Monday 19 September 2011

My Musings....

Disrespected and Ill-reputed Minister,

I begin with my heartiest congratulations to the Indian government and the Ministry for HRD for their latest brain freeze. I believe Om Puri is absolutely correct when he says what he says. I’d even have to agree to the news flashes on India TV that say, “Mantriyo ke CT scan mein unhe paaya gaya dimaag rahit”. Please tell me all this is indeed a bad dream, and you are making an April fool out of us; a liitle late though you are, having probably borrowed S. M. Krishna’s calendar.

There is inflation (increasing petrol prices by a factor of π is a serious insult to Archimedes), corruption, terrorism, and so many other things you can pass your time with. Or, you can even condemn terrorist attacks for a pastime (if there’s no such attack to condemn, start condemning every rape and murder), and we still won’t say anything. You can be the conniving bitch and attempt to demean noble souls by conjuring up a humongous 2.2 lakh scam. We, the gullible Indian public, will not even blink if you go ahead and do a petty 1000 crore scam of your own. (And, if you think we will blink, you can always go on a 3-day fast to redeem yourself.)

But this, dear minister, is absolutely unacceptable. You are playing with the lives and dreams of an entire generation with your stupid schemes and utopian ideas. For your information, IITs and IIMs are the institutes which put India on the world map. Opening up dozens of them has already diluted Brand IIT, but it seems you aren’t satisfied yet. The “Man on a Mission” that you are, I believe you will rest only when you blend IITs with the mediocrity that the rest of our country is used to.

Let me tell you where you exactly went wrong.

The first time it was when you opened so many new IITs to “provide better opportunities” to the students. The students know they aren’t as good. The companies know they aren’t as good and there goes your money down the drain with seats in these “IIT’s” lying vacant. You could have waited a few years until you had the infrastructure or the academia to match the ones existing. But no, you are like the “colony ke naïve Sharma uncle and Geeta aunty” who think “IIT, Arre waah bahut Badhiya”. You sought to just milk the IITs’ existing reputation with little substance to back your claims and thereby diluted it to no end, for selfish votebank issues. Trust me,even the slightly educated are NOT voting for you in the next elections.

Then, you went ahead and said that you will give a greater weightage in admissions to Board marks to end the coaching menace, thus “reducing the stress and financial burden on the students”. It could have been a good idea, if the Board exams weren’t unfortunately a test of rote learning instead of understanding. For all I know, the examination system in India ain’t changing until my grandson dies, and hence your proposal is crap. Also, the Andhra Board gives 95% marks away like lollipops and the UP board gives 85% marks to the toppers with a contorted face. How will a bunch of over-intelligent people like you normalize these scores to ensure uniformity? Probably you’ll hire people like yourself and come up with some other superb innovation. For all you care, you might have just extinguished the dreams of lakhs of small-town students.


Jairam Ramesh may have been correct in his assessment that IIT professors are “not that good”. And your noble schemes, I’m glad to announce, will bring in similar “not so good” students into IITs, thereby solving the problem of mismatch. Brilliant. But I can only warn you about the rigours of IITs. A student who has lived in your “stress-free” environment might not be able to handle it and we may have more cases of you-know-what. Isn’t there enough blood on your hands already, minister??

The one-exam-for-all proposal is another example of how Early Man used to function, when his brain was not fully developed. If I get ill on the eve of this ONE EXAM or maybe spoil my paper, tell me where do I go. We are middle-class people, unlike you. We like to have a backup and hence the JEE, AIEEE combination made some sense. Yeah, you did not think of that. I will not say that JEE is something prestigious and should be put on a pedestal and worshipped but the one thing it has done across 50 years, is that it has given to India, some really extraordinary and eminent people.

The payback scheme is another absolutely superb idea. Seriously, who all were in the drafting committee?? My guess: Rakhi Sawant, Navjot Sidhu, Bappi Lahiri, KRK and Arindam Chaudhury and of course You, sir. Such capitalist nonsense could have been brewed only by these geniuses. You say that the fees are insufficient to support IIT and yes I agree to a large extent. But then, where does the money that we do pay, go??

An average IITian earns Rs 6–8 lakhs per annum at the beginning of his career (contrary to the popular and misplaced belief), and if he lives in an expensive city like Mumbai or Bangalore, from where in hell will he bring the money to pay you back?

If you really must, increase the fees marginally and gradually. Rope in well-positioned alumni for funding. They are more than generous and willing to help their alma mater. We understand our duties towards IIT and if and when we can, take my word, we surely will contribute. Do not burden a free spirit at the very onset of his career.


