Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Thursday, January 09, 2014

Education: what do I/we mean by it?

I wish to write more details about how to orient an undergraduate teaching program in a liberal arts setting. Given the influence of Harvard's "Peer Instruction" and how radical schools (Summerhill and Tagore's Shantiniketan) approach school teaching, I would like to remodel the undergraduate program along similar lines. I will illustrate details using Physics/Astronomy examples, but I believe the principles will apply to other science/social-science streams as well. 

Here is an outline of my future posts: the color codes indicate various groupings under which I will attempt to address the various questions. Perhaps the answers clubbed in this way will allow more systematic thought into this set of problems.

  1. What does a man/woman learn?
  2. What is learning?
  3. What use is learning?
  4. Learner, society, industry...
  5. How to learn?
  6. How can a 'learner' be helped best?
  7. How does 'skill-gap' occur?
  8. What use of a structured program for learning?
  9. How to bridge skill gap through structured degree programs?
  10. What is the right model of higher education?
  11. Economics of higher education.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Educating India: Colleges




Colleges will train teachers for
  1. for democratic pedagogy: It is not easy to grant rights to minors and listen to their valid demands.
  2. for life-oriented learning: Teachers should become innovative and mix different techniques to make learning enjoyable and worthy of hard-work. This means that learning has to be oriented towards lives of students.
  3. to remove teachers' own previous biases and background: We all are humans, and carry our 'culture' with us. It is important to unlearn our habits and past karma, at least to certain degree become aware of them.
Several schools embody these principles (and more), JK Foundation runs 'Rishi Valley Schools', then there is 'Geniekids', or 'Srujan Anand'. However, relatively very few schools also go on to train more teachers in a more systematic way. Geniekids, and now Azim Premji University aspires to do this. This has to grow as a movement, spread as a contagion and take roots as a Banyan tree...

Educating India: Schools

Here I will elaborate the idea first introduced in the earlier post, where I proposed an outline of my solution to India's chronic problem of education.

The proposed plan is to have schools where students enjoy learning, live without burden from parents and explore their own life. I am impressed by Summerhill, Tottochan and scattered readings of Tagore. If you are interested in these books and similar other books/ articles, go to Arvind Gupta's excellent website.

Before we look at schools and colleges, here are the basic set of principles:
  • Happiness is paramount, therefore learning to be happy is of utmost importance.
  • Children should move/ play/ act, not sit idle and cram material at one place.
  • Anyone's worth is not measured by her/his productivity or knowledge, therefore education should be geared towards learning what one likes to do, and emphasizing the pleasure derived from it.
  • Adults should not enforce their sense of morality, importance and life on children.

So, here is what the schools should do:
  1. Students set their daily lives and ground rules: periodic and out-of-turn meetings of the entire schools will set rules for daily lives and punishments for breaking the rules. What is excluded from their purview is: academic matters and dealings with society outside the schools.
  2. Classes are optional: most students play, read books, listen to stories/ music, learn dance, engage in outdoor/ indoor sports. These rules will be set by rule 1 above.
  3. Learning is by demand: teachers assist students when they demand. Teachers will be trained to provide Montessori education to younger ones. The older students (12-16) will be essentially on their own, reading and working. The scientific laboratory spaces will be manned by assistants for safety purposes.
  4. Grading is oriented towards learning: There is no scope for points-based grading in this system, forget 99.23% kind of silly scores. The teachers decide who has gained skills at what level, and when a student is ready, she/he can attend ICSE/ CBSE kind of examinations for their own satisfaction. We will develop alternative to other colleges, where students can register for degree or certificate courses to obtain their livelihoods.
  5. Schools are residential: Parents are responsible for most problems in their children's lives. Schools will be entirely residential and students go home only twice in the year (around December and May-June.)

How we treat children is most crucial here. They have to be treated with respect, sincerity and honesty. Why did Summerhill succeed so much in bringing back so many apparently wild, unruly children to the main-stream? Neill understood the way children approached life, the role honesty and kindness while dealing with them. He never moralized them, never forced them and never judged anyone based on history.

There are many elements here that we want to keep in mind before running a school. John Holt summarizes the bit about 'permissive schools' (please read the entire piece) as follows:
....
In any case, to call Neill permissive is not just an oversimplification but a serious mistake. Let me cite an example that is widely, indeed almost always misunderstood-the matter of his rewarding with a gift a child who steals something. When Neill gives a child sixpence for stealing, is he "permitting" him to steal? Nonsense! If Neill meant to “permit" it, didn't care whether a child stole or not he would simply take no notice. But in fact he takes a very particular kind of notice, whose meaning is not for a second lost on the child. The child knows, when Neill gives him the six- pence, that he is not saying, "Sure, stealing is fine, go steal some more." The child knows already that Neill does not steal and does not want stealing around the school. What then does he hear Neill saying with this gift of suspense? He hears him saying, "I know you are not a thief." He is rightly amazed, thinks, "Not a thief! Of course I'm a thief, everyone tells me so, all the time. Besides, I just proved it, by stealing." To these thoughts he hears Neill’s silent reply, "No, not a thief. If I thought you were a thief, and would go on stealing indefinitely, I'd be a bloody idiot to give you money every time you did it, wouldn't I?" No way to argue with that; Neill is clearly no idiot. "No, at heart you're not a thief. You may be stealing now, trying to satisfy important needs that you don't know how to satisfy any other way. But there are other ways. I am ready to help you look for them, and I think you will find them.”
...

There is a good deal of child psychology to understand, develop in-house and internalize in practice. This also means that the school gradation is going to be unique, not the usual 10+2 gradation each year, with x/10 point system. Heck, even home-work will not be mentioned here.

Indian is not a free, as in free thinking. There are several things considered taboo, and children being thought as 'minors' will be one of the hardest to beat. Therefore, a free/ democratic school described above remains a huge challenge...

.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

How to address India's education problem - III - School-college chain

This post is second in the series after the first one and second one. I propose to alleviate the problem by having a chain of teacher-training colleges and schools. If you remember, the problems we face are:
  1. Not having enough schools
  2. Not having good enough schools
Our solution will first train teachers to teach in a manner 'desirable'. This attacks the second problem, whereby we change the structure of school education and the learning pattern through our teachers.

We will place trained teachers in 'willing schools' . If needed, we will start schools within a periphery of 20 km of the college. Over a period of time, we intend have enough schools and teachers for every child in the vicinity.

