Addressing a gathering of former IITians at a ‘Pan IIT’ summit in New York, Murthy said the quality of students entering IITs had deteriorated due to coaching classes that prepare engineering aspirants. He said save the top 20% who crack the tough IIT entrance exam and can “stand among the best anywhere in the world”, the quality of the remaining 80% of students leaves much to be desired. “They somehow get through the JEE. But their performance in IITs, at jobs or when they come for higher education in institutes in the US is not as good as it used to be. This has to be corrected. A new method of selection of students to IITs has to be arrived at,” Murthy said.
According to Murthy, for IITs to be counted among the best in the world, they must “transcend from being just teaching institutions to reasonably good research institutes”, at par with Harvard and the MIT, in 10-20 years. “Few IITs have done well in producing PhDs, but when we compare ourselves to institutions in the US, we have a long way to go,” he said, adding that the emphasis must be on research at the undergraduate level. He also said exams should test the independent thinking of students rather than their ability to solve problems.
Besides, Murthy lamented the poor English-speaking and social skills of IIT students, saying with politicians “rooting against English”, the task of getting good students was getting difficult. “An IITian has to be a global citizen and must understand where the globe is going,” he observed.