Here is a suggestion, which could be useful if I already am not sounding like RSS to you. Go ahead with the unification. It is indeed needed and I am all for it, considering how chaotic it is. But, begin from the beginning at least. You cannot expect Suresh Raina to hit sixes off short pitched balls when all he has done his entire life is, thwacked knee-heighters over midwicket. Give the students a Unified Board Exam first. Standardise that according to the needs of higher education, and consult some sensible people. It is going to take some doing to manage all of that, but why opt for the easy-but-damaging way out! For God’s sake, do not tamper with higher education without improving and implementing things at the grass root primary and higher secondary level.

I can only hope you get some perspective and leave IIT alone. My worst fear is of you trying to make the IIT curriculum less rigorous and hence produce lazy, good-for-nothing, unskilled engineers instead of the well-polished ones. That would indeed be Doomsday. There was a lot more to say but I am fearful you will teargas me

Yours Truly

 

Ashish

Sunday 18 September 2011

Secret of Success @ IITJEE

The title of this article is weird, isn’t it? You would be thinking that what can be the secret of getting into IIT (if there is one)? If it is there then why not someone else has told you this before? Some of you might even be thinking that I have gone mad or I am trying to get your attention. But I assure you that by the end of this article, you will be very much agreeing with me. So here it goes.

I will first ask you to guess. Is it the hard work? Or it is dedication? Some of you might be thinking of discipline and some other must be thinking of intelligence. But the answer is no to all of them. All these are the secondary things which come on their own if you have the secret. So let me unfold the mystery. It’s the “desire”. The desire to see yourself as an IITian. The desire to see your name as a successful candidate of JEE in the newspapers. It’s the desire to see your parents enjoying their happiest moment of life given by you. It’s the desire to give your elders and your old parents a quality life. It’s the true love with your dreams. Yes it’s the desire to make your dream real. It’s the desire to shut up the mouth of everyone who has ever doubted on your capabilities. It’s the desire to change your life. It’s the desire to lead everyone in the race.

As I told you, all the other factors like discipline and hard work will come to you by them just if you have this burning desire within you. We all have some short of desire. For me it was the desire to short out all the financial problems of my family. Similarly you have to find your extreme desire and use it as a weapon to get all the other factors necessary for success at JEE. At this point I will like to warn you that there is very significant difference between desire and daydreaming. Daydreaming is just dreaming without acting whereas desire is to act to make your dream true at any cost. It’s the inner strength to sacrifice everything coming in between you and your dream. So desire for IIT and not just daydream it. Once the concept of desire is clear to you I believe that you don’t have any doubt left on how to study, hoe to improve concentration, time management and all. All these will seem funny to you. 

 

" So start desiring.''

 

The important things in life

A philosophy professor stood before his class with some items on the table in front of him. When the class began, wordlessly he picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with rocks, about 2 inches in diameter.

He then asked the students if the jar was full. They agreed that it was.

So the professor then picked up a box of pebbles and poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles, of course, rolled into the open areas between the rocks.

He then asked the students again if the jar was full. They agreed it was.

The professor picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar. Of course, the sand filled up everything else.
 He then asked once more if the jar was full. The students responded with a unanimous “Yes.”

“Now,” said the professor, “I want you to recognize that this jar represents your life. The rocks are the important things – your family, your partner, your health, your children – things that if everything else was lost and only they remained, your life would still be full.

The pebbles are the other things that matter – like your job, your house, your car.

The sand is everything else. The small stuff.”

“If you put the sand into the jar first,” he continued “there is no room for the pebbles or the rocks. The same goes for your life.

If you spend all your time and energy on the small stuff, you will never have room for the things that are important to you. Pay attention to the things that are critical to your happiness. Play with your children. Take your partner out dancing. There will always be time to go to work, clean the house, give a dinner party and fix the disposal.

Take care of the rocks first – the things that really matter.

Set your priorities. The rest is just sand.”

Sunday 11 September 2011

Success stories of IIT toppers

Srikanth Jagabathula, President of India gold medal winner. 

Meet Srikanth Jagabathula, IIT's pride, the President of India gold medal winner for 2005-06 for scoring the highest marks among all batches at Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay.
After an enviable stint at the IIT, Srikanth is all set to fly to the United States to pursue his studies at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After five years he plans to come back to Indian to start his own communications company.

As a kid he dream t of becoming an engineer. Somehow he always thought an engineer's job would be very fascinating. He heard about the IIT when he was in the 7th standard. Since then IIT was his aim. After clearing his 10th class, he religiously worked towards cracking the IIT-Joint Entrance Examination. A rank of 38 at the IIT-JEE meant a smooth entry into IIT-Bombay. Srikanth, who hails from Hyderabad, was always a topper in school. Mathematics and physics were his favorite subjects, but he dreaded biology and chemistry.
A desire to top in everything he did from his schooldays helped him score high grades and he always lived up to his parents' expectations. Studies were always a priority for Srikanth and his efforts won him several awards.

From securing the first rank in the board exam in the 7th standard, securing the 8th rank in the Andhra Pradesh State Science Talent Exam when he was in the 8th standard to securing the President of India gold medal for topping across all the batches in 2005-06 in IIT-B, Srikanth's success is an inspiring story.
Any IIT-ians in the family? "No," he says, "my father has retired from the technical education department in Andhra Pradesh and my mother is a homemaker. They are really happy to see me achieve my goals though they are sad to see me go aboard for further studies."

His role models: Apple Computer founder Steve Jobs, Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page, Infosys founder N R Narayana Murthy and Nandan Nilekani. Srikanth is excited about his next stint at MIT and takes us through his journey from IIT to MIT.

My IIT experience
 
"IIT has been a dream come true for me. Initially, it was very difficult as I came from Hyderabad. It (Mumbai) was a new city and for the first time I was staying away from the family. But from the second year, everything was perfect and I made good friends here.
It is really a great learning experience. IIT helps you excel as it provides you with the best facilities and faculty.

My mantra for success
 
I have a desire to excel. I am very organized, am always on time, and have deep love for the subjects I learn. I have always done things I like to do, which is very important.

Interests
 
Reading books and participating in debates. I also like watching action-packed films and thrillers. On OBC quota.
The 50 per cent quota is not a good idea. The focus should be on improving basic education. Unless you get the basics right, there is no point introducing the quota system at the highest level. There are many backward regions in the country, so the focus should be towards a region-based development than a caste-based reservation system.

Next move
 
"After I joined IIT, I heard more about MIT from my seniors who studied there. I'm very happy that I got selected. I will be joining MIT soon to do my PhD. I'm very excited about it. I have got a scholarship which will waive the entire tuition fees and I will get a stipend of about $950 a month," he grins.

Advice to IIT aspirants
 
Don't get bogged down by pressure, many people are very talented, but it is important how you perform on the entrance day. You have to prepare well for two years, you must learn to cope with the pressure.

On India
 
Earlier foreign jobs offered much better prospects. But now all the multinational corporations have set shop here. There are plenty of opportunities in India. So there is no need to actually go abroad. India is on a growth path and in 5 to 6 years there will be big changes in India.

Future plans
 
I would like to come back to India and start my own company. It will basically be a communications company. The idea is to develop products to provide cost-effective Net connectivity and communication facilities in rural India.
Now the cost is a big hindrance to Net penetration. My aim will be to remove the barriers and make communication effective and increase its reach.

And if you were to join a company, which would it, be?
 
Google is an example of efficiency and best products. It will be a great and interesting place to work in and learn.



Friday 9 September 2011

IITian and Rickshaw-wala...nice piece of conversation

This one is delightfully interesting to read.

There were two rickshaw-walas vying for our business, when we wanted to go to Sankat-Mochan temple in Benaras. I agreed to go with the one, who was about 20 years of age, seemed like a regular young rickshaw-wala, but I found something interesting about him. I was not proved wrong.

He wanted Rs 50, we said Rs 30. We settled for Rs 40.

Here are the highlights of the conversation that ensued, while we rode the rickshaw:

"Aap kahan se aaye hain?"

"Delhi."

"Bijness, ya kaam karte hain?"

"Naukri karte hain."

"Kismein?"

"Internet mein."

"Humara bhi kuch wahin kaam lagwa dijiye."

I just chuckled.

"Main try kar raha hoon engineering padhne kee. Achchi naukri lag jaayegi tab."

"Achcha?" I asked a little interested.

"Haan, delhi mein Guru Gobind Singh Indraprashta University mein engineering ke liye apply kiya hai. Achchi hai woh university."

"Haan, achchi hai", I agreed.

"Haan, kal hee maine JEE bhi diya."

"JEE matlab, IIT ka?"

"Haan, Joint Entrance Examination" he pronounced it perfectly.Just to make it clear to me what JEE stood for. "Mushkil hota hai exam."

