Showing posts with label IIT Guwahati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IIT Guwahati. Show all posts

Monday, September 20, 2010

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

Yielding to the year-long demand of IIT faculty members, the Centre has decided to offer experienced and senior faculty members a Higher Administrative Grade (HAG) Pay of Rs 67,000-Rs 79,000 — the highest government pay scale accorded at the Additional Secretary level since the Sixth Pay Commission came into effect.

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

The move is good news particularly for professors.

In its earlier order, dated August 18, 2009, the HRD Ministry had said that those appointed as professors must have a PhD with first class or equivalent with a very good academic record and a minimum of 10 years of experience with an academic grade pay of Rs 10,500 per month.

Forty per cent of these every year, the ministry order had said, would be eligible to move to Academic Grade Pay (AGP) of Rs 12,000 per month after six years of regular service in AGP of Rs 10500 per month subject to performance evaluation based on research publications, PhD supervision, teaching and consultancy services, etc.

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

Now, in a new order dated September 15, 2010, the Ministry has said that instead of movement up to AGP of Rs 12,000 per month, 40 per cent of the professors would move to HAG.

"It has now been decided in consultation with the Department of Expenditure to extend the HAG scale of Rs 67,000-Rs 79,000 without any Grade Pay in place of AGP of Rs 12,000 per month. The AGP of Rs 12,000 per month does not exist anymore," the HRD notification states.

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

The IIT teachers, during their agitation last year, had sought a HAG pay or higher for senior faculty. "We are glad this has been notified. This was one of our key demands, which has been much delayed by the Ministry," Prof M Thenmozhi, president, All India IIT faculty Federation, said.

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

Recently, members of the IIT faculty federation had also met HRD Minister Kapil Sibal, demanding HAG and its implementation from 2006 with retrospective effect.

They also wanted it to be extended to larger sections of faculty and not only to 40 per cent of the professors.

Govt clears pay hike for professors at IITs, IIMs

The new pay-scale will apply to professors at IITs, Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Bangalore, Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), National Institute of Industrial Engineering (NITIE), Mumbai and Indian Institutes of Science Education & Research (IISERs).

Source: Indian Express

Saturday, September 11, 2010

India out of global best campus list

Four Chinese Univs in world’s best 50 edu institutions, IIT Bombay at 187

India out of global best campus list

New Delhi: Four Chinese universities figure in the list of the world's best 50 educational institutions, even as India's sole representative in the top 200 -- IIT Bombay -- has slipped 24 places from its 2009 position.

The University of Cambridge has replaced Harvard as the world's best university in the prestigious QS World University Rankings, 2010, published in London yesterday. Six of the top 10 universities in the world are American, the other four are in the UK. The US and UK share positions 1 through 17 among themselves.

The QS rankings, earlier published in collaboration with Times Higher Education, are an annual ranking of the top 500 universities in the world, based on an academic reputation index, employer reputation index, institution inclusion, and research among other criteria.

India out of global best campus list

Among Asian countries, Japan has 10 universities in the top 200; China and Korea have six and five respectively. India has one -- IIT Bombay at No. 187, down from No. 163 in 2009.

IIT Guwahati has crashed 100 places from No. 401 to No. 501, University of Delhi is down 80 places from 291 to 371, IIT Delhi is down 21 from 181 to 202, and IIT Kanpur is down 12 from 237 to 249. The Universities of Mumbai and Pune are in the 450-500 bracket, comparable to Tehran.

In contrast, three of the four Chinese universities in the top 50 have improved their positions since last year. At No. 23, the University of Hong Kong is up one place, and on top of the Asian pile. The Chinese University of Hong Kong is up to 42 from 46, and Peking University is up to 47 from 52.

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology is at No. 40, down from No. 35 last year.

India out of global best campus list

Beijing's Tsinghua University is the fifth Chinese institution in the top 100, coming in at No. 54.

Martin Ince, convener of the Academic Advisory Board for the QS World University Rankings, said that the poor performance by the IITs apart, "the real story is the very modest showing of all other Indian higher education in our rankings".

"Delhi University scores well in our assessment of academic and employer opinion but very poorly on our other measures -- faculty/student ratio, citations, international staff, international students," Ince wrote in an email to The Indian Express.

"This is a very modest performance for the flagship university of a very significant nation... Note too that many universities around the world are investing heavily and want to be prominent in this and other rankings. So universities need to improve just to stand still."

IIT Guwahati director, Prof Gautam Barua, expressed surprise and disappointment over the steep fall in the institute's rank and said he would examine the issue. IIT Kanpur director Sanjay G Dhande, however, said that wide disparities in the budgetary structures of Indian and Western institutions -- even though faculty and student profiles may be comparable -- make it unfair to measure them by the same yardstick.

India out of global best campus list

dian government policymakers argue that international ranking criteria are based largely on western models and do not take into account several other indicators. The University Grants Commission is in fact, in the process of developing its own ranking system based on "Indian indicators of performance".

Ince, however, argued that "the much more prominent position of Chinese universities than Indian ones proves that we are not simply being nice to western institutions". He added, "In fact, India's tradition of the English language ought to give it a big advantage over China in world higher education, but we do not see this effect at work."

HRD Minister Kapil Sibal, though, struck an optimistic note.

"In the next ten years several of our institutes will be among the top 100 in international rankings. Without commenting on the merits and demerits of these rankings, with the reform in education systems, we should see more Indian institutes figuring on them. It should also be thought what should be adopted as a global criteria... not necessary it has to be western-style", Sibal told The Indian Express.

Source: The Indian Express