Obviously we can't solve both the problems a day or even a year. The plan will involve increase the number of schools /colleges, from (1 college + 5 schools) to (50 colleges + 500 schools) in 2 decades. If each school holds 200 students, we will be teaching a million students.

Of course, there are 4 pre-conditions:
  • Education policy
  • Funding
  • Parental interest
  • Democracy and civil rule

Thursday, June 23, 2011

How to address India's education problem - II

This post is second in the series after the first one. First we need to identify the real problems, for which we need to look at a number of symptoms of this decease carefully (e.g. why don't Kerala students go to schools as much as earlier?):

  1. There are not enough schools (which adds to parents stress) therefore, those existing ones have arbitrary entrance tests, even for admission to nursery classes!!!
  2. Even average, no-good schools charge extra-ordinary fees, and if some parents complain, children are humiliated as a punishment for their parents' action (showing how much they must love those kids in the first place.)
  3. Many students (from poorer families) can not go to the 'established aided schools', Some schools even deny entry to many students. Students are thus forced go to horrible government schools, so many patronize smaller private (un-aided) schools instead. Of course, these private schools are often run by a small team, even then they outdo government schools, for
  4. Government schools do not have enough trained teachers (heck, some states did not bother to have any norms to employ teachers), and many of teachers do not report to work. Those who do teach, are forced to also do menial jobs (for the same salary), such as cooking, census duty and election work. Note: no retraining of teachers or gradation based on teaching skills.
  5. It is not just school teachers, the whole pattern of Indian education system is like a badly-made, well-worn quilt. There are only a handful of schools who care for their students' learning: Hrishi Valley, Genie Kids, (once upon a time) Shanti Niketan...
  6. Against no-fail policy, schools fail students in 9th standard, only allowing the brightest students to appear for 10th examination under its name. This explains 100% pass percentage and guarantees that more students will flock to that 'good school'.
  7. No wonder, students do not want to be in schools and schools are not relevant and do not respond to their lives' demands.
  8. Those students who stay in schools are stressed (can you believe this: some schools have removed ceiling fans so students can't hang themselves ?)
  9. If all this was not enough, there are school examinations and other prestigious examinations to appear for, and students have enormous stress from exams as well. In 2006, about 6000 students killed themselves over examination stress, and many deaths were possibly not reported as such (where are Roy's, Hazare's and Baba's now?)

Simplest things to make out from above are:
  1. Schools are designed not to be fun and are disengaged from students' lives: so students are stressed.
  2. If schools are just about tolerable, there are 'tough' examinations, where gradation is disengaged from learning: so again students are stressed.
  3. For many students, being in school does not give returns in terms of skills for survival.
  4. Most school managements do not care for points above, and are interested in status quo (which includes removing ceiling fans, of course.)
  5. Government makes rules/ laws (who runs a school or how to employ a school teacher) and they do not work, which is not surprising, for
  6. Most government rules are arbitrary, without any love or care for children underpinning it or even simple market economics.


Now, read how Tagore approaches schooling. This is the angle we will pursue further about how schools ought to be (did you not guess it from my previous posts?)

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Admissions to schools: old problems and new questions

Here is the second email:
This is S from Pune.

How are you? Hope things are fine there.

My BITSAT results have just come out and I have scored 240 marks. But the eligibilty criteria for the same is that one must score 80% in PCM in 12th Boards, which unfortunately I have not acheived. Actually, it was 70% till last year and this year they set the bar to 80% which is ironic because I have 70% in PCM this year.

I wanted BITS very badly, and so we are trying to get admission through management quota.So I was wondering if there is any management quota in BITS that we can avail of. If so, what is the procedure to get admission by management quota? Do you know any trustee, friend or person of authority who can help us out with this procedure? Can you suggest any other way to get admission? Please help me out in this matter. Your guidance is very important for us at this junction.

And here is my response

प्रिय xxxx
तुला निराश करू नये असे वाटते, पण या बाबतीत माझा पूर्ण नाईलाज आहे. BITS मध्ये 'कोटा' पद्धत नाही, फक्त त्यांच्या (माझ्या दृष्टीने चुकीच्या) ठरवलेल्या प्रमाणानुसार ते प्रवेश देतात. [I wish I would not disappoint you, but it is unavoidable. BITS does not have any quota system and they admit students on (in my opinion dubious) merit criteria]

This is utter bullshit, you know. Bright students like you should never be denied good college education and our monstrous government has achieved exactly this. I don't want to get into that right now, but this is not your fault but someone else's blunder. I am very sorry, but I went through something similar in my own student life and hated it myself (which is why I want to teach and start my own university.)

Please don't get discouraged or frustrated, I went through that phase as well. You will still do well, given your ability to work hard and excellent support structure you have at home and around. A better approach now will be to select a good college anywhere, and do something you like. I will suggest not to focus on engg (unless you know what you want exactly), but keep your options open towards science, economics, arts, whatever. It is unlikely anyone at your age can decide everything, another major fault of Indian system is that it does not allow any experimentation (to select and change stream if desired). So, you select now what you find the best, choose a college with a good library and laboratories (as I think it best). Then you are at least set to work on your own...

Admissions to Schools: old problem, new questions...

Hiya, back to blogging. This is caused by emails to my mailbox from two anxious souls, hard-working and well-meaning ones. These two would start their professional life with so much anxiety, it breaks my heart. Why on earth do Indians have such a pathetic education system!

Without further ado: here is email one, followed by my own response. My commentary will follow after the two separate mail posts.


(My friend Abhi writes)
maza bhacha atta 12 wi zala. tyala engg. shivay vegale kahi karayache ahe. [My nephew just finished HSC and he wants to do something other than engineering] i mean BSC -> MSC -> and higher education

mee tyala Chemistry ghe ase suchawale ahe. [I suggested Chemistry to him] ani higher educationla he will have multiple options. so he is starting with PCM and then he can decide but another option is Chemistry, BioChemistry and Botony (he is not interested in Botony - so after 1st year he will drop botony)

what is your view? any guidance tip?

