National Institutes of Technology

"National Institute of Technology" redirects here. For other uses, see National Institute of Technology (disambiguation).
Patna
Raipur
Warangal
Bhopal
Durgapur
Jamshedpur
Nagpur
Srinagar(JK)
Surathkal
Allahabad
Calicut
Rourkela
Surat
Jaipur
Kurukshetra
Trichy
Agartala
Silchar
Hamirpur
Jalandhar
Goa
Karaikal
New Delhi
Srinagar(UK)
Ravangla
Aizawl
Shillong
Imphal
Dimapur
Tadepalligudem
Yupia
Location of the 31 NITs(Green).

The National Institutes of Technology (NITs) are a group of premier federally-funded public engineering institutes in India. These institutions have been declared as Institutes of National Importance alongside the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) by an Act of Parliament of India.[1] These institutes of national importance receive special recognition and funding from the Government of India. The NIT Council is the supreme governing body of India's National Institutes of Technology (NIT) system. All 31 NITs are funded by the Government of India. These institutes are among the top ranked engineering colleges in India. The National Institutes of Technology (NITs) have one of the lowest acceptance rates for engineering institutes, of around 2 to 3 percent, second only to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) in India.[2][3][4]

Admission to the under-graduate course (B.Tech) in NITs is through the highly competitive Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Mains.[5] From 2015, Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSSA) conducts common counselling and allocates seats jointly for all Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs). In 2015, over 1,300,000 candidates appeared for the JEE exam for admission to 28,000 undergraduate engineering seats in 68 centrally-funded technical institutes that included all 19 IITs (10,000 seats), 31 NITs (15,500 seats) and 18 IIITs (2,500 seats).[6][7][8]

NITs offer degree courses at bachelors, masters, and doctorate levels in various branches of engineering and technology. All NITs are autonomous which enables them to set up their own curriculum.

On their inception decades ago, all NITs were referred to as Regional Engineering Colleges (RECs) and were governed by their respective state governments. In 2002, MHRD Minister Murli Manohar Joshi decided to upgrade all RECs to "National Institutes of Technology" (NITs). The upgrade was designed along the lines of the prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). NITs were founded to promote regional diversity and multi-cultural understanding in India. Comprising thirty-one autonomous institutes, they are each located in one major state/territory of India. In 2007,the Indian government declared these schools as Institutes of National Importance.

Admission to NITs was done by the erstwhile All India Engineering Entrance Examination, now replaced by Joint Entrance Examination Main (JEE Main) conducted across India.Central Counselling Board(CCB) was conducting the Online counselling for admission into NITs till 2012. It was then replaced by Central Seat Allocation Board (CSAB) which held the seat allocation process in NITs till 2014. From 2015, Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) allocated the seats in IITs, IIITs and NITs. Joint Seat Allocation Authority 2015 (JoSAA 2015) conducted the joint admission process for a total of 31 NITs.[9][10][11]

History

See also: History of RECs

The Government started fourteen RECs between 1959 and 1965, at Warangal, Calicut, Durgapur, Kurukshetra, Jamshedpur, Jaipur, Nagpur, Rourkela, Srinagar, Surathkal, Surat, Trichy, Bhopal, and Allahabad. It established one in Silchar in 1967 and added two others located at Hamirpur in 1986, and Jalandhar in 1987.

The RECs were jointly operated by the central government and the concerned state government. Non-recurring expenditures and expenditures for post-graduate courses during the REC period were borne by the central government while recurring expenditure on undergraduate courses was shared equally by central and state governments.

The success of technology-based industry led to high demand for technical and scientific education. Due to the enormous costs and infrastructure involved in creating globally respected Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT), in 2002 MHRD Minister Murli Manohar Joshi decided to upgrade RECs to "National Institutes of Technology" (NITs) instead of creating IITs. The central government controls NITs and provides all funding. In 2002, all RECs became NITs.

The upgrade was designed along the lines of the prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) after it was concluded that RECs had potential as proven by the success of their alumni and their contributions in the field of technical education. Subsequently, funding and autonomy for NITs increased, and they award degrees which have raised their graduates' perceived value. These changes implemented recommendations of the "High Powered Review Committee" (HPRC).[12] The HPRC, chaired by R.A. Mashelkar, submitted its report entitled "Strategic Road Map for Academic Excellence of Future RECs" in 1998.

In 2002, MHRD issued NIT status to three more colleges, located at Patna (Bihar Engineering College—a 110-year-old college), Raipur (Government Engineering College),[13] and Agartala (Tripura Engineering College).[13] Based on the request of state governments and feasibility, future NITs are either converted from existing institutes or can be freshly created. The 21st (and the first brand-new) NIT is planned for Imphal in the north-eastern state of Manipur at an initial cost of Rs. 500 crores. In 2010, the government announced setting up ten new NITs[14] in the remaining states/territories. This would lead to every state in India having its own NIT.

