siliconindia | | March 20209The office of today demands a motivated team that is proactive, open to take on challenges, and team members can work independentlymay understand programming language but lack the cre-ativity to come up with newer products or tools. That is, we are still a software services economy rather than a software product economy. How do we change this? By creating an educational system and a teaching methodology where students learn not just programming language but also art, design, cre-ativity, humanities, and related subjects. But it must not stop there. Students must be encouraged to participate in events such as hackathons and incubator workshops, where they meet industry leaders to understand what is required, where the gaps are, and what products exist. And this must not just be a one-off exercise. Our edu-cational system, syllabi, methods of evaluation must all be re-tooled and re-purposed to provide a better skill-development oriented learning to students. New Age Curriculum for New-Age CareersThe student of today knows what she or he needs. By the time our students arrive in the final year of their un-dergraduate program, they have their entire career map planned out. They know which overseas universities to apply to or which campus placement interviews to at-tend. Students are exposed to and communicate with a global student population and have thus a wider range of options to choose from when it comes to careers or higher education. Given this scenario, it is imperative our learning sys-tems and teaching processes also keep pace. The focus must be on understanding individual goals and needs and building the environment in which they can best achieve this. Skill development must take precedence over class-room rote learning. Teachers, support staff, administrators and policy-makers must think of cross-discipline and multi-disci-pline solutions rather than insist on specializations. Sci-ence and humanities must be given equal importance, and design-based thinking and the programming lan-guage must both be tested at the same level. Knowledge and skill are different things, and students must learn to apply knowledge in a practical and real-world environ-ment ­ through internships, industry placements, and workshops. Our universities must become centers where criti-cal thinking is encouraged, where students can and should question the status quo, question why things are the way they are and are encouraged to design and build new things. All this will ensure that we not only have a creative and highly-skilled workforce, but also a generation of future-ready leaders.
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