My answer is long (please excuse the small letters)
Abhi

first of all, give this young man my 2 thumbs up!! in so many years, so many came to ask about where/how to do engg. this is the first time someone asked me about something else. he must have an independent mind and a strong will to search for what he likes/ dislikes. i will highly encourage him and his parents to allow him to follow his instincts and liking.

unfortunately, there are few options for good undergraduate education in India. colleges and univs are not great and syllabi are limiting. if you see what international univs offer to students, it is a shame we don't have anything close to that for intelligent students like your nephew :-( the same is true about engg education, btw, BITS/ IITs notwithstanding.

the only few places who offer some semblance of quality: Xavior's (Mumbai), Stephen's (Delhi) and Presidency (Kolkata). in pune, there is a new IISER, where I have a couple of close friends (xxxx e.g.). there are are some good profs scattered everywhere: Prof Kulkarni at Fergusson, Prof Watve at Garware, for example. The main problem is: students are left to themselves to devise ways to learn, no innovative teaching, etc. i am trying to give you a complete picture, to allow him to choose carefully.

this should not discourage him, with a couple of good friends, he will do quite well. remember, I had Shrirang throughout my BSc and then great friends in MSc. so, my advice is to choose a college like Fergusson with a decent library (and a handful of profs in area of interest), make 'good friends', and connect with interested profs from other places (IISER, IUCAA, Pune Univ, etc.) he should read book by Krishnamegh kunte for some inspiration (that 'failed student' is in Harvard now):

http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~kunte/RanvedaCover.htm

now the BIG QUESTION is: what does this man like? he should not think that only science is his destiny, even a good economist is equally valuable (and earns a lot higher salary in the market). he has to find, out on his own, what he likes and would like doing for a large part of his life. of course, he could do something else later on, but for now he has to have something in his mind. no one can help with this, unfortunately -- `ghode ko paani koi nahin pila sakta'.

he has to explore a bit: surprisingly BITS/IITs offer him other variety of courses at undergraduate level, so there is more exposure possible. this option does not exist in most univs/ colleges. i am not sure how IISER does this either. the only way to know if he likes economics (in a place like Fergusson) is to meet other students from economics and learn from them. it is not desirable but not avoidable. i could not do that, and i wish i had read economics earlier in my life (as well as neuro-biology and Marathi literature).

but, all said and done, his honesty and decision to look elsewhere is commendable. He needs to be open minded and brave, only those do exceptionally well in today's world. If he can write more about what he wants to do, or his inclinations, it would help me write a little more detail.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Summerhill is an island...

मांझी रे, अपना किनारा, नदिया कि धारा हैं |


Summerhill is an island. It has to be an island, because its parents live in towns miles apart, in countries overseas. Since it is impossible to collect all the parents together in the town of Leiston, Suffolk, Summerhill cannot be a part of Leiston’s cultural and economic and social life.

I hasten to add that the school is not an island to Leiston town. We have many contacts with local people, and the relationship on both sides is a friendly one. Yet fundamentally, we are not a part of the community. I would never think of asking the editor of the local newspaper to publish success stories about my old pupils. We play games with the town children, but our educational aims are far apart.

Not having any religious affiliation, we have no connection with religious bodies in the town. If Summerhill were part of the town community center, it would be obliged to give religious teaching to its pupils.

[Summerhill A RADICAL APPROACH TO CHILD REARING 1968, A. S. Neill]

Monday, May 03, 2010

Summerhill, the book

You can download this book: "summerhill" by A S Neil. It will change your views about children, learning, and education. It will educate you once more.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/5081386/summerhill

This much is a great post in itself, I will quote more from this book soon.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Indian and American Education System: a comparison - III

This is second part of my questionnaire, you can read earlier part 1 and part 2 for a background. Here we will consider remaining questions and their answers.

[ In the next post, I will use all these answers in designing my own education institution, along with a proposal of an education system based on liberal-arts set up.]



4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare Physics group in India (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.


My Summary:

Teaching styles are a matter of appropriate training and experience of faculty. In general, faculty in US is better trained, with more incentives. Faculty are active in research and bring their research problems to their classes, providing first-hand access for students to research problems. Profs bring in their own experience and knowledge beyond books, courses therefore carry more weight.

The exams are rigorous and students put in a lot of effort for their grades. Students are treated with respect and trust, which students return. If students ask questions, point out flaws, it is appreciated. Student feedback is taken seriously, and provides vital input to teaching methodology and efforts. This is all done concious

The support staff is excellent too. Moreover, there is very little paper pushing and delay due to administrative overhead, bane of Indian system.

Facilities are many-folds better than India, of course, that comes with appropriate investments. Technology is ubiquitous, and is put to a good use. Everyone answers emails within 24 hours.

==============================

5) how were the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

While some courses depended only on the Profs self made notes and experience, others depended on books. Course activities range from assignments, seminars to projects; these elements are flexible. Prof decides to hold an exam or otherwise, and which elements weigh how much. Usually course assignments were weekly, carry a lot of weight and can not be copied. They also kept students up to date on material taught.

Courses are generally well structured, with a mix of both theory and application. Class interaction is very much encouraged (read summary of earlier question above). Lab work and exercises are an important part of the syllabus.

====================================

6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?

My summary:
Professors are open to dialogue and discussions are encouraged. Students are expected to ask questions and discuss with profs. Classes were not compulsory, but material was taught in such a good manner that classroom interaction was valued very highly.

There is a lot of emphasis on self work.: reading background stuff, latest research etc Students take their homework and assignments seriously. There is no copying unlike in India. In fact, given research-based assignments, it is hard to google and find answers. Any copy attempts is dealt with severely.

Peer grading enabled students not only to evaluate other submissions but also to appreciate different ways of solving the same problem. Some of the courses had project components that were entirely student evaluated.


=======================================

7) if you had to remodel Indian system, would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

My summary:

  1. Reduce class sizes (hire more faculty)
  2. Increase electives and choices for students (less rigid pattern of education)
  3. Encourage faculty research, make them connect students with their work.
  4. Let faculty decide courses' learning goals, teaching and grading methodologies.
  5. Faculty performance review, sincere student feedback.
  6. Thorough teaching, flexible grading and strict compliance of anti-copy rules.
  7. Make courses more experience/ research oriented (not theory only)
  8. Respect students, encourage academic discussions in classroom and outside, and make their life easier with less admin overheads.
  9. Introduce TA system, encourage peer learning inside and outside the classroom.




Read replies yourself for more.



===============================================


--AN
--

4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare Indian Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.

