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HH wrote:Special Greetings, "fl" & "Johnny" ... For Braving Out The System ... I, Too, Was Part Of The System ... Thirty Five Years Ago ...
RK wrote:HH wrote:Special Greetings, "fl" & "Johnny" ... For Braving Out The System ... I, Too, Was Part Of The System ... Thirty Five Years Ago ...![]()
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how old r u HH sir??

RK wrote:...![]()
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how old***** ...??
Untired ...
Untired With Loving
Peace be upon all those who seek the relief ...
There are many who stepped through this door and they sent us their farewell in form of mystic Sufi poems.
These mystic poets, each an scholar on a different matter of love and loss, bring to us many hundreds of years after their death
a clarity and depth to re-learn how to love.
...
Visit:
http://www.untiredwithloving.org/


wht a stupid comment!Johnny wrote:Thank ya all...![]()
Btw, Do u people agree to the comments of Prof. Anirban of IIPM?
He said in a paper promo, "These people, from IIT and all should be asked to pay back the penalty of not continuing in their specialisation, or else should be asked to do 7 - 10 years of Army or work in a government organization, before they can switch their career to a MBA. "
Now How foolish is that?

CtrlAltDel wrote:*****...

Johnny wrote:Thank ya all...![]()
Btw, Do u people agree to the comments of Prof. Anirban of IIPM?
He said in a paper promo, "These people, from IIT and all should be asked to pay back the penalty of not continuing in their specialisation, or else should be asked to do 7 - 10 years of Army or work in a government organization, before they can switch their career to a MBA. "
Now How foolish is that?

akhilis2cool wrote:wht a stupid comment!Johnny wrote:Thank ya all...![]()
Btw, Do u people agree to the comments of Prof. Anirban of IIPM?
He said in a paper promo, "These people, from IIT and all should be asked to pay back the penalty of not continuing in their specialisation, or else should be asked to do 7 - 10 years of Army or work in a government organization, before they can switch their career to a MBA. "
Now How foolish is that?
just 'coz no serious student gives a damn abt IIPM

"Academically Justified MBA programs with students of Diverse backgrounds should be of 3 years duration with atleast 24 hours a week contact hours. A recent proposal to introduce 1 year MBA program to people having 5 years experience(obviously non managerial experience for most of them)is deemed to DILUTE the academic content of the program to cater to emerging markets as demonstrated by ISB. Having FAILED to prove the superiority of their 2 Years MBA programs, the IIMS are lured by the HIGH FEES that ISB is able to charge and also to secure very high level of entry salary superceding the elitist salary of IIM Pass outs. Lacking confidence in their academic standards and contributions to business success, IIMs are trying to overcome their second class citizen status by entering into DE-VALUED 1 year MBA programs. The IIMS are thus victims of their own criteria of judging an institute's academic status of level of salaries its graduates can command from the market by restricting artificially supply of such graduates available to the Industry."

their ads are darn hillarious...'dare to think beyond the IIMs'. and then they burn IBM PCs just coz one of its employees criticised IIPM in a mag owned by an IIM grad.Jolly HP wrote:akhilis2cool wrote:wht a stupid comment!Johnny wrote:Thank ya all...![]()
Btw, Do u people agree to the comments of Prof. Anirban of IIPM?
He said in a paper promo, "These people, from IIT and all should be asked to pay back the penalty of not continuing in their specialisation, or else should be asked to do 7 - 10 years of Army or work in a government organization, before they can switch their career to a MBA. "
Now How foolish is that?
just 'coz no serious student gives a damn abt IIPM
Was it Anirban or Arindam? NEways...nobody cares I guess.
By the way, have you ever noticed the paisa vasool ads IIPM comes out with? THey don't miss a single millimetre of the space they buy. And to think of it, so many students must be specialising in Marketing from IIPM. God save the companies that employ them.
well, i think no student geting into the IITs minds working hard...Jolly HP wrote:On topic, from what I could gather from fl & Johnny's posts, life in IIT's is not easy. But then nobody should expect it to be easy either. I studied in a Sainik School and we were being trained for admission to the NDA. In school, we used to hear a lot of cases about trainees not being able to cope up with the tough life at the academy. But our teachers always used to inculcate the fact that such places (and IIT's & IIM's too) are meant for the best and the best need to prove they're indeed a cut above the rest. This, they can achieve by going through the gruelling life with a smiling face and come out with flying colours.

