Post Matric Scholarship for Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) in Madhya Pradesh

Daily writing prompt
In what ways do you communicate online?

By Kavita Dehalwar

The scheme “Post-Matric Scholarship” started in 1945 by the Tribal Welfare and Scheduled Caste (SC) Department, Madhya Pradesh, provides scholarships to Scheduled Tribe students studying in classes 11th, 12th, Colleges, PhD, and Professional Courses.

The Post Matric Scholarship for Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) in Madhya Pradesh is a government initiative aimed at promoting higher education among students belonging to SC and ST communities. The scheme provides financial assistance to help students meet the expenses of their education after matriculation (Class 10). Here’s a detailed overview of the scholarship:


Objective

The primary goal of the Post Matric Scholarship is to reduce the financial burden on students from economically weaker SC and ST communities and to encourage them to pursue education beyond the matriculation level.


Eligibility Criteