In an effort to curb coaching menace, HRD is preparing to bring app for the students appearing in the IIT entrance examination.
Speaking at an event organized by Education Promotion Society for India (EPSFI), a body comprising private deemed universities, Irani said her ministry aims to resolve the various regulatory issues faced by these bodies while expressing concern over commercialisation of education. |
The HRD ministry is coming up with a mobile app and portal containing free lectures from IIT faculty on various subjects and previous years' question papers of entrance tests to these prestigious engineering institutions. HRD Minister Smriti Irani today said it has also been decided that the questions in the IIT-JEE entrance test would conform to class XII syllabus. Speaking at an event organized by Education Promotion Society for India (EPSFI), a body comprising private deemed universities, Irani said her ministry aims to resolve the various regulatory issues faced by these bodies while expressing concern over commercialisation of education.
Referring to the "menace of the coaching industry", Irani said one of the biggest pressures on students preparing for IIT entrance exam is to seek outside help in preparation. "That is why the government has decided to dedicate in the forthcoming two months, an IIT-Pal portal and mobile app on which 50 years of IIT (entrance) examination papers will be available free of cost. "In all segments of knowledge on the basis of which students take the IIT entrance exam, some of the IIT academicians and faculty members will give lectures available on this app, so that students can have that additional learning," she added.
Keeping in mind the requirements of students who have studied in regional languages, this content will be available in 13 languages. She said in conjunction with IIT council, it has been now ensured that the question papers conform to the Class XII syllabus. Irani said another "reality" which needs to be confronted is about the commercialisation of education.
"We all know that capitation fee is not allowed. We all know that students cannot be harassed in the middle of the academic year to cough up money for which no disclosure was made," she said, suggesting that not all institutions in the private sector were following the norms. She asked the EPSFI to engage with administrators and weed out "wrongdoers who bring a bad name to the sector" like fake universities and added that states have already been asked to take action against such universities.