With the technology based industry's continuing growth, the government decided to upgrade twenty National Institutes of Technology to full-fledged technical universities. Parliament passed enabling legislation, the National Institutes of Technology Act in 2007 and took effect on 15 August of that year. The target is to fulfill the need for quality manpower in the field of engineering, science, and technology and to provide consistent governance, fee structure, and rules across the NITs.[15][16][17] The law designates each NIT an Institute of National Importance (INI).

Institute and financing

Average NIT funding increased to 100 crores by year 2011. On average, each NIT also receives 20-25 crore under World Bank funded Technical Education Quality Improvement Program (TEQIP I and TEQIP II).[18]

NITs and Locations
Serial No. Name Established Short Name City/Town State/UT Website Ranking (NIRF 2016)
14 NIT Kurukshetra1963 (2002) NITKKR KurukshetraHaryananitkkr.ac.in 48
11 NIT Calicut1961 (2002) NITC CalicutKeralanitc.ac.in 35
21 NIT Delhi 2010 NITD New Delhi Delhinitdelhi.ac.in 92
17 NIT Agartala 1965 (2006) NITA Agartala Tripura

nita.ac.in

52
8 NIT Durgapur1960 (2003) NITDGP DurgapurWest Bengalnitdgp.ac.in 30
22 NIT Goa 2010 NITG Farmagudi Goa nitgoa.ac.in 76
23 NIT Pondicherry 2010 NITPY Karaikal Pondicherrynitpy.ac.in
4 NIT Bhopal1960 (2002) MANIT BhopalMadhya Pradeshmanit.ac.in
15 NIT Jaipur1963 (2002) MNIT JaipurRajasthanmnit.ac.in 37
10 NIT Allahabad1961 (2001) MNNIT AllahabadUttar Pradeshmnnit.ac.in 23
24 NIT Manipur 2010 NITMN Imphal Manipurnitmanipur.ac.in
25 NIT Meghalaya 2010 NITM Shillong Meghalayanitm.ac.in 57
26 NIT Mizoram 2010 NITMZ Aizawl Mizoramnitmz.ac.in/
27 NIT Nagaland 2010 NITN Dimapur Nagalandnitnagaland.ac.in
20 NIT Jalandhar 1987 (2002) NITJ JalandharPunjabnitj.ac.in 42
5 NIT Jamshedpur 1960 (2002) NITJSR JamshedpurJharkhandnitjsr.ac.in 78
6 NIT Nagpur1960 (2002) VNIT NagpurMaharashtravnit.ac.in 18
1 NIT Patna 1886 (2004) NITP PatnaBiharnitp.ac.in 87
2 NIT Raipur1956 (2005) NITRR RaipurChhattisgarhnitrr.ac.in 63
12 NIT Rourkela1961 (2002) NITRKL RourkelaOdisha nitrkl.ac.in 19
28 NIT Sikkim 2010 NITSKM Ravangla Sikkimnitsikkim.ac.in
18 NIT Silchar1967 (2002) NITS SilcharAssamwww.nits.ac.in 65
9 NIT Srinagar1960 (2003) NITSRISrinagarJammu and Kashmirwww.nitsri.net 67
13 NIT Surat1961 (2003) SVNIT SuratGujarat svnit.ac.in 15
7 NIT Surathkal1960 (2002) NITK MangaloreKarnatakanitk.ac.in 22
16 NIT Trichy1964 (2003) NITT TrichyTamil Nadunitt.edu 12
29 NIT Uttarakhand 2010 NITUK SrinagarUttarakhandnituk.ac.in
3 NIT Warangal1959 (2002) NITW WarangalTelangananitw.ac.in 28
30 NIT Arunachal Pradesh 2010 NITAP YupiaArunachal Pradesh

www.nitap.in

19 NIT Hamirpur 1986 (2002) NITH HamirpurHimachal Pradeshnith.ac.in 51
31 NIT Andhra Pradesh 2015 NITANP TadepalligudemAndhra Pradeshnitandhra.ac.in

Governance

Organisational structure of the NITs

The President of India is the ex officio visitor of all the NITs. The NIT Council works directly under him and it includes the minister-in-charge of technical education in Central Government, the Chairmen and the Directors of all the NITs, the Chairman of University Grants Commission (India), the Director General of CSIR, the Directors of other selected central institutions of repute, members of Parliament, Joint Council Secretary of Ministry of Human Resource and Development, nominees of the Central Government, AICTE, and the Visitor.

