say National institute of photography, Mumbai may
involve the candidate calling up every number listed in there, and still
drawing a blank. Despite the ubiquitousness and the effective reach of
the internet, phone and other mass media vehicles, our education
infrastructure is lagging way behind. This is a void which needs to be
filled. And no, we can’t wait for the so-called government to help us
with it. About time we started helping ourselves. Wield the power of
community, and ensure that the young ones reach where they want to,
touching new heights.
Thoughts Welcome!
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