"Haan, 2 saal toh log padhte hee hain uske liye, asaan nahin hai."
"Delhi mein fiitjee coaching institute hain na?"

"Haan, hai."

"Aapne kya padhai kee?"

"Main engineer hoon, aur phir MBA bhi kiya."

"Kahan se engineer?"

"IIT Delhi se."

He swung back, surprised, a little delighted, and smiled. "Ok, aapke liye Rs 30."

Swati and I laughed.

Swati asked "Padhai kab karte they IIT ke liye?"

"Bas, rickshaw chalaane ke baad raat mein". Then he added "Kismein engineering kee aapne?"

"Chemical."

"Toh aapki Chemistry toh badi strong hogi."

"Nahin, aisa nahin hai."

He continued "Yeh bataiye....jab Mendeleev ne Periodic Table banaya tha tab kitne elements they usmein?"

Now it was my turn to get surprised. He was quizzing me. I said "Shayad 70-80."

"No, 63" he said sharply. "Kaunse element kee electronegativity highest hai?"

Swati was laughing, and I didnt try too hard and said "Pata nahin."

"Flourine", he said confidently. Without a break he asked,"Kaunse element kee electron affinity highest hoti hai?"

Now I was laughing too and said "Nahin pata"

"Chlorine. toh aapka kaunsa subject strong tha?" clearly having proven that my chemistry wasn't a strong point.

"Physics", I said.

"Achha, Newton's second law of motion kya hai?"

I thought I knew this one. "F=ma", I said.

"Physics is not about formula, it is understanding concept!", he reprimanded me in near perfect English. "Tell me in statement"

I was shocked. Swati continued to laugh.

I said "ok, Newtons second law, er....was...."

" 'Was' nahin, 'is'!Second law abhi bhi hai!" he snapped at my use of 'was'.

Surely, my physics wasn't impressing him either. "Yaad nahin, I said"

"Force on an object is directly proportional to the mass of the object and the acceleration of the object", he said it in near perfect English. "Aapne M.Tech nahin kiya?"

"Nahin, MBA kiya"

"MBA waale toh sirf paisa kamana chahte hain, kaam nahin karte."

"Nahin, aisa nahin hai, paisa kamaane ke liye kaam karna padta hai." Didn't think too highly of me apparently anymore.

In a minute we reached our destination. We got off and I told him that he must and should definitely study more, and that I thought he was sharp as hell. He took only Rs 30, smiled and began to leave. I got my camera out and said "Raju, ek photo leta hoon tumhari". He waved me off, dismissed the idea and rode off before I could say anything more....leaving me feeling high and dry like a spurned lover.

Damn, what a ride that was! India is changing, and changing fast.

And so it goes !!!!

Thursday 8 September 2011

IIT JEE study Planner: Weekly timetable

Students have a different schedule for every day of the week.

It is advisable to put together a weekly timetable.

This will give us a good view of the time available  in a week.

There are some weekdays when students have to attend both school and IIT JEE coaching / Tuition. This leaves very little time for self study.

There are days when we have the entire afternoon, after school, available for self study.

The weekdays are of particular importance. This is the only time, when students get a lot of time to cover all the pending work.

Unlike Class X, when students take it easy on weekends, IIT JEE preparation calls for extra studies on weekends.

Weekly planner

Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday

After filling in the time table, calculate the number of hours of self study, available per week. This should not be less than 30 hours. If you can study 30 hours per week regularly for 2 years, it is good.

IIT JEE Study Planner: Minimum recommended time for self study

Most students find it difficult to determine exactly how much time, they should spend in activities in studying. This is particularly important right at the beginning of the study so as to make an effective study plan.
This is complicated even more by the fact that every chapter requires different amount of time. Even different subjects require different amounts of time in theory and problems.
The different questions that come to the mind of the student are:
  • How much time should be spent in reading from the textbook?
  • Are the notes from tuition/coaching enough? Can I manage without reading the textbook?
  • Is there anything to read from the textbook in Mathematics?
  • How much time should I spend in solved examples given in the IITJEE course material>
  • How much time should be allocated to a certain topic?
  • How much time should be spent on a problem that is not getting solved before looking at the solution or asking for help?
  • How much time should I spend in testing at home?
  • How should I calculate the total time required?
We have tried to answer these questions by giving an indicative time plan.

