The country's vast, education-hungry population  could supply the next generation of the world's scientists — but only  if it can teach them.
              Subha  Chakraborty has hardly left the lab in three months. His master's  research in micro-scale systems is running into the early hours almost  every morning, and "that is not the right time to go back to your room  and sleep", he says. So he bunks on a makeshift bed under his computer  and cooks on a toaster in the corner of the lab's common room.
Chakraborty isn't alone: most of the lab's ten postgraduate students  follow a similar schedule. "There's some kind of charm here," says one  of them, Anindya Roy, who has decided to officially surrender his  dormitory room.
These students at the banyan-tree-lined campus of the Indian  Institute of Technology (IIT) in Kharagpur are among India's luckiest  and best: once they have completed their degrees, they will end up  working at top universities and private research hubs in India and  around the world. But the optimism and drive are ubiquitous. "When you  go to the rural parts of the country you meet extraordinarily bright  kids who just have to be given the opportunity," says Chintamani Rao,  chief scientific adviser to India's prime minister. There are a lot of  them — around 90 million between the college-going ages of 17 and 21,  rising to an estimated 150 million by 2025. And they are hungry,  starving even, for an education (see 
'Technology levels the educational playing field'. 
 Brain drain
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Click for larger imageBut  can India feed that hunger? The government has pledged to make it a  priority, but faces tremendous obstacles. Most of the elite science and  engineering graduates opt for high-paying jobs in industry rather than  independent research. Other students far too often end up in high-priced  commercial diploma-mills that deliver little real education. Many, many  more young Indians don't even get that far: the country's 500  universities and 26,000 colleges have space for only about 12% of its  eligible youth. And the population is growing by 1.34% a year, more than  twice the rate of growth in China (see 
'A double explosion').
But if India cannot meet this challenge, it could miss out on  becoming one of the world's great innovation hubs, says Rao. "There is a  very large population out there that is extremely qualified and they  end up in second or third-rate institutions," agrees Pradeep Khosla,  dean of engineering at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania, and a graduate of IIT Kharagpur. "A lot of talent gets  wasted."
On the surface, India seems to be in the middle of an educational  renaissance, thanks largely to its booming economy. After decades of  economic stagnation under the socialist policies that followed the  country's independence in 1947, Indians enthusiastically embraced a  series of business-friendly reforms that began in the early 1990s. The  result has been economic growth that currently averages more than 8% a  year, with only a slight and temporary slowdown during the global  financial crisis that began in 2008. That growth, in turn, has created a  flourishing market for qualified graduates in everything from  construction to information technology and health care.
"There are a lot of stories of successes — from rags to riches — of  Indians who made it just on the basis of good education," says Pawan  Agarwal, author of  
Indian Higher Education: Envisioning the Future  (Sage; 2009). "This is creating high aspirations among Indians about higher education."
Those ambitions, along with the population growth, have fuelled an  eight-fold increase in science and engineering enrolment at India's  colleges and universities over the past decade, with most of the growth  occurring in engineering and technology — fields in which jobs are  especially plentiful. The low cost of doing business in India and the  large crop of English-speaking graduates has made it a global hot spot  for investment in research and development (R&D).
"In 2003, 100 foreign companies had established R&D facilities  in India," says Thirumalachari Ramasami, head of the government's  Department of Science and Technology. "By 2009, the number had grown to  750." Those companies include technology and communications firms such  as IBM, General Electric, Cisco, Motorola, Oracle and Hewlett-Packard,  all eager to get a foothold in the fast-growing information-technology  hub around Bangalore.
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Click for larger imageSmall  wonder, then, that the 15 IIT campuses nationwide have roughly 300,000  applicants every year, or that the students who make it in are very,  very good: IIT acceptance rates are about 2% (see 
'Only the best'),  compared with around 7% at Harvard University in Cambridge,  Massachusetts, an emblem of US elitism. "Statistically, out of a billion  people there must be a Michael Faraday," says Rao. "There must be a  number of talented people."