Jolly HP wrote:akhilis2cool wrote:wht a stupid comment!Johnny wrote:Thank ya all...![]()
Btw, Do u people agree to the comments of Prof. Anirban of IIPM?
He said in a paper promo, "These people, from IIT and all should be asked to pay back the penalty of not continuing in their specialisation, or else should be asked to do 7 - 10 years of Army or work in a government organization, before they can switch their career to a MBA. "
Now How foolish is that?
just 'coz no serious student gives a damn abt IIPM
Was it Anirban or Arindam? NEways...nobody cares I guess.
By the way, have you ever noticed the paisa vasool ads IIPM comes out with? THey don't miss a single millimetre of the space they buy. And to think of it, so many students must be specialising in Marketing from IIPM. God save the companies that employ them.
On topic, from what I could gather from fl & Johnny's posts, life in IIT's is not easy. But then nobody should expect it to be easy either. I studied in a Sainik School and we were being trained for admission to the NDA. In school, we used to hear a lot of cases about trainees not being able to cope up with the tough life at the academy. But our teachers always used to inculcate the fact that such places (and IIT's & IIM's too) are meant for the best and the best need to prove they're indeed a cut above the rest. This, they can achieve by going through the gruelling life with a smiling face and come out with flying colours.

Johnny wrote:Good to see my topic on the homepage, almost 2 years after I had started it. I had started it when I was still in IIT. Now, I am in Corporate.

well, IE says the reasons for the death are not known as yet...fl wrote:after roorkee and bombay its kanpur's turn now
read today's papers


IIT Roorkee - Govind Bhawan
Activities
One of the most important seats of residence in IITR , it really gives a sense of confidence to the inmates. Major activities like inter constituency sports etc . go on a regular basis.
Visit:
http://www.iitr.ac.in/living/hostels/go ... ssages.htm

IITs ... Questions ... Questions ...
...
The truth is that the IITs too are beginning to age as institutions. One of the reasons they have stood out as an island of excellence in an ocean of Nehruvian Stalinist mediocrity is that they have had that most precious resource for an academic institution, freedom from political interference. Thus they were able to thrive and produce good alumni, who also happen to be fiercely loyal, as well as (to an extent) willing to put their money where their mouth is by creating endowments.
What is the return from the IITs? It is true that large numbers of graduates leave the country; but there is a non trivial number of them returning these days. What about the investments they have themselves made in India? What about the investments they have persuaded their employers to make in India? Is the enormous value of the brand reducible to monetary terms? Is Brand IIT worth a billion dollars?
I think people seriously underestimate the value of marketing and branding. For instance, the Blessed M Teresa circus and the resultant publicity created a billion dollars worth of positive publicity for the Vatican, while conversely creating ten billion dollars worth of negative publicity for India and in particular Calcutta, portraying both as hopeless pits.
Compared to that, the CBS video on the IITs, and the character Asok in Dilbert have now created an impression of IITs as among the best universities on the planet. This has a halo effect on Brand India in general: even Peter Drucker now talks about the 'Institute of Technology in Bangalore' [sic] as being world class. In other words, the IITs have entered the American lexicon, roughly on par with MIT, Stanford, Berkeley and Caltech.
On balance, then, the IITs have produced a good return on investment in my opinion.
But is the IIT model the only, and best, model for advanced education? Probably not. This is why I say the IIT model is aging. It is a fact that the IITs have not really kept up with the times. For instance, why are they still producing roughly the same proportions of engineers in various disciplines as they did in the early days? The market has moved on substantially. To some extent the IITs have kept pace, for example with computer science programs and some management programs.
But as far as I know, not a single IIT has a well regarded program in any of the great new frontiers of technology, in particular in biotechnology. Nor in nanotechnology, in new power technologies such as hydrogen fuel cells, in any cutting edge area, really. Why is this? One reason is that they are insulated from the market, as they are guaranteed a Rs 75 crore grant from the government every year.
I think this model may be obsolete. There could be new institutions that are more market oriented, which charge market rates, which are essentially for profit, private entities that have relatively little by way of social considerations: the model followed by the great private American universities. Of course, the government can divert research grants to them. Can the IITs mutate into this? Perhaps, but I doubt it: they are doing an excellent job right now churning out good engineers; so let them continue.
But let licenses be given to entrepreneurs to invest in private universities. For it is quite possible that as in the days of Nalanda, Taxila and Vikramashila, India will once again become a center for educational services, attracting many overseas students and thereby beginning to recreate the 'Greater India' of old: the cultural hinterland of India that once spread all over Southeast Asia and parts of Central Asia as well as Tibet. ...
Visit:
http://in.rediff.com/news/2004/jan/23rajeev.htm

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