Students Can Now Pursue Humanities Alongside Engineering Degrees

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The walls are finally down. A look at how the AICTE‘s approval for technical institutes to also run arts and commerce courses is set to play out on the ground.

A computer engineer who’s also studying psychology, a mechanical engineer with a grounding in accountancy, or humanities with a side of statistics — engineering colleges are finally starting to see the big picture. Keeping pace with the demands of the market, they are now increasing stress on knowledge beyond the selected field.

The All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) recently granted approval for these institutes to run humanities, arts and commerce courses alongside engineering. This decision was taken, explains AICTE chairman Anil Sahasrabudhe because the demand for engineering has remained more or less constant in recent years while the number of engineering colleges and the scale of their infrastructure have both grown significantly.

“This resulted in many private colleges shutting down courses. The infrastructure remained unused. This step was taken to make these institutions economically viable,” Sahasrabudhe says.

Disclaimer: This is an excerpt, you can read the originally published article on Bweducation here.

ASMA does not take any responsibility for the accuracy of data in the article. This snippet provided is simply to bring to you the most relevant news and announcements from the Education space. Any Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) in the article belong to their respective right holder(s).

 

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