Indian Institutes of Technology Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) are the premier educational institutions for science and technology spread all over India . At present, there are seven IITs, in Kharagpur, Mumbai, Chennai, Kanpur, New Delhi, Guwahati and Roorkee.There are about 1500 undergraduate and 2000 graduate students in each IIT (except for IIT Guwahati which is about half this size). The IITs are very well respected worldwide. The IITs have an acceptance rate of 2% i.e. out of every 50 students appearing for its IIT-JEE (Joint Entrance Exam) every year, only one gets selected. This makes them some of the most difficult colleges in the world to get in to, since even Harvard has an acceptance rate of 8%.
A student/alumnus of the Indian Institutes of Technology is informally known as an IITian. Many IIT alumni have excelled in the Silicon Valley.
In early 2004, the IITs and the IIMs were struck in a controversy with the then ruling BJP government branding them as institutes of elitism, where people from weaker sections of the country found it tough to enter.
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2 Notable Alumni 3 Notable Praises 4 List of fictional IITians 5 Books on IIT-ians 6 External links |
In 1946, Sarkar Committee was setup to explore setting up technical institutes of higher education for post-war industrial development of India by the Indian Government under a special act by the President. The recommendations of the Sarkar Committee were modelled along the lines of great US universities, notably the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
The first IIT was born in May 1950 in Kharagpur, West Bengal at the site of Hijli Detention camp. Four other campuses were subsequently founded at Mumbai (1958), Chennai (1959), Kanpur (1960), New Delhi (1961). In 1995, a sixth campus at Guwahati was added and most recently in 2001, a seventh campus was established in Roorkee by upgrading Roorkee University, one of India's oldest engineering institutions, into an IIT.
Today, IITs offers undergraduate, integrated postgraduate, postgraduate and doctoral degrees in over 25 different engineering, technology and business/management disciplines.History
| Name | Campus | Year | Achievement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ajay Bharadwaj | Delhi | 1982 | President, Biocon India |
| Arjun Malhotra | Kharagpur | 1970 | Co-founder, HCL Technologies |
| Arun Sarin | Delhi | - | CEO of Vodafone |
| Avi Nash | - | - | Advisory Director, Goldman Sachs |
| Bharat Desai | Mumbai | 1975 | Chairman and CEO, Syntel |
| Gururaj Deshpande | Chennai | - | Co-founder Sycamore Networks |
| Kanwal Rekhi | Mumbai | - | CEO Ensim Corporation; Ex-CTO Novell |
| Madhu Sudan | Delhi | 1987 | Nevanlinna Prize, 2002 |
| Manohar Parrikar | Mumbai | 1978 | Chief Minister, Goa |
| N.R. Narayana Murthy | Kanpur (M Tech) | - | Co-founder and Chairman of Infosys |
| Nandan Nilekani | Mumbai | 1978 | Co-founder and CEO of Infosys |
| Rajat Gupta | Delhi | 1971 | Managing Director, McKinsey; |
| Rakesh Gangwal | - | - | CEO Worldspan, Ex-CEO US Airways Group |
| Ravi Uppal | Delhi | - | Vice-Chairman and MD, ABB India |
| Som Mittal | Kanpur | 1973 | CEO Digital GlobalSoft |
| Victor Menezes | Mumbai | - | Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup |
| Vindi Banga | - | - | Chairman, HLL |
| Vinod Khosla | Delhi | 1976 | Co-founder Sun Microsystems |
Since the first IIT was set up in the 1950s, thousands of initiates have walked out of the campus gates of IIT Kharagpur, Mumbai, Chennai and elsewhere to become leaders in their chosen fields. In India, they head many of the biggest and most admired professionally managed companies. Abroad, they lead giant corporations, and their feats figure in the folklore of Silicon Valley. The power that the alumni of this one bunch of undergraduate schools wields in business, academicia and research is comparable to that of Cambridge and Oxford in the heyday of the British Empire.
Sandipan Deb, himself an IITian, delves into his own experience and those of scores of alumni to try and explain what makes IITians such outstanding achievers. In part, it may be that they cannot be anything else: only one in every hundred applicants gets admitted. Harvard, in comparison, takes one in eight. The unique village-like campuses peopled only by the super-bright and the intensely competitive hone the IITians' skills further. No wonder then that when they leave the campus, IITians look upon themselves as special people, capable of competing in their field with the best in the world. And, as their record shows, succeeding.
This is an Article on Indian Institutes of Technology. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Indian Institutes of Technology Notable Praises
List of fictional IITians
Books on IIT-ians
The IITians: The Story of a Remarkable Indian Institution and How its Alumni Are Reshaping the World
External links
