University of Engineering & Management
News & Achievements
The real reason why 95% of Indian engineers can't code
A few years ago, a McKinsey report said just a quarter of engineersNSE -2.55 % in India were actually employable. Of late, some other studies put it at less than 20%. Recently, a survey by employability assessment firm Aspiring Minds said 95% of Indian engineers can’t code.
Though graduates from India's premiere engineering colleges such as the IITs are still in demand, it is the thousands of other engineering colleges and ITIs that churn out millions of graduates every year whose employability is questionable.
There is a glut of engineers in the country and most of them are not employable. Old problems of low-quality education and outdated curricula have become more pronounced with automation and emerging technology reshaping businesses.
The problem that has been growing for the last nearly two decades is the over-capacity of colleges.
That's why the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) wants to close down about 800 engineering colleges across India. There are no takers for their seats, and admissions are plunging in these institutions every year.
Nearly 150 colleges are closed down voluntarily every year due to stricter AICTE rules. According to a rule of the council, colleges that lack proper infrastructure and report less than 30% admissions for five consecutive years will have to be shut down. AICTE has approved the progressive closure of more than 410 colleges across India, from 2014-15 to 2017-18.
In 2003, the government formed a committee to find out how technical education was doing in the country. The UR Rao Committee flagged a future glut of graduates. It found technical education was expanding rapidly which could not be sustained in the long run as there wasn't as much demand for as supply of engineering graduates.
Fifteen years later, the committee stands vindicated.
Nearly eight lakh BE/BTech students graduated last year, but only less than half of them got jobs through campus placement, according to data from All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE).
The Rao committee had suggested a five-year moratorium on approvals for undergraduate technical institutions in states where the student intake exceeded the then national average of 150 seats per million population, according to an Indian Express a report.
However, Rao’s suggestion was never followed. In 2008-09, 30 per cent more students joined engineering colleges over the previous year, the highest jump since 2001, according to the AICTE data. More than over 700 new colleges were approved that year.
Half of the 15.5 lakh BE/BTech seats were vacant in 3,291 engineering colleges in India in 2016-17.
A glut of engineering colleges and resultant over-supply of graduates has led to quality going down.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's dream project of 'Make in India' is hobbled by lack of employable graduates. The project aspires to increase manufacturing capacity in India and generate 100 million jobs by 2022. That's too difficult with the kind of graduates our engineering colleges churn out.
India's much-touted demographic dividend, which can help India compete with China in manufacturing in near future, will turn into a burden if employbility of graduates does not go up. The jobs sector is already in stress. If the quality of skilled labour does not improve, latest technology that requires updated learning would cause a huge unemployment crisis.
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//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/62067588.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
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May 3, 2018
News Articles
80% engineers unemployable as they lack key skills: Report
CHARMINAR: There seem to be a significant gap in skills in the city as 80 per cent of engineering graduates are unemployable, as per Aspiring Mind Report 2016, highlighting the need for an upgraded education and training system.
City educators say that thousands of youngsters are being trained but they do not possess necessary skill and talent. While the syllabus of other countries is said to be practical, thousands of engineers are jobless in the state due to lack of these practical skills.
Engineering students say the curriculum for engineering education does not favour highprofile jobs in construction and building sector, as the academic syllabus often fail to fulfil real-world applications. "Many Indian engineers are not even aware of the international standards that are exercised in high-profile construction projects like the Makkah Tower or the Hyderabad Metro Rail project. The education system needs to be upgraded and make it more coherent with real-world execution and not depend on International companies,'' Azeemuddin Azad, an engineer explained.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/80-engineers-unemployable-as-they-lack-key-skills-report/articleshow/58141318.cms
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May 3, 2018
News Articles
Prof. Dr. Ashok Sharma, UGC Emeritus Fellow addressed the students and teachers of the UEM Jaipur
Prof. Dr. Ashok Sharma, UGC Emeritus Fellow addressed the students and teachers of the University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur on 28th April, 2018 at the University premises.
Prof. Sharma has innumerable number of research publications and is a reputed personality in the academic world. He was extremely pleased to visit the different facilities at the UEM Jaipur.
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May 2, 2018
Faculty Development Programs, University Daily News
Wonderful words from guardian of UEM Jaipur Student
Wonderful words from Michael Peter Moven, guardian of Roselina Maria Moven, 4th year student of the University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur. Roselina got 4 job offers from campus placement and she is joining Timken India, Bangalore, a leading company in software domain.
[video mp4="https://media-staging.uem.edu.in/uploads/2018/05/VID-20180501-WA0009.mp4"][/video]
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May 1, 2018
Other events, University Daily News
Career Fair of UEM Jaipur at Gangtok
Career Fair of University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur at Gangtok.
#uem #careerfair
[gallery ids="6077,6078,6079"]
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May 1, 2018
Other events, University Daily News
A wall of UEM Jaipur, having been painted by Koushik Nath, current 4th year student of UEM Jaipur
University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur is a place where apart from the strict and interesting academics, and the wonderful placement records, students are given the opportunity to exhibit their talent all round through the different cultural and sports clubs existing in the University, may be in arts, may be in sports, may be in music, may be in dance, whatsoever.
For eg. the attached picture shows a wall of UEM Jaipur, having been painted by Koushik Nath, current 4th year student of the University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur.
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Apr 30, 2018
Other events, University Daily News
Launch of a missile by UEM Jaipur Students
The video shows the launch of a missile by the students of the University of Engineering & Management (UEM), Jaipur, which has been designed and manufactured by themselves in their UEM Jaipur laboratory.
This can be very effectively used in Army, since the launching machine of the missile can be adjusted to any height before launching the missile, through an electronic remote, that the students also manufactured, and also can be closed down after the launching is over.
Hence any projection of any angle can be achieved, easily without mechanical efforts.
[video mp4="https://media-staging.uem.edu.in/uploads/2018/04/VID-20180428-WA0015.mp4"][/video]
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Apr 29, 2018
Other events, University Daily News
FDP session by Prof. Dr. Ashok Sharma, UGC emeritus fellow
Prof. Dr. Ashok Sharma, UGC emeritus fellow, taking FDP session today i.e., on 28th April 2018.
[gallery ids="6061,6062,6060"]
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Apr 28, 2018
Faculty Development Programs, University Daily News