I took three courses, the faculty for which were as follows :
Professor A : Very bookish, used to put up lecture notes *and* then write almost exactly the same stuff on the blackboard, very little attempt at intuitive teaching. :(

Professor B : New prof from MIT, teaching a course for the first time, enthusiastic, and tried to be helpful, but was kind of erratic - didn't explain some topics well. Nevertheless, this course was enjoyable as a whole.

Professor C : The prof. who adopted the real-world kind of teaching approach I described earlier. Very good, the only complaint I had was, he graded horribly in a class of 20..still I believe that is mostly irrelevant

Now I guess almost all of these could be found in any other research group. One thing I did *not* find (sadly) was an improvement in *everyone's* teaching styles. So I guess that shows that as far as taught courses are concerned, the teaching has quirks almost everywhere.

As regards labs, there is little I can say, as the facilities here are far more numerous than any we had in India (not necessarily more advanced, only more opportunity to use them) As regards support staff, they are excellent here, and there is little of the paper-pushing and forms in triplicate mentality that seems to pervade a lot of the administrative thinking at xxxx.
5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

Aside from working in a lab, I didn't have any labs per se this semester. One of our courses contained a final project instead of a final exam, and it tested us quite a bit on the material covered, while managing to remain interesting.
6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?

The part which I found was slightly different from India (I'm assuming that expectations such as a proper understanding of theory, etc. are common factors everywhere) was that student-professor interaction was expected to be at a far higher level than usual. The office hours (chamber consultation hours) were expected to be used to the fullest.


7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).


One of the things I mentioned, and would like to mention again, is that the system at xxxx, consisting of assignments timed at 15-day intervals at max, seemed to work out better for me. Here, there is a weekly system of homeworks for almost each course, and if you take 3 theory-intensive courses (as I did this sem) it is a struggle to keep it going, leaving less time to actually ponder over the theory.

Now, as regards ideas if I had to remodel xxxx, I might do the following :

- Reduce class size, and increase the number of courses that can be taken as electives. As I mentioned earlier, EE student who are sure about their future work probably might not need to take things like MechSol, or even, say, Principles of Management for that matter (our final exam of PoM was a joke due to some people copying rampantly). Unless it is absolutely essential to the fundamental nature of the degree, it should be the student's choice whether he/she wants to take it or not.

- Increase collaboration with other colleges in the area as regards projects, research, etc. I have seen some stellar projects during Quark made by people from GEC. Also, apparently (according to Axxx) we have MoUs with universities all the way upto MIT which allow exchange programs, etc. which have never been used. These could be used to their fullest extent.

- (Slightly controversial, but decided to mention it anyway :p) Stop expanding immediately. Until xxxx campus has been raised to the level of xxxx in terms of all research groups, increasing number of campuses will only serve to widen the perceived disparity between the campuses, and will ultimately lead to isolation of the graduates of these campuses as of a distinct level from xxxx Pxxxxx. (Thankfully that did not happen for our batch during MS admissions.)

if you don't mind, i would like to know about these issues from your other friends and colleagues (from xxxx or elsewhere in India). can you forward this email?

I will try to ask interested people and then forward it to them. That being said, there are very few people who are genuinely interested in furthering education in India as such,
=================================================

--NI--

4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.
The xxxx Physics Group is probably still among the best set of people I have interacted with. One thing different here is the ubiquitous use of technology. Professors and staff alike usually answer email immediately, (worst case within 24 hours) and are very open and encouraging. Feedback provided by students is very serious - there are rating for each instructor for each course. This provides a good way to check the quality of teaching, as a consistently low performance must be acted upon. It also provides teachers an opportunity to refine their approach. Again this is online and anonymous.

5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?
Grad courses are usually very project heavy, while undergrad ones will have a little more emphasis on exams. On an average, CMU courses will have 35-40% project, 15-20% labs/assignments and the rest for exams. What matters most - that depends on an individual as to what he/she is looking to learn. For a single individual, it might be different from course to course. I am focussing on learning various tools, techniques and softwares that I might use anywhere in the future.

6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?
Yes very much so. Class interaction is very much encouraged. Grad students will have a lot of emphasis on self work. Reading background stuff, latest research etc.
7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).
1) Frequent reviews of syllabus to keep content state-of-the-art.
2) More flexibilities
3) Review of performance of faculty.

=========================================================

--NC--


4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare xxxx Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.

The faculty was, in general, very good. The thing I liked was the emphasis on rigor in theory, followed up by exercises that gave a taste of practical applications. I believe this approach would greatly enhance the approach of teaching at xxxx, which is already at a good level.

Also, I think some of the courses at xxxx (this is with regard to my
experience of courses in EE) would have been better served if the exams were more challenging, with a commensurate leniency in grading, as opposed to general run-of-the-mill questions with stricter grading. Open-book tests at xxxx were a concept that I greatly admired, though in my later years, many courses did not have this component.

At Georgia Tech, we had a weekly seminar in the DSP Group, where a Professor or PhD student would explain an aspect of their ongoing research. This was helpful in giving students an idea of the cutting-edge research going on and also gave them an insight into what a particular Professor was working on. I guess maybe having something similar at xxxx would help in giving students an idea of whom they can talk to regarding taking up projects such as a COP/LOP/SOP.


5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

As I mentioned during my answers to the previous questions, the courses were generally well structured, with a mix of both theory and application, which was reflected in the exercises/assignments and exams. I think the xxxx system is also very good with respect to the continuous evaluation, as opposed to one final exam carrying all the weightage in terms of grades; however, I think a assignments/HW component in the courses at xxxx would be something to consider - perhaps we could have 2 midterms, assignments and a Comprehensive Exam instead of the 3 midterms and Compre.

A project component in the courses was also something that appealed to me and could be something to consider too, in courses where it would be feasible.


6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?

Students were expected to turn in good efforts on the HW assignments, following which (in some subjects) there was peer grading. This enabled the students not only to evaluate other submissions but also to appreciate different ways of solving the same problem. Some of the courses had project components that were entirely student evaluated. Also, the Professors always welcomed insights on various problems from students and were open to dialogue discussing topics more in depth than was covered in the class. Thus, students learned from both the Professor and each other, and this fostered deeper and quicker understanding of subject matter.


7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

I think I will glean some points from my answers to your other questions for this one, as I already mentioned some of my thoughts with regard to improving xxxx in those questions.