List of chapters (with recommended time slotted)
Topic Total Reading (textbook) Solved examples Conceptual problems Exercises (problems) Chapter test
Mathematics
1
Complex numbers
21
2
2
1
16
2
2
Quadratic equations
19
1
1
1
16
1
3
Logarithms
6
1
5
1
4
Progressions
10
1
2
1
6
2
5
Permutations and combinations
22
1
2
1
18
2
6
Trigonometry
35
2
2
1
30
2
7
Straight lines
18
2
3
1
12
3
8
Circles
21
2
4
1
14
4
9
Conic sections
34
4
4
1
25
4
10
Binomial theorem
33
2
3
1
27
3
11
Functions, Limits and Continuity
49
4
4
1
40
4
12
Differentiability and differentiation
19
1
4
1
13
4
13
Application of derivatives
33
1
3
1
28
3
14
Indefinite integration
10
1
3
1
5
3
15
Definite integration
10
1
3
1
5
3
16
Area under the curve
19
1
5
1
12
5
17
Differential equations
14
1
4
1
8
4
18
Determinants
23
1
5
1
16
5
19
Matrices
11
1
2
1
7
2
20
Probability
16
1
4
1
10
4
21
Vectors
13
1
3
1
8
3
22
Three dimensional geometry
10
2
2
1
5
2
Total
446
34
65
21
326
66
Physics
1
Units, dimensions, vectors and calculus
15
2
2.5
0.5
10
2
2
Kinematics
13
3
2.5
0.5
7
3
3
Laws of motion
18
2
2.5
0.5
13
2
4
Work, Power and Energy
17
2
2.5
0.5
12
2
5
Center of mass, linear momentum, collision
28
4
3
1
20
4
6
Rotational dynamics
33
4
3
1
25
4
7
Elasticity, fluid dynamics and properties of matter
35
4
3
1
27
4
8
Gravitation
16
2
1.5
0.5
12
2
9
Simple Harmonic Motion
21
3
2.5
0.5
15
3
10
Wave motion
23
4
2.5
0.5
16
4
11
Heat and Thermodynamics
48
5
5.5
2.5
35
5
12
Electrostatics
45
5
3.5
1.5
35
7
13
Electric current and resistance
28
4
3
1
20
4
14
Magnetism
27
4
2
1
20
4
15
Electromagnetic Induction and AC
18
3
2
1
12
3
16
Geometrical Optics
21
4
2
1
14
4
17
Wave Optics
18
4
2
1
11
4
18
Modern Physics
18
5
2
1
10
5
Total
442
64
47.5
16.5
314
66
Chemistry
1
Basic concepts of chemistry
18
3
2.5
0.5
12
2
2
Structure of atom
15.5
3
2.5
0
10
2
3
Periodic properties
10
3
1
6
2
4
Gas laws
21
4
2.5
0.5
14
3
5
Chemical bonding
15
3
2
10
2
6
Chemical energetics
18
3
2.5
0.5
12
2
7
Chemical equilibrium
20
4
1.5
0.5
14
3
8
Ionic equilibrium
23
4
1.5
0.5
17
3
9
Redox reactions
16
3
2.5
0.5
10
2
10
General organic chemistry
29
5
1.5
0.5
22
4
11
Hydrocarbons
16
4
12
3
12
Alcohols and ethers
13
3
10
2
13
Alkyl and aryl halides
13
5
8
4
14
Solutions
26
3
2.5
0.5
20
3
15
Solid state
21
3
2.5
0.5
15
2
16
Chemical kinetics
20
3
2.5
0.5
14
2
17
Electrochemistry
25.5
3
2.5
20
2
18
Nuclear chemistry
14.5
3
1.5
10
2
19
Functional groups containing nitrogen
14
4
10
3
20
Aldehydes and ketones
14
4
10
3
21
Carboxylic acids and their derivatives
19
4
15
3
22
s-Block elements
17
5
1.5
0.5
10
4
23
p-Block elements
24
5
1.5
0.5
17
4
24
d-Block elements
19
5
1.5
0.5
12
4
25
Metallurgy
19
5
1.5
0.5
12
4
26
Qualitative salt analysis
19
5
1.5
0.5
12
4
27
Coordination compounds
15
5
1.5
0.5
8
4
Total
494.5
104
40.5
8
342
78
Chapter tests
210
Full length tests
120
at least 20 tests of various formats, of 6 hrs each
Self assessment
30
Revision / other material
60
Total Time (Required)
1802.5
This is just a recommendation. Students can make changes to the study plan based on their proficiency in the subjects. The actual time spent by the student can vary by 10% – 15% depending on the student’s personal style of study. Please consider that the time given here is the minimum that a student needs to spend. The total time spent in studying for IITJEE across 2 years should not be less than 10% of the given.