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Saturday, December 9, 2017

What is in the name?

Recently, a newspaper item caught my attention. While the headline talked about colleges having to mention all fees on website, something that will enhance transparency, reading the whole article made me aware of other guidelines issued by AICTE. They apparently have decided that no institute in the country can have a name whose initials will be IIT or NIT or IIM or IISc, etc. To learn about the exact guideline (I couldn't believe that AICTE could be doing this, but if they are doing this, what is the complete list of initials that are banned), I visited the AICTE website, and I couldn't find anything there, which is, of course, not very surprising.

What is the implication of this. Well, if I want to start a new engineering college, and want to name it as "Narnaul Institute of Technology" I can't do it, since the initials will become NIT, which is banned as per this order. I expect the first reaction of the readers to be, what is wrong in this. The private sector guys are all scums and trying to fool people into believing that they are not what they are. So such restrictions are ok.

But think about it. Is it being done because private sector guys are all scums, or is it being done because there is a genuine fear that some student/parent will get confused between Narnaul Institute of Technology and National Institute of Technology Kurukshetra. If it is the former, then the only possible public policy response is to close ALL private sector educational institutions. There is no point in allowing all scums to run educational institutions. So I will assume that AICTE is concerned about the confusion that such names can cause.

Is that a reasonable concern (and hence a reasonable restriction), or has AICTE gone overboard. If mere similarity of initials can cause confusion in the minds of students and parents, then should we have 23 IITs. Should we have 31 NITs (of course, some of them have slightly different initials). Is it reasonable to assume that a typical student and parent can distinguish between National Institute of Technology Raipur and National Institute of Technology Rourkela but they cannot distinguish between them and Narnaul Institute of Technology. In my opinion, if someone can distinguish between 31 institutes with not just same initials, but same names, they can certainly distinguish between institutes with completely different names.

And what if I change the name of the institute to "Narnaul Institute of Technology Narnaul" and now claim that the initials are not NIT but NITN, and then go ahead and advertise myself as NIT Narnaul. Would I be on the right side of AICTE.

Were there many complaints by students and parents that they got confused. Will AICTE tell us which institutes they confused with. Or is it a pre-emptive strike. Could it be that there is a specific institute which is being targeted by its competitors and AICTE has naively supported one side.

And if the goal was indeed to help students and parents, why help their confusion only with respect to some government institutes. If a student is getting confused between Birla Institute of Science and Technology and Barabanki Institute of Science and Technology, shouldn't AICTE help those students as well. BITS is a great brand today, even better than NIT brand (in my opinion), and hence if you want students to not get confused with some college initials being NIT, you must also want students to not get confused with some other college initials being BITS. And where does it stop. How do we decide which initials are being confused with, and which initials are not being confused with.

I am glad that they have not included IIIT in the initials (at least not mentioned in the newspaper reports). Otherwise, IIIT Hyderabad, which arguably has the best brand with that initial today, would have to change its name again.

Wouldn't it be better to first look at the instances of confusion and see if those confusions are because of misleading advertisement. If yes, book those institutes under various acts of law, instead of putting some arbitrary restrictions on names.

ADDED on 9th Dec:
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I am told that they have included IIIT also in the list of reserved initials. This is very interesting. IIIT Hyderabad came up with the unique initials. Government of India liked those initials and set up its own institutes with the same initials. Now it is telling IIIT Hyderabad that you can't have same initials as my institutes. Is this fair.

9 comments:

Unknown said...

What are your views on MIT?
(Manipal Institute of Technology and others)

https://manipal.edu/mit.html

https://www.google.co.in/search?q=mit+india&oq=mit+ind&aqs=chrome.2.69i57j0l3.13832j0j7&client=ms-android-motorola&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8

http://www.mitpune.com

Dheeraj Sanghi said...

@Muhammad Abdullah Ansari, We should probably ban any two colleges in the country to have the same initials. Easiest way to kill colleges.

Xelios said...

Hello,

I'm a student at IIIT Hyderabad. So, from the news report, I see that AICTE has asked institutes to abide by the guidelines. Given that IIIT-H is a deemed university and doesn't need AICTE's blessing to function (can award degrees on its own), do you think it would really need to abide by their new rules on nomenclature?

Dheeraj Sanghi said...

@Xelios, After a recent SC judgment which has said that deemed univs can be regulated by UGC more than univs set up through an act, UGC has asked all deemed univs to take approval from AICTE, and AICTE has promptly written to everyone asking to seek approval for every new course, every new seat, etc. So IIIT Hyderabad is firmly back under AICTE control.

Xelios said...

@Dheeraj Sanghi, thank you for the clarification. :)

I better apply to grad school soon, before the name changes and the institute starts getting treated like an unknown quantity if that's not the case right now. Also, thanks a lot for offering advice on engineering colleges in general, I took your advice and joined IIIT-H years ago and the decision has served me very well.

Rajat Gupta said...

Are students (actually parents since they are the ones who decide all this stuff) in this country so foolish that they are not even able to distinguish between colleges?I wonder if there are any actual cases.Have you heard of any?

Are their similar laws in any other part of the world?A poor move.This will only increase legislation.Scammers will circumvent this easily.

Rajat Gupta said...

Are students (actually parents since they are the ones who decide all this stuff) in this country so foolish that they are not even able to distinguish between colleges?I wonder if there are any actual cases.Have you heard of any?

Are their similar laws in any other part of the world?A poor move.This will only increase legislation.Scammers will circumvent this easily.

Unknown said...

Sir out of the 20 institutions which the government is planning to declare as Indian institutes of Eminence. 10 are supposed to be from the private sector. According to you which 10 institutes in the private sector deserve this title?

Unknown said...

Sir the government is planning to select 20 institutes of higher learning and give them the Indian institute of eminence tag. 10 of these institutes are supposed to come from the private sector. Which private institutes do you think will be able to get this tag? Also under this tag they will be given aditional freedom as well.