- Having more HW assignments, well spaced throughout the semester, is beneficial as one is constantly kept on one's toes and challenged to go beyond what is covered in the lectures.
- Giving a real-world feel to the course, through challenging assignments or exam questions will be beneficial in expanding the student's understanding of the course and bridging the gap between theory and practice to an extent. In my field, as in many others, MATLAB simulations are an excellent way of doing this.
- Making exams more challenging, while not putting undue stress on students about their grade. As I said, perhaps a few questions on an exam can be out-of-the-way, forcing students to apply their minds.
- Encouraging student discussion and dialogue to enhance understanding of the subject. Maybe having a weekly seminar wherein students take turns in giving talks about various topics can be an idea to think about. I know some student groups, including our Astronomy Club at xxxx, incorporated this, but it can also be a feature of senior-level courses undertaken in the 4th year. Students can be exposed to research papers and literature surveys, which would benefit them should they choose to go to graduate school.

Having said all this, I believe the curriculum at xxxx is definitely one of its strong points, together with the concept of continuous evaluation. Many colleges elsewhere in India do not have these strong points. Also, the idea of xxxxxxx School to give relevant industry
experience is a big plus. All in all, I believe xxxx has a great system, which can of course be evaluated and improved to be up-to-date and rigorous.

==========================================================

--AD--


4) how was faculty and support staff? can you
compare xxxx Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.

The main difference between the faculty that I saw here and in xxxx (not necessarily the Physics group, since I have not taken many courses with professors in this group) was that all the professors here are actively involved in research. If xxxx could invest more on research, it would go a long way in bridging the gap between Indian and the American education system.


5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

The labs and exercises are an important part of the syllabus. It's through these that I did most of my studying. Doing the homeworks and labs sincerely removed the need to study for tests later on as we understood all the content while working on the exercises. There's absolutely no rote learning here and that's the thing that mattered to me the most. Another important part of most courses is the class project, where students are encouraged to work on something new and interesting. Projects proved to be a very good learning experience.


6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?

Yes, the classrooms are very interactive and informal and students are encouraged to participate in it. The more questions we ask and more discussions we have, the more we all learn.


7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

I think that xxxx is in a much better place than most other academic institutions in India. With a few changes, it would be as good as the American ones. The main change I would make is more emphasis on research by faculty and hence getting students more interested in research. The second thing would be to change the curriculum so that it emphasizes less on rote learning but focuses more on applying concepts to practical situations through relevant lab work and home work.

=========================================================

--OP--

4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare xxxx Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.
I have not interacted with the Physics Group here at all.
5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?
The striking difference between Indian universities and the ones here w.r.t student activity in a class comes in the assignments. Assignments are taken very seriously here irrespective of the weightage they have , somehow...no one copies, everyone attempts and works it out on their own. In India (even in xxxx), just because its not an exam, assignments are taken v liberally. People copy without guilt and the one or two bright ones are more than happy to share their work.The assignments here are very well designed to enhance the learning process. Especially for the graduate courses, I have observed that at least 50% of a course's learning takes place through solving the assignments.
6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?
Not completely sure what you are referring to, but students are generally expected to contribute to the research being pursued by the professors of their department. Students make very solid, hands on contributions. Sometimes, the Professor vaguely proposes an idea, its the student who makes a detailed design and implements it. But then again, I guess I'm speaking only about graduate students.
7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

a. Make the university more research oriented. Thoroughly involve students in the research.
b. Make the grading system tougher. I got away with As in a bunch of courses where I learnt very little. This really reduces the motivation to learn (esp in xxx --- India --- where there are tons of exciting things to do instead of studying).
(I can see a 19 yr old xxxxx relaxing in a xxxx lawn thoroughly disappointed at her future self suggesting something so horrendous, "How did I turn into you?" she asks!)

I do not know how to give the suggestion of Assignments, because even if very challenging ones were assigned, I would not know how to inculcate the culture of spending time on them and honestly attempting them.

_____________________________________________________________________


--IM--

4) how was faculty and support staff? can you compare xxxx Physics group (i know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? we were a good group, i believe. we can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and i would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.

It does not matter how many degrees the professor has earned and we can never really
compare. Each professor has a varied approach, there is every kind of professor some extremely knowlegable, some who have earned degrees but not very student-friendly to work with. On the whole, what I think is the difference between the faculty here and faculty in xxxx is that, every professor here is very very actively working on a bunch of projects wheras in xxxx not all of them are involved in continuing research activity or atleast the students are not given a chance to participate in their research. It is of great help for the students to work with professors and real-time projects. Most of the professors here are associated with companies and real-time projects which is just not the case in xxxx

5) how was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? how did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

Syllabus as i have mentioned involves in assignments and projects very very frequently( this can be the case with only georgia tech because tech is considered to be very toughest and time-consuming). The students are always given a chance to participate in the professors research and use it as a class project as well. Also, the quality of projects are quite different. As I did in xxx, most of them in the class google it and get almost the same answer just tweak a little. But here the projects are modules of new ideas which cannot be googled, we might just get an idea from google(which also is mostly not). They also make sure that the disciplinary code is very very strict which ensures students dont copy. It is very easy to copy in xxxx. These projects here happened to help me quite a lot. It gives you a hang of the concept.

6) what was expected from students ? learning is a 2-way street, i believe, did you find something similar?

Not much difference in this aspect, according to me.

7) if you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

Change the entire course curriculum to include more practical implementations and more programming.

I would love to see the professors having tight-relations with companies and I would expect the professors to be in continuous learning phase so that they can come up with interesting projects and suggest students about the various opportunities and areas to learn and grow in. The students will have to be given a chance to work with the professors on these real-time projects, participate in conferences and be actively involved in the present happenings in their field of study.

I guess this is what I have observed from one semester that I have spent here. I began to love this system now (though a lot of cribbing goes on and on everyday). Hopefully, this helps education level in xxxx to raise. It is very nice of you to take time to analyze the weaknesses and possible improvements to the Indian Education System as a whole and particularly in xxxx

========================================================

--KA--

4) How was faculty and support staff? can you compare xxxx Physics group (I know this bunch the best) with one you saw there? We were a good group, I believe. We can improve hugely in terms of our approach, and I would like to know if you can point out the fault lines... Again, i would ask you to stress less on equipment (automated robots or moving screens) than approach, but do write about the over all thing.

