image courtesy (power plant control room): googleDid you ever feel that the education system in India is more classroom oriented than practical? A Japanese student starts to experiment and assemble stuff like watches, gears etc. at the age of 10. A tenth standard student in India on the other hand does huge mind numbing problems on capacitors, not realizing that condensors and capacitors are the same or that they can be found even in a normal fan!
While some of the bureaucrats might beg to differ, me and my many friends are on the same page here... The page where you see the picture of a fresh creative mind being squashed to shit by useless, impractical and outdated ideas. Yet, in this hell-hole of the Indian pedagogical system, there are some worthwhile people who care enough to go out of their way and show their students what they are actually gulping down their intellectual guts. It is because of profs/teachers like these that some of the institutions manage to gain an edge.
We were recently out on a trip to visit NTPC in Dadri. Around 28 students including 3 profs (Dr. P Srinivasan being one of them) embarked on this educational tour which took one whole day. I would like to narrate to you all, my experience of this fabulous journey*.
The bus started from Pilani at around 11:00pm on 11th Feb. 2010. Pagadala and Bijjam were the two most familiar faces to me throughout. We shared ipods, cracked jokes on every god damn thing in the universe, slept on each others' shoulders and mumbled profanity about the rash driver together. We finally reached Dadri (close to noida) at about 6 am on the 12th. The accomodation wasn't great but very huge and very tiny people adjusted quite well. :) Rahul and I loitered around the acco. making up stories of comic escapades. (we both are quite creative on that note... but this post is definitely not one of those)
Everyone got back on their feet by 8:15am and we all had breakfast which resembled our mess food in so many ways that some of us were internally crying.
We finally got to the plant at around 9:30. It was a coal based thermal power plant having four 210MW boilers and one 490 MW boilers adding up to a total of 1030 MW. (one more 490 boiler was yet to be inaugurated) We were taken around and shown almost every significant component of the plant which was quite overwhelming because
- most of us never expected to see something, that is a prospective 15 mark question in a cdc comprehensive exam, live!
- all of us felt so puny in front of these gigantic metallic power-beasts that made noise enough to wake you up from your deepest slumbers.
After a three hour tour around the plant we reached the NTPC plant canteen to have a bite and guess what was waiting there.... BLOODY MESS FOOD! Though the food was "healthy and sufficient" we were all happy for the fact that the trip was in keeping with what we had imagined. After a little bit of resting in the lawns outside the canteen, we were taken to GT-ST combined cycle plant which was of 829MW capacity. This was a more state-of-the-art power plant and was very interesting. We were told that it runs on CNG (compressed natural gas) or HSD (diesel). The plant was much more compact and sophisticated than the coal based one. After a lot of questioning, understanding, discussion and agreement, we moved on to a place called the "ash-mound". Ash from the coal plant was heaped into the shape of a small hill near the plant and vegetation was grown on it which made it look like a beautiful picnic garden. Everyone played on swings and other child-play equipment there, which made our profs wonder if we were really mature enough to understand the seriousness of the trip. Nag became the lead and the explorer on the mound and was at the peak of his analytical and observational abilities (for a not-to-be-named girl) while Rahul followed around with his ever-green poise and calm.
Calling it an awesome day, we all started back at around 5pm, had some tasty and non-mess like food on the way and reached Pilani at 1:30am on the 13th.
*though the journey was really good, I did miss out on the batch snaps of my wingies... sorry guys and thx for the cool pics at my batch snaps. :)
Written form of our wonderful experience.Thnx to Prathipati :)
ReplyDeleteMess food @ NTPC hahaha.... I beg to differ from your opinion of our mess food though. I personally think the food we eat is pretty descent.
ReplyDeletei go with Reddy , coz we're non-vegetarian souls in non vegetarian bodies !
ReplyDelete'power'ful experience in powerful words :)
ty ty
ReplyDeletenice post. first para was awesome.
ReplyDeletethere are capacitors in a fan? dayymmmmnnn!
yo POT.
ReplyDeleteHey adi, nice post ra! It's sad that we cannot be there on field trips like that. All of the work done is on bloody computers for us!
ReplyDeleteHail Civ,Che and Mec Engg!(Half harted :P)
Cheers!
hey dooooode... nice to hear from you. coding is awesome in its own ways...:)
ReplyDeletein software ... what happens is we have large bodies of code without any purpose what so ever. but what happens is a small part of that code does something which no one knows and many computers/people depend on it. what happens to such code bases ? nothing ... oka laavu american ni saaki nattu saakutaru ? why ? because replacing cost is greater than maintenance cost(until the next guy takes over the code) and accounting can always be manipulated. hence that monstrous code never gets replaced and dependencies keep on piling up. ironically the best solution to this grand problem going back to the basics of pen and paper for while and letting simpler systems evolve from then on. however that will never happen since people are a coward lot.
ReplyDeletein the context of education that means people need to stop studying.
aaahhhh... that's the yuggi I know!
ReplyDelete