Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Plan for ‘Science Magnet’ schools gets IISER nod as Navodaya Schools


he proposal to set up new specialized Navodaya Vidyalayas to be termed as ‘Science Magnet’ schools, in collaboration with top R&D institutes, got the go-ahead from the Indian Institutes of Science Education & research (IISER) on Tuesday.
At a meeting with the Human Resource Development (HRD) minister Kapil Sibal, IISER directors said that such schools would allow an integrated approach to science education from school to university level. IISER Thiruvananthapuram director has also committed to helping to provide an enabling environment to students enrolled in these Science Magnet schools. The Planning Commission is also learnt to have accorded, in principal, approval for the proposal.
These specialized Navodaya schools will only cater to students from classes IX to XII and will be set up over the next three years. The idea came up in light of the huge shortage of science graduates and post-graduates in the country and the diminishing interest in core science subjects.
Institutes like IISERs, Indian Institute of Science, National Physical Laboratory, Bhaba Atomic Research Centre, Council for Science & Industrial Research (CSIR) will be approached to help these schools which will be located in close proximity to these R&D institutes.
Meanwhile, the IISERs have rejected the proposal for an integrated near 7-year PhD programme, terming it as impractical in the present set up. The directors said that the suggested change “is not practical and the present pattern of 3+2+3 years for obtaining a BS-MS degree at the end of the fifth year, negotiation for a PhD at the end of the fourth year and the completion of PhD at the end of the eighth year is ideally suited”.

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