Below the NIT Council is each NITs Board of Governors.

The Board of Governors of every individual NIT consists of the following members:

The Director serves under the Board of Governors, and is the school's chief academic and executive officer. Academic policies are decided by its Senate, which is composed of some professors and other representatives. The Senate controls and approves the curriculum, courses, examinations, and results. Senate committees examine specific academic matters. The teaching, training, and research activities of various departments of the institute are periodically reviewed to maintain educational standards. The Director is the ex officio Chairman of the Senate. The Deputy Director is subordinate to the Director. Together they manage the Deans, Heads of Departments, Registrar, President of the Students' Council, and Chairman of the Hall Management Committee. Deans and Heads of Departments in NITs are administrative postings rather than career paths. Faculty members serve as Deans and Heads of Departments for limited periods, typically 2 to 3 years, then returning to regular faculty duties. The Registrar is the chief administrative officer and overviews day-to-day operations. Below the Head of Department (HOD), are the various faculty members (professors, assistant professors, and lecturers). The Warden serves under the Chairman of the Hall Management Committee.

Education

Courses are divided into semesters with evaluation on the basis of credits, which allows for proportional weighting based on the course's importance. For each semester, grades range from 3 to 10. Semester evaluations are independent. The weighted average of the semesters is used to compute the cumulative grade point average (CGPA).

NITs are implementing dual degree programs, integrated postgraduate studies that complete in 5 years rather than the 6-year conventional track of a Bachelor's followed by a Master's degree. These programs encourage academic research and began with mathematics and computing.

Stringent faculty recruitment and industry collaboration also contribute to NIT success. Faculty other than lecturers must have a Ph.D. and relevant teaching and industry experience. Existing faculty who do not meet these criteria enroll under a Quality Improvement Programme (QIP) at IITs and IISc.

Student life

NITs provide on-campus housing to students, research scholars, and faculty members.[19] Students live in hostels, also known as halls, throughout their college life. Most have single accommodation but many live in double or triple rooms during their initial years. Every

hostel has a recreation room equipped with cable television, magazines, newspapers, and indoor games and in-room Internet connectivity. Every hall has its own cafeteria managed by the college or by a local private organization.[20] NITs also have a common cafeteria for students and a separate cafeteria for professors. During vacations, hostel dining is generally closed and the common cafeterias serve students who stay on campus.

All the NITs have an athletic ground and facilities for field, indoor and aquatic events.[21]

NIT campuses across India arrange official welcome parties and interaction sessions to acquaint newcomers with senior students and professors. Faculties and researchers from IITs, ISM and IISc organize occasional technical seminars and research labs.

Libraries

Central Library of NIT Rourkela

NITs have a Central Library equipped with technical books, literature, fiction, scientific journals, and other electronic material. Most have digitized their libraries. Some provide an intranet library facility. Every departmental library has high-speed connectivity. Electronic libraries allow students access to online journals and other periodicals through the AICTE-INDEST consortium, an initiative by the Ministry of Human Resource Development. Students also have access to IEEE documents and journals.[22][23] While some have video conferencing facilities, others are upgrading under the World Bank funded TEQIP scheme.

Student government

Some NITs individually conduct elections to elect student body a general secretary and vice president. These representatives are generally responsible for communicating with the college management and media, organising festivals, and also for various development programmes in their college. Some NITs (such as NIT, Rourkela, SVNIT, Surat and VNIT, Nagpur) have recently adopted online voting process. The committee which monitors the flow of funds has a student body representative. This committee also includes the chairman of board, an MHRD representative, and NIT professors. But due to some disturbance in voting process, there have been no elections since 2008 in SVNIT, Surat.[24]

Disciplinary Committee

The Disciplinary Committee (DISCO) consists of the Director, the student affairs officer, and professors. and reports to MHRD. DISCO regulates student activities and combats student harassment and illegitimate student politics. After a series of harassment incidents, all NITs took strict measures especially to protect first year students.[25]

Extra-curricular activities

Incubation centre at NIT Warangal

Popular extra curricular activities include National Cadet Corps (NCC), National Service Scheme (NSS), Indian Society for Technical

Education (ISTE), and annual college festivities.[26][27]

Students at NITs run hobby clubs such as Linux User Groups (LUGs), music clubs, debate clubs, literary clubs, and web design teams. Students also publish campus magazines which showcase student creativity and journalism. The first Linux User group in India, Bharat Linux User Group was formed in early 1997 at NIT Surat (SVNIT). Students conduct regular quizzes and cultural programs. They also present research papers and participate in national level technical festivals at IITs, ISM, IISc and NITs. Most NITs promote entrepreneurship by creating on-campus incubation centers under the STEP program.[28][29][30]

O-INSA

Organization for Inter-NIT Student Activities (O-INSA) coordinates cultural, technical, sports and other groups.[31]

Inter-NIT sports

NITs compete annually in an Inter-NIT sports meeting, which rotates among schools.[31][32] Winners get cash prizes and trophies. Boys and girls compete separately. During February and March, NITs conduct annual sports contests in their respective locations. However, since 2007-2008, Inter NIT meetings have not been held during the academic calendar, to facilitate participation of more NITs and to avoid students missing class. In recent years, National Institute of Technology, Jamshedpur has been the most successful.

Festivals

NITs conduct technical and cultural festivals to showcase student talents. Technical festivals include research paper presentations, business quizzes, robotics competitions etc. Some NITs conduct online coding contests, attracting participants from multinational corporations and international universities. NITs also conduct cultural festivals with celebrity and student participants, including those from other schools. Festivals last 3 to 4 days and are usually held all around the year depending upon institute's academic calendar. Corporations through sponsorships (generally asked by students)and college administration help fund these events. Organizing committee generally comprises faculty advisers and student coordinators. The structure of organizing committee varies from fest to fest. These fest are not as large as some of IITs in terms of participation, crowd, and prizes but are organized with greater efficiency (participation per rupee spent in the fund) as they don't have funds as much as that of IITs have but participation is remarkable.

Inter-NIT sports

NITs compete annually in an Inter-NIT sports meeting, which rotates among schools.[31][32] Winners get cash prizes and trophies. Boys and girls compete separately. During February and March, NITs conduct annual sports contests in their respective locations. However, since 2007-2008, Inter NIT meetings have not been held during the academic calendar, to facilitate participation of more NITs and to avoid students missing class. In recent years, National Institute of Technology, Jamshedpur has been the most successful.

Alumni

This is a list of some of the notable alumni of the National Institutes of Technology in India.

Business/industry

Name Alma mater Achievements
Natarajan Chandrasekaran NIT, Trichy CEO, Tata Consultancy Services
C. P. Gurnani NIT, Rourkela CEO, Mahindra Satyam
K. V. Kamath NIT, Surathkal Chief of the New Development Bank at BRICS, Former CEO of ICICI Bank, Padma Bhushan Awardee
Shashank ND NIT, Surathkal Founder and CEO of Practo Health, Forbes 30 under 30 Asia
Srini Raju NIT, Kurukshetra Chairman, Peepul Capital, iLabs VCF, Former CEO of Cognizant Technology Solutions & Satyam Enterprise Solutions
K. R. Sridhar NIT, Trichy Founder and CEO of Bloom Energy
Shyam Srinivasan NIT, Trichy CEO and Managing Director The Federal Bank Ltd.
Nelabhotla Venkateswarlu NIT, Allahabad CEO, Emami Limited
Dinesh Keskar NIT, Nagpur Senior VP, Boeing Aircraft Trading and Head Boeing India.

Public service

Name Alma mater Achievements
Dr.Thomas Abraham NIT, Jaipur Chairman of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin, coined the term PIO
Dawood Danesh Jafari NIT, Srinagar Minister of Finance & Economic Affairs, Iran
Ajit Jogi NIT, Bhopal First chief minister of Chhattisgarh also a former lecturer at NIT Raipur.
Deep Joshi NIT, Allahabad Recipient of Magsaysay award & Padma Shri, Social activist, founder of PRADAN(NGO)
Hemant Karkare NIT, Nagpur Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief, killed during the November 2008 Mumbai Terrorist Attacks.
Nitish Kumar NIT, Patna Chief minister of Bihar
Lakshmi Narayana NIT, Warangal Former Joint Director for India's Central Bureau of Investigation
Suresh Pachouri NIT, Bhopal Member of Parliament
Prabhakaran Paleri NIT, Calicut Former director general, Indian Coast Guard
Ram Vinay Shahi NIT, Jamshedpur Longest-serving power secretary of India
Abhishek Singh NIT, Raipur Member of Parliament from Rajnandgaon Region

Academia/technology and research

Name Alma mater Achievements
Siva S. Banda NIT, Warangal Director of the Control Science Center of Excellence and Senior Scientist in Control Theory for the Air Vehicles
Samir Barua NIT, Nagpur Director, Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad
Dr. Lalit Goel NIT, Warangal Professor and Head of Electrical Engineering, Nanyang Technological University
Baldev Raj NIT, Raipur Recipient of Padma Shri, former director of the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research, currently the Chairman of BOGs at National Institute of Technology Pondicherry.
Srinidhi Varadarajan NIT, Warangal Creator of SystemX and currently working at Virginia Tech.

See also

References

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