4. As mentioned before, I believe the 'approach' is important. Students trust teachers, when teachers themselves trust their courses and subjects. When a teacher loves what he is teaching (and more importantly effectively communicates this fact) then a student loves the course too. Here teachers are liberal, easy; a student can leave the class when he wants to, ask AS many questions as he wants to (without fear that he will be snubbed or ridiculed), submit an assignment a day late if he has a valid excuse, and so on. Teachers here are more like friends (like you were to us, but like almost no other Prof at xxxx - India- is) and understood and most importantly RESPECTED students. I believe that is the most important thing which lacks at xxxx (India). Students are treated like thieves and thugs and almost all of us will agree to that. Working in a lab late (even if on a student's own project) should be easy and not so bureaucratic like India. It is then we will see real innovation. After lab hours in PHY123 ("Harvard"), I would sit with some undergrads in the lab who were working on developing a new protocol for the iPods. In a few days they did it, and even presented some papers on that.

In terms of knowledge base, the faculty here was definitely MUCH MUCH better than that India. I say that because the course came out of papers, of the "other" knowledge of Profs and not out of books. Profs would start with stories about what they'd done in their UGs, bring those papers to share with us, to show the real innovation outside classrooms. Discussions were encouraged immensely. And most importantly, these Professors prepare before coming to the class, unlike most of the ones at xxxx (India) I studied under. I wouldn't want to name them, but even the best of the Profs did so many mistakes in the class.

Just between you and me, as an example, Prof. xxxx knew nothing about what she was teaching. When I used to point out her mistakes (in a not-so subtle way) she'd get so irked. She threw me out of her class once for acting "over smart." I lost all the will to come to the class anymore or even learn the subject. I could have taught the course better than her! Of course I made an A in the course, but the whole
experience left me very bitter. If the same case had happened here (which did) the Profs are so understanding of their mistakes, and say sorry a million times, to actually make the student feel sorry for pointing it out (in a nice sort of way!) That helps because the next time the student is eager to learn more out of the course from the same Professor. The exact same thing that happened between Prof. xxxx (India), happened between me and Prof. yyyy (Man) or Prof zzzzz (Woman, both in India) to name some.

5) How was the syllabus and student activities (exercises, labs, seminars, research)? How did it make a difference, what exactly mattered to you the most?

5. Each course had its own structure. While some depended only on the Profs self made notes and experience, others depended on books. Almost always we didn't even have a prescribed text book (which I found unnerving initially!) but which worked better in the end because we focused more on what was going in the class room. Some courses are seminar courses too, but I didn't take any of them. Almost each course has weekly or bi-weekly HWs, and some of them had final take home exams too. One of them had a midterm group presentation and a final paper to be written. HWs since cannot be copied (unlike India) had to be done (they carried a huge percentage) and since they covered everything taught till that week, updated every student with what happened in the course till that date. The final projects were VERY intensive and often we didn't sleep for days! Also, please notice the file attached (I believe you've seen this before though.) This is a reply from the Prof for our midterm presentation. Such customized replies went to 12 other groups. This Prof. is perhaps the most famous professor in her field existing today and yet she put in the time and effort to do this. This is what impresses us as students; the Prof putting in as much work as the students (you did so for us in MT1 lab too.)

6) What was expected from students? Learning is a 2-way street, I believe, did you find something similar?

6. Students were expected to ask questions, lots of questions! The class was like a chatter box and students who didn't ask questions were mostly the ones who were asked questions BY the Professor. It kept us on our toes! Everyone was expected to attend the classes (and everyone did) because unless you attended the class you wouldn't get anything out of the slides, and you wouldn't be able to do your HWs. There was no compulsory attendance though. Also to make students attend the classes, the teachers did not compromise by giving questions from what is taught in class, but by teaching so, that the student would HAVE to attend the class. No surprise quizzes (which I personally believe didn't serve a single purpose in xxxx (india) since I never attended them and got A's in most of my courses.) and even if there were quizzes they were not "marked." Imagine getting all the quiz papers and the Prof. right then and there picking up them, not mentioning the name of the students who wrote them, and discussing what was wrong or right in their approaches. That way the topic was discussed then and there with students "actually" learning rather than caring more about their marks.


7) If you had to remodel xxxx, what would you do? Detail 2 things of your own (more if you have time).

7. Whoa. xxxx Would go topsy-turvy then.
a) Introduce TAs who are available to take a weekly "session" to review what was done in the class and answer students' queries. All students learn differently. Some are comfortable in a classroom setting with the Prof, others in a classroom setting with another student teaching them, and yet others who like to be alone while discussing questions. Introducing such students who are half way between a Prof and a student would be a very wise idea.
b) Introduce a MUCH stronger and centralized feedback system for Profs and courses. Students get to rate them back on various fields and that keeps the Profs on their toes. This also helps students decide on a particular elective course for the next semester.
c) Go easy on students. Respect them because they are because of who your institution runs. There are legitimate problems sometimes, and that needs to be understood. Each of them is different, and learns differently. I can remember so so so many instances of teachers shouting at students for no mistake of theirs. Stop that, there are other ways to tell them that they are wrong.
d) Focus on research. Make publishing at least one paper in an international journal mandatory. If we as students could publish papers only by our own work, then our Profs should too. That's how we will respect them too.
e) Get a larger non-teaching staff and delegate the administrative work to them. Teachers are already loaded with work and courses; this would give them more time to do research too.
f) Update the courses and not just the course text-books. Take ideas, information from the latest papers, discuss them with students.
g) In continuation, fascinate the students by giving hands-on demonstrations (if possible), reading excerpts out of papers (even if 50 years old!), talk about personalities who've existed in the area (for example Tesla, when teaching Magnetic fields!) and so on. Make it fun!
h) Pay more to the faculty. The reasons are understandable; better faculty, better …
i) Make the academic/other procedures for students a little bit more easier. It shouldn't be a pain to take a leave; the students are grown ups, or to simply audit a course or take an elective!

Monday, March 15, 2010

Indian and American Education System: a comparison - II

My first three questions

In my previous post I had requested a few, whom I was fortunate to interact with earlier, to compare their US experience with Indian education system. I had asked them some specific questions, and their feedback.

In this post I will compile and analyse their answers to three questions in the questionnaire.



1) did you take any courses that were similar to those in India? if so, can you compare what changed for better (and worse, of course).