Look closer, however, and it becomes apparent that there are serious  cracks in the system. For example, the vast majority of India's science  and technology graduates immediately head for high-paying jobs in  industry. Only about 1% of them go on to get PhDs, compared with about  8% in the United States. "Internally the brain drain is quite high,"  says Rao. "All the talent goes into sectors that make money but produce  very little in terms of creative things for the country."
What makes this problematic, adds Rao, is that the country's rising  economic tide is largely the result of its myriad outsourcing centres  and the computer industry. If India cannot broaden its economy — and  make better use of its brightest scientific minds — it will have little  chance of solving its challenges in areas such as poverty, food, energy  and water security.
"Everyone's just making computers faster, and our computers are  pretty fast already," agrees Manu Prakash, who graduated from the IIT in  Kanpur — and who, like many Indians with academic ambitions, elected to  pursue his education elsewhere. He earned his PhD from the  Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, and now runs his own  biophysics lab at Stanford University in California.
Prakash says that although the IIT system does attract superb  students, it is institutionally broken because it doesn't value  creativity. "You have a brilliant mathematician coming into an  engineering course and then taking a nine-to-five job with a company,"  he says. "There is something wrong there." 
 Quantity versus quality
Whatever its flaws, the IITs remain out of reach for millions of eager,  ambitious Indian students. The higher-education system is expanding  pell-mell to accommodate them — with the burgeoning private sector  filling around 90% of the demand. "We will need another 800–900  universities and 40,000–45,000 colleges within the next 10 years," says  Kapil Sibal, India's minister of human resources and development. "And  that's not something the government can do on its own."
For-profit colleges and universities are popping up around the  country by the day — nearly 4,000 of them in 2010 alone. The road  leading out of Chennai in southern India, like many around the country,  is crammed with hundreds of private engineering colleges. The government  has struggled to maintain any kind of standard. "The big challenge is  that when you move to grant more access [to education], that the access  must come with quality," says Sibal.
“We are spoon-fed. The teachers dictate and the students write down what they say.”
Many  private institutions have only a few hundred students each and offer  little in the way of laboratory or practical training, because labs are  expensive. Curricula are outdated and there are crippling shortages of  teaching staff, thanks to the allure of higher-paying industry jobs.  "The younger generation is completely disillusioned with pursuing higher  education with the intention of going into teaching," says Agarwal.  Sibal estimates that at least 25% of academic posts are vacant and more  than half of professors lack a postgraduate education.
Rahul, who prefers that his real name not be used, studies  information technology at a private college an hour outside Delhi. "We  are spoon-fed," he says. "The teachers dictate and the students  literally write down what they say."
Rahul's parents paid hundreds of thousands of rupees up front to get  him into the institute after he scored poorly on entrance exams. He  says that about 30% of his peers entered in the same way, and at other  colleges the informal 'management quota' can be as high as 40–50%.
This year, tuition at the institute cost 85,000 rupees (US$1,900):  more than three times that charged by the IIT system. And the payments  at many private colleges don't stop there, says Rahul. "A few days  before [exams] you can pay 1,000 rupees for a copy of the paper, and you  can pay another couple of thousand rupees if you didn't get the right  marks," he says. "Then, if you don't attend classes or labs, you can pay  5,000 rupees to fulfil your attendance quota. Education here is based  entirely on money. And to think, my institute is one of the best in the  area."
There are more than 600 colleges affiliated with one university in  his province alone, and every college has 5–6 branches, with 60–120  students each. "That's lakhs [hundreds of thousands] of students passing  out of these colleges per year," says Rahul.
Moreover, many of the students are graduating with abysmal literacy  and numeracy skills. Employers' surveys suggest that up to 75% are  unemployable.
