Education is only a means, not an end: Dr Jitendra

Excelsior Correspondent

Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh, flanked by Vice Chancellor Prof Talat Ahmad, posing for photograph with students and scholars outside the main block of Jamia Milia Islamia University on the occasion of its 95th Foundation Day at New Delhi on Thursday.
Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh, flanked by Vice Chancellor Prof Talat Ahmad, posing for photograph with students and scholars outside the main block of Jamia Milia Islamia University on the occasion of its 95th Foundation Day at New Delhi on Thursday.

NEW DELHI, Oct 29: Addressing the 95th Foundation Day function  of Jamia Milia Islamia University here today, Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER), MoS PMO, Personnel, Public Grievances, Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr Jitendra Singh said that education is only a means and not an end in itself.
Elaborating further, Dr Jitendra Singh said, education can be a means to learn the skill or to groom the inner talent to become employable. But education without skill or without talent may not per se help an individual to become employable. Similarly, he said, education can help one become a better citizen through the study of scriptures and books of social or moral relevance, but education, per se, alone may not make an individual socially relevant. And therefore, the end is far beyond and the journey to reach the end is continuous, while education is like a road on which this journey is to be undertaken, he added.
Complimenting the faculty and students of Jamia Milia for being a part of one of the most cherished universities of India, Dr. Jitendra Singh said, besides Jamia Milia there are only two or three other universities in the country which were not established as a part of a planned State or corporate initiative, but more as a result of passion of certain individuals who were committed to prove that they could make it, notwithstanding all other constraints. Just as Jamia Milia was the brainchild of compulsive educationalist Dr. Zakir Hussain, Banaras Hindu University was the result of similar passion in Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya and Aligarh Muslim University by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, he added.
Dwelling on certain contradictions and confusion in today’s education system, Dr. Jitendra Singh said, for an education pattern to be absolutely relevant, it has to be essentially based on social and economical determinants of any given time. Unfortunately, however, education sometimes tend to lose its relevance partially because of the conditioned approach of the teachers themselves or social competitiveness among parents who are keen to push their adolescent children into all sorts of tutorials and coaching classes without themselves being clear about what actually they expect from their children. This queer phenomenon, he said, often ends up making the aptitude a casualty and thus even the most highly educated youngsters may be  unable to live up to their expected parameters.
Dr. Jitendra Singh said that the present government headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi encourages healthy innovation, fruitful experimentation and out-of-box initiatives. In this context, he announced the introduction of India’s first ever formal post graduate degree course in North-East studies which will begin in Jamia Milia University from the next academic year.
Calling upon the students to become a part of “Make in India” initiative, he also appealed to the faculty persons and researchers to evolve “Make in India” reforms in India’s education system, which will be best suited to the Indian conditions.
Vice Chancellor Prof. Talat Ahmad, Dean Prof. Tasneem Meenai, Prof. Sadre Alam, Prof. Shahid and Prof. Ansari, besides faculty members and students,  were present during the Foundation day celebration.