[This was to compare two institutions directly, wherever possible]



My summary : In a US university, depth is valued more than breadth, so focus on a few fundamentals. Fundamentals are valued over ability to remember and calculate. There is a lot more rigor and students are given a lot of homework, which they take seriously unlike in India. There are also programming (MatLab etc.) exercises; laboratory projects; research papers to read/ work out; and research-related lab work to complement class-room learning.


2) were there any other courses (Logic or Astronomy) which you wish you had encountered before? perhaps, then you would remove some other courses from Indian curriculum, which ones?
[This is to understand what students desire in terms of background/ basic courses]

My summary : Rather than specific courses, what is (rightly, in my opinion) demanded is flexibility to choose from courses at an early stage. Also, the choice should be from a wider pool of courses, which allows for all branches to interconnect. Let the student decide which courses s/he wants to do. Fundamental courses in Math give a solid background, but only when taught with real-life examples, perhaps we should make teachers collaborate in a classroom. Plus, there should be arts courses, which would make it all-round development, of course given capable teachers (not making the director teach literature course, zilch of a background in that).



3) did you find any course very much enjoyable in your stay? which ones, and why? of course you will like some topics more than others, but it is the "learning experience" from a course that counts for me.

[This is to understand what does a course contain to make it students' favorite]


My summary : In US, a teacher would make students work with real-life examples: learning something, construct it yourself (learning 'amplifiers', make one). This means quality teaching, only a skilled teacher knows what to add to the course, and what activities to be carried out in what measure. Also, such a teacher would have to be active researcher to get the feel of the latest, esp. given the quick changes in "state of the art" of engineering and sciences.



Here are students' responses for you to read directly.

=======================================================
1) did you take any courses that were similar to those in India? if so, can you compare what changed for better (and worse, of course).
[This was to compare two institutions directly, wherever possible]

My summary : In a US university, depth is valued more than breadth, so focus on a few fundamentals. Fundamentals are valued over ability to remember and calculate. There is a lot more rigor and students are given a lot of homework, which they take seriously unlike in India. There are also programming (MatLab etc.) exercises; laboratory projects; research papers to read/ work out; and research-related lab work to complement class-room learning.


----AN----

I took Introduction to Probability Theory (which is a 500 level course), which was similar to the Probability and Statistics Course that I took in India
. The major difference was breadth v/s depth. I'd say (in India) we covered a wider range of material in the course, but mainly without mathematical proofs. On the other hand, in the course here, relatively less material was covered topic-wise, but whatever was covered, was covered completely, with proofs for each relevant theorem

---NI---

in the first sem, I was a bit bull-headed, and I did not take courses which I though I had covered. However, now I realize that a course here is probably twice as much worth as one in India. from the point of view of using softwares.

There is a lot more emphasis on assignments which need a significant amount of work/effort/thinking. There is also probably a lot more industry relevance. I think syllabi here are updated more frequently here, and that makes a lot of difference. This semester I am taking a undergrad course which will teach me formally the things that I tried out in my projects in India. Formal knowledge makes a significant difference to the effort required to reach project goals, I believe.

---
NC ---

Some of the courses that I took in DSP and Communications involved some matter that had been taught in India
too. The major difference that I observed was the stress on mathematical rigor, which was also reflected in the difficulty level of the problems assigned for HW. Further, the focus was on gaining a clear understanding of the fundamentals, and learning was facilitated through simulation examples via MATLAB, which made the subject more interesting.

--- AD ---

I have taken a number of courses here that are similar to
India. I found that here the professors give more importance to strongly nailing in the fundamental concepts. This method is complemented by a good amount of homework and laboratory work that is meant to help us understand the concepts better. I feel that I have learned a lot more from the courses here than I did in India.

--- OP---

I was TA of an undergraduate course which was the equivalent of Digital Design and Computer Architecture in India. From what I know

a) The computer architecture part was not given any focus / importance in India. It is taught very thoroughly here, the examinations even had questions involving the redesign of the micro architecture of a basic pipeline as per a new instruction set specified by the professor and other involving choosing cache sizes for a specific application. In India, we only vaguely touched upon pipelines and caches as mere concepts.

b) In India, the practicals for the course ( basic VHDL programming, hooking up simple logic circuits on bread boards etc) was a part of the coursework. At this university, there are no lab sessions or programming assignments for the course at all. All of the practical aspects have been bundled into a separate course which may or may not be taken in another sem.

--- IM ---

I have taken a similar networking class to what we had in India. There we had mostly theoretical questions based on it. But in US we had a couple of projects where we could practically implement what we are learning. This is one of the major things that is lacking in our education. We read a book, ace the exam and get an A and an year later we dont really remember the basics if we do not go into that field anymore.

--- KA
---

I took two courses very similar to India. PHY123 (commonly called the Art of Electronics, taught by Paul Horowitz and Tom Hayes) similar to MT1, ES1 and Advanced VLSI Design, similar to Analog and Digital VLSI Design (ADVD). Here are some thoughts:

PHY123: The course was simply outstanding! The first hour of the course was spent in discussing a chapter from Paul's book (Art of Electronics) and the rest 4-5 hours (yes!) working in the lab. The course did not require students to write lab reports (which was simply great, because according to me lab reports don't serve much purpose except for learning how to copy) but the HWs given at the end of each class covered all that was done in the lab. Hence one HAD to do the labs to get the HW questions right. Of course, the HW questions were novel and were generated over years (the course has been running for more than 30 years.) The course is immensely popular at MIT and the class was divided half and half between MIT and Harvard. The main point about the course which cannot be stressed more is the fact that it was FUN. I believe this is what we lack when we do courses
in India; they are rote. You get a book, see what has to be done in the lab and do it. While here, you play with circuits, there are demonstrations (like how to send sound using just an LED and decode and play it on a speaker, etc) already prepared by the Professors before the students enter the classroom. The handouts/quizzes are handed on a mini-train which travels on the table and reaches every student, and so on. These might sound naive, but I've SEEN these things work. After every 20mins in the first hour, students were given a 5 min break since the attention span of a human averages over there, and so on. I could go on writing about the course in fact! :)

Advanced VLSI Design: The course was an eyeopener. Topics were taught from scratch, and students were not assumed to know anything. Very intensive classes too, with HWs from book, but otherwise information (updated!) was given. VLSI is an ever changing field, and instead of sticking to a book, students were made to read papers, comment on them etc. Each week an assignment was given which started from scratch design and culminated in students learning extensive use of Cadence softwares (which is EXTREMELY necessary for EE grads and not taught in India.)