"You can pay to get in, you can pay to get good marks and you can  pay for your attendance, but you can't pay to get into a good company,"  says Rahul. "There are people at my college who don't even know how to  say 'how are you?' in English" — the working language of most companies.
Rahul's experience is not unusual. Geeta Kingdon, who studies  education, economics and international development at the University of  London's Institute of Education, points to allegations of widespread  corruption in how Indian institutes and universities are accredited.  "Even those who have got the relevant accreditation only got it because  they paid the relevant bribe," she says. Many don't bother. A government  crackdown on unaccredited institutions in 2010 left more than 40  universities and thousands of colleges in court.
Corruption has even reached the august halls of IIT Kharagpur. Last  October, a handful of the institute's top engineering professors were  accused of running a fake college called the Institution of Electrical  Engineers (India) from the campus. The scheme allegedly involved the use  of forged documents bearing the IIT logo to lure in students, who were  charged 27,000 rupees for admission, roughly what the IITs charge per  year. The IIT Kharagpur has launched an inquiry into the incident. "But  there will always be another scandal down the road," says Srinivasan  Ramanujam, a mechanical engineer at the institute. "Students are  desperate to get into a college and people exploit this mentality."
With all these desperate but half-baked graduates, India's hopes of  becoming a global centre of innovation are being compromised. Too often,  the corporate R&D model sweeping through India treats science  graduates more as grunt workers than true innovators, says Ramasami.  "Just availability of scientifically talented people does not provide  scientific breakthroughs. For the discovery process you need ambience  and creative people."
India's government is working hard to change the trend. In January  2010, for example, it pledged to ramp its investment in R&D up from  the current 1% of the gross domestic product to 2%, but this will happen  very slowly, says Rao. The government's budget for 2011–12 included a  one-third increase in its annual higher-education investment, to a total  of 130 billion rupees. And it has approved a new funding agency, the  National Science and Engineering Research Board, which is expected to  become operational this year, and will have an initial budget of around  US$120 million, says Rao.
By 2014, says Ramasami, the hope is that such measures will raise  the number of science and technology PhDs awarded each year from the  current 8,900 — less than one-third that of the United States or China —  to at least 10,000. By the end of the decade, he says, the target is  20,000 PhDs a year. 
 Overseas input
The government is also counting on an injection of money and expertise  from foreign academic institutions. With enrolment rates waning abroad,  many universities are looking to India as a new academic market —  including US institutions such as the University of California,  Berkeley, and Carnegie Mellon University.
US President Barack Obama's trip to India last November highlighted  the growing interest: included in his delegation were three presidents  of US universities and senior representatives of several more. During  the trip, Obama and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced that  they would hold a US–India summit on higher education this year to help  encourage collaborations.
So far, Indian law has restricted foreign universities to forming  partnerships with Indian institutions, says Sibal. But a Foreign  Educational Institutions Bill being considered in India's parliament  would allow them to build full-blown campuses of their own. Sibal takes  it as a sign of what India could become. "Top-quality institutions of  the United States and around the world are actually knocking at our  door," he says. "The India of tomorrow will be an India that provides  solutions not just for itself, but also for the rest of the world."
But that is only if India's rising youthful generation can break out  of its current job-based mentality — not easy in a developing country.
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One evening late last year, Shirsesh Bhaduri, a fourth-year  biotechnology student at IIT Kharagpur, visited Tikka — a makeshift café  in the shade of a banyan tree, where students and faculty members catch  up over cups of 3-rupee tea and samosas. But just over the campus's  whitewashed walls is the reality of West Bengal state and most of India:  unruly fields, shanty villages, water buffalo and jungle.
"In other countries, people may choose their career according to  their interests," says Bhaduri, who has just been to an interview with  London-based bank Barclays. "But here the industries that pay the  maximum attract the maximum applications. Most people do a master's in  business administration after the IIT — and that is the aim of most  people out here. Everything is money-oriented."
 
Anjali Nayar is a freelance writer based in Nairobi.