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Educational News Today
Saturday, July 05, 2008
Civil engg in merely 30% TN colleges

Chennai: It may be an exciting career option considering the boom in the infrastructure, energy and construction sector, but as far as Tamil Nadu is concerned, civil engineering is still perceived as a poor career option by BE/B.Tech aspirants. An analysis of the courses offered in the 272 engineering colleges in Tamil Nadu reveals that less than 30% of institutions offer civil engineering.

To be precise, just 81 of the 272 colleges in the government, aided and self-financing sectors offer civil engineering courses for undergraduates, as per statistics released by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) on June 30.


This mismatch between potential demand and supply has clearly emerged due to the manner in which industry has evolved, say experts. Following the growth of the software sector since the mid-90's, self-financing colleges had slashed their intake in civil engineering and instead applied to the AICTE to increase student strength in the more popular courses.

The most favoured options soon became Electronics and Communication Engineering, Electrical and Electronics Engineering and Computer Science Engineering. Students, aware of the boom in cities such as Bangalore and Pune, want admissions to software courses, hoping to land plum jobs in IT and IT Enabled Services companies.

Today, there are just 4,265 seats in BE Civil Engineering in the 81 colleges, all put together. "Here again, if you notice, only three institutions —- Kongu Engineering College, St Peter's Engineering College (which has since become a deemed university) and the Kanyakumari-based Sun College of Engineering and Technology — are offering 120 seats in the branch. On the other hand, as many as 20 colleges have just 30 seats each in civil engineering," pointed out an academic.

A students' intake of 60 is usually considered the full strength for a class. But only 49 colleges have this intake in civil engineering. While eight colleges have an intake of 40 students each, one institution admits 45 students.

A students' intake of 60 is usually considered the full strength for a class. But only 49 colleges have this intake in civil engineering. While eight colleges have an intake of 40 students each, one institution admits 45 students.

Interestingly, the Madha Engineering College based in suburban Chennai is the first to sense the change in the industry scenario and increase its intake for the civil engineering course from 30 students last year to 60 for the new academic year. In contrast, almost all the other colleges prefer to continue offering courses in IT and software with most showing an intake of 60 in each class.

"This is a very sad scenario. The information technology sector has witnessed a second slowdown in the last five years and therefore is not reliable. Whereas, in a country like India where infrastructure development has just begun students who opt for civil engineering will have a secure future. Therefore, they must apply their mind while choosing a course instead of following a trend," argued a professor of Anna University, who did not want to be named.
Courtesy: The Times of India
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