Arjun wrote: Also, the JEE is highly correlated with most other accepted measures of high IQ - including the Olympiads, GRE and Mensa
I think I understand your position a little better. I do think a broader question should be asked: what is the correlation of 'high IQ' with success in a career; high IQ as determined by a test in the 17th year of one's life. Are most high IQ kids uniformly successful? Do most successful people have a uniformly high IQ, as determined by GRE/Mensa/some other test? Certainly, the answer depends on what is considered as success. (A few years ago, I read a study done by a psychologist who tracked some high IQ kids in the US (as measured in middle school) for about 15 years or so. The results were mixed. I struggle to remember the researcher, but I'll look.) It was published as a book or perhaps an article in a book
Bade:
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/a ... 516272.ece
Good article. The prof. considers the problem within a larger context of what is the end-game....why is something considered good, and who benefits. The student alone....student and society at large etc. The other article by Dr. Jalote (IIT-Knpr) also made an attempt to think within a larger context and anticipate impending problems.
Anyone teaching in IITs is aware that many of our undergraduate students are just not interested in engineering. A small proportion of them know they will never take up an engineering career even before they enter IIT.
This line caught my eye....really, for such people there ought to be a different avenue allowing them to pursue what they want. Give them the super-duper high IQ public stamp of genio-supremacity that they want (and probably deserve), and get them into something else. This is indeed a massive waste of time and resource.
Sometimes, it seems like the JEE is like a Mahabharat ka yudh between the science profs. at IITs and the physics/math/chemisty teachers at the coaching institutes who train the students- each trying to outwit the other.
As an aside, I do feel that people who start businesses of their own are not given respect in desh....they are actually heroes, as far as I am concerned. They make a profit (assuming the business is profitable) by answering an economic need in the society, provide employment to others and improve efficiency in the economic system. They are also the ones who have successfully shaken off the naukari mentality and stood on their own.
RamaY wrote:If anyone wants pursue education beyond a 5 year under grad, they should commit to a 5 year PhD program. These will be our real Brahmins
I submit that we actually need more vaishyas in desh
I just stumbled onto page 1/2 of this thread.....seems like we are having the same discussion 4 years later

. (singha...did not know you TA'ed 4th yr UGs at IIT-K).