==========================================================


2) were there any other courses (Logic or Astronomy) which you wish you had encountered before? perhaps, then you would remove some other courses from India curriculum, which ones?

My summary : Rather than specific courses, what is (rightly, in my opinion) demanded is flexibility to choose from courses at an early stage. Also, the choice should be from a wider pool of courses, which allows for all branches to interconnect. Let the student decide which courses s/he wants to do. Fundamental courses in Math give a solid background, but only when taught with real-life examples, perhaps we should make teachers collaborate in a classroom. Plus, there should be arts courses, which would make it all-round development, of course given capable teachers (not making the director teach literature course, zilch of a background in that).

--- AN---

If I were given the choice, I might consider removing Mechanics of Solids for Electrical Engineers, and perhaps replace it with a course teaching Object Oriented Programming, perhaps through Python. One thing you find here is that you're almost expected to know OOP (or rather, it isn't a minus point if you don't, but a big plus if you do...you can get started on projects etc. much more quickly if you know C++ or Java)

--- NI---

One thing I would encourage in India is the flexibilities offered here. It is not important whether the degree name is EnI or EEE, I should be allowed to do more courses of my interest rather than all the CDCs. Maybe there can be different 'tracks' like Control Systems, Systems, Signal Processing etc. You get the idea.. The Maths courses that India has - and it has a lot - are really helpful in providing background [Asgekar: "And I always found Math classrooms empty"]

--- NC ---

I wish I had understood the importance of Linear Algebra in Signal Processing. When we were taught this course in the 1st year at India came across as a relatively abstract, difficult though interesting course, but I believe we were not given enough real-world perspective. [Asgekar: "Read my comment above"]

Further, I also wish that I had done a more rigorous course on random signals/random processes. It was covered in 1 chapter in the Communication Systems course in India.
but the material was covered very quickly, I believe it has enough content to merit a separate course.

Also, I know it is difficult to increase the flexibility, but I think it would help if the Compulsory Discipline Courses in India
had a wider scope and students could choose from a pool of courses, as against the compulsory 8 courses that we had to do in our 3rd year. In my case, I would have rather done a course on Random Signals than, say, Power Electronics or VLSI Design.

--- AD ---

Actually, I think the Indian
curriculum was very good and I wouldn't drop any courses from it. The method of tackling the courses is what needs to be changed a little bit. I did feel it would have been useful to include Operating Systems course in the ECE required course work.

--- OP---

There are many interesting courses to choose from at universities in U.S.A. Though I wondered sometimes why Indian Univ
had a limited choice of courses, I felt that the idea may not be practical considering both the smaller number of students and the fewer degrees offered. We only had Engineering and Sciences as the programs offered. On the other hand, universities here offer hundreds of degrees ranging from Archeology to Creative Writing to Law. Hence any course would find a good number of students wanting to take it, this may not be the case in India.

--- IM ---

I am extremely unhappy about the number of electives that are offered in India. Undergrad is a time for people to know what they are interested in and shape their career in. How can they just restrict us to a couple of electives? I would have loved to take foreign languages, give a shot at photography. There is not much importance given to art in India, may be it is not related to our college alone, but Art and psychology and public affairs are all extremely important to the universities here.

--- KA---

2) Instead of removing a course from Indian curriculum (MT2 can be removed!) improving them is a better option. Courses like CP2 do nothing to teach much except know how pointers work. Many many more assignments should be given at India.

==========================================================


3) did you find any course very much enjoyable in your stay? which ones, and why? of course you will like some topics more than others, but it is the "learning experience" from a course that counts for me.

My summary : In US, a teacher would make students work with real-life examples: learning something, construct it yourself (learning 'amplifiers', make one). This means quality teaching, only a skilled teacher knows what to add to the course, and what activities to be carried out in what measure. Also, such a teacher would have to be active researcher to get the feel of the latest, esp. given the quick changes in "state of the art" of engineering and sciences.


--- AN---

Well, I liked a course on Coding Theory that I took. The professor in charge of the course explained the theory very lucidly and with real-world examples of codes. In general, he always tried to adhere to the "how do we construct an *actual* code with these principles, and model real-world error probabilities into it, etc" approach.


--- NC ---

Three courses that I really enjoyed at ... were:

1) Digital Communication (basic M-ary communication system design and performance analysis in AWGN channels)
2) Digital Processing of Speech Signals (speech production models, analysis techniques and applications such as coding, recognition)
3) Harmonic Analysis and Signal Processing (wavelets and time-frequency representations, approximation theory, best basis and sparse approximation, statistical estimation, compression, inverse problems)

I learned a lot through these courses, due to a combination of skilled teaching, well-planned coursework and insightful assignments/projects. Again, I believe that learning was greatly enhanced by incorporating extensive MATLAB simulations into the coursework.

--- AD ---

The best course that I have done here is VLSI Principles. The course content, homeworks and lab work were designed to give a thorough understanding of digital chip design. The highlight of the course was that it is superbly oriented with the current semiconductor industry, giving us hands-on experience with state-of-the-art tools and designs through lab assignments.

--- OP---

I loved the course Digital VLSI Circuits Design. The course project involved doing the physical layout of an entire micro controller. It was extremely challenging, but also very very useful. The classes were also very impressive because of the professor's teaching style, he often used his incredible knowledge of "how its done in the industry" in lectures and shared the simple intuitions he had about various concepts.


--- IM ---

The course I liked the most is Operating Systems and Image Processing. I liked Operating Systems because we have gained indepth knowledge of how things work, very low-level. We were introduced to working with shell scripts though it was not included in the course curriculum( which by the way has to drastically improve to include more practical coding and programming, which a normal college in India has but unfortunately we dont). Image Processing was interesting because I could apply whatever I have learnt by working on a project extensively. The charm of a topic is only reliased when we work on it and see what it is all about. I think our course curriculum gives more importance to include theory of as many topics as possible but that does not help in any way if we cant use it. They should try testing the students on projects more than on tests.

--- KA---

3)See answer 1. Apart from that, a course at MIT called Low Power VLSI Design was very very useful. The course was finely broken up into topics required for Low Power Design without overwhelming the students. The HWs were made challenging but not so much that a student would be dissuaded. The course culminated with a project which covered EVERYTHING taught in it.