AICTE takes big step to facilitate Engineering Education in Indian Languages

AICTE takes big step to facilitate Engineering Education in Indian Languages

Last Updated Jul - 18 - 2022, 11:11 AM | Source : | Visitors : 18

New Delhi: With the aim to make engineering accessible to students of all Indian languages, The All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) is undertaking a mighty mission to make technical courses available in non-English languages. To aware people of the same, AICTE organized an enlightening day-long conclave titled ‘Implementation of National Education Policy (NEP) 2020: Facilitating Engineering Education in Indian Languages’ on July 15, 2022, at the AICTE headquarters in New Delhi.

The Conclave encouraged interactions with the Vice-Chancellors of technical universities, Directors of NITs and professional bodies like the Indian National Academy of Engineering (INAE) to make people aware of the technical education in the Indian languages. In alignment with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, AICTE aims to make engineering accessible to speakers of all major indigenous languages.

“Language is a powerful medium to reach the last person standing and give students the confidence to learn better in their own language. Language should not be a barrier to learning. After the first year, we are ramping up our translation and writing in Indian languages for the second and further years of engineering. It is getting even more intense as subjects diversify and electives come in,” said Prof. Anil D. Sahasrabudhe, Chairman, AICTE.

READ | Undergraduate Curriculum Framework will not lessen teacher’s workload: DU Vice Chancellor

The conclave also felicitated key persons across different states aiding AICTE in translating engineering books into Indian languages. During the program, students pursuing engineering courses (Computer Science and Engineering) in Indian languages such as Marathi, Telugu and Hindi, also shared their feedback, citing ease of study and learning concepts and terminology.

“Language and education are closely interlinked. NEP 2020 talks about education as well as language. We must encourage learning in the original language a child is born in. Moreover, in the past few years, we have trained 50,000 educators in universal human values who go beyond the curriculum and impart basics of humanity and civilization,” said Prof M P Poonia, Vice-Chairman, AICTE.

Notably, AICTE has initiated technical education in Indian languages in the year 2021-22 to decentralize the availability of study material in only English. About 20 institutions had started programs at Under Graduate and Diploma levels in six languages, i.e. Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, Kannada, Tamil & Marathi, across ten states in which 255 students were enrolled.

“Translations using digitized tools can help in speed and scale of the project, but the human mind is needed for review of the translation quality. We must prepare educators and principals to review them. 90 percent of our GDP does not come from the use of English, but from the local languages. More than teaching language, we must teach through language. We must revive traditional knowledge systems and our Indian roots through language. I highly respect this initiative by AICTE,” said Prof Chamu Krishna Shastry, Chairman, High Powered Committee for the Promotion of Indian Languages, Ministry of Education.

READ | CBSE Result 2022 Live Updates: Class 10th, 12th results to be out on?

Santosh Kumar Taneja, Samkalp Foundation Trust, New Delhi, said, “There’s a widespread belief that Indian languages cannot take you ahead in life. It’s a great injustice to our Indian languages that we don’t let our students pursue higher education in it. Out of the 24 lakh engineering seats in India each year, only 18 lakh seats get filled. If we open these seats to engineering in Indian languages, we can open up many more opportunities.”

“The non-availability of course material in Indian languages is the major hurdle in engineering in one’s own mother tongue, to tackle which we have started original book writing and translations. To provide the course material for engineering in Indian Languages, AICTE had introduced technical book writing and translation in 12 scheduled Indian languages – Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Gujarati, Kannada, Punjabi, Odia, Assamese, Urdu and Malayalam,” shared Prof Rajive Kumar, Member Secretary, AICTE.

AICTE has earmarked a budget of Rs 18.6 crores for developing the second-year course material in English and its translation into 12 Indian languages.

Simultaneously, on the University front, 40 institutes across 10 states namely Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and West Bengal have come forward to start engineering education in one or more disciplines in six Indian Languages: Bengali, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi, Tamil and Telugu with a total intake capacity of 2070 students in 2022-23, in this academic year.

READ | NIRF Rankings 2022: IIT Madras tops in Overall Category

Three expert panel discussions took place, featuring education stalwarts’ views on themes such as (i) Genesis and Importance of Education in the mother tongue, (ii) Role of the Universities/State Technical Education Department/Regulatory Bodies as an enabler to impart technical education in Indian Languages, and (iii) Future Road Map to make outcome-based education accessible in Indian languages.

Vice-chancellors, directors and professors of various universities, including IGNOU, IIT Kanpur, NIT Nagaland, Gujarat Technological University, and IIITDM Jabalpur, joined the program as panelists.

(Inputs from Education Diary)

Share :

Trending this week

NEET UG 2024: Supreme Court Declines to Stay Results Despite Alleged Paper Leak

May - 18

The Supreme Court on Friday refused to grant a stay on the declaration of National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) undergraduate exam results.... Read More

NCERT Offers Free Online Courses on the SWAYAM Portal for Classes XI and XII

May - 18

The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has introduced MOOCs catering to students in class XI and XII. The NCERT has been... Read More

IIT Delhi Launches STEM Mentorship Programme For School Girls

May - 18

The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi has launched the third batch of its STEM Mentorship Programme tailored for high school girls in Clas... Read More