Monday, February 11, 2008

India Engineering collages


Total Engg. collages in India : 1550
AP as of 2008 : 337 ( first place in india as per this eenadu reprot )
new in 2008-09 year for AP: 80




for 2008-09 AP total collages: 400 out of 1600 India total that is 25% of total country ..
- Tamil nadu, karnataka , maharasta next places : These 4 states ( with AP) may have 75% of collages easily ...


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Andhra to have 8mn new jobs by 2015


The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) envisages that Andhra Pradesh will have 7.5-8 million new jobs to offer by 2015, considering the likely improvements in the state’s economic output and labour productivity.

The employment opportunities envisaged are likely to emanate from construction, textiles, IT and ITeS, healthcare, tourism, pharma, biotech, financial services and engineering sectors.

The CII projections are based on a ‘Study on Mapping of Human Resources & Skills in Andhra Pradesh- 2015’. The study was jointly conducted by CII and ICRA Management Consulting Services Limited (IMaCS).

As per the study, the state requires 4.5 million skilled and 3-3.5 million unskilled human resources by 2015. As against this requirement, supply of skilled workforce is estimated to be around 3.4 million. After factoring in the low levels of employability, the available skilled workforce is reduced to 1.3 million.

Andhra currently has an established (higher) education infrastructure consisting of about 1,340 arts, science and commerce colleges, 101 polytechnics, 300 engineering colleges and over 550 industrial training institutes. Together, these institutions out turned over 300,000 skilled human resources in 2006.

However, according to the study, over 28 per cent of the engineering graduates and 20 per cent of the diploma-holders that the above institutions turn out every year are unemployed
.

The primary reasons cited for the ‘unemployability’ of the student are a disconnect between academic curricula and industry requirements resulting in deficiencies in specific functional skills and shortfall in appropriately trained faculty resulting in inappropriately trained students.

For narrowing human resources-availability gaps in the state, the CII has suggested creation of additional educational infrastructure and ushering in skill building initiatives.

As per its estimate, the annual funding requirements to support these initiatives will be of the order of Rs 650 crore, the bulk of which has to be spent on employability-focused training.

The state government should take a lead role in the skill development initiatives and establish a Skill Development Fund (SDF). The funding of SDF should be raised by innovative ways.

The government should fund the initial corpus to support training activities of workers. The organisations employing these workers should pay the government one month’s pay of the worker. “We expect this to cover 50-60 per cent of the total yearly funding requirement,” the CII said.


According to the organisation, the balance funding could be in the form of budgetary support or through funding from multilateral agencies. The state government should nominate a nodal agency to manage the disbursement of funds that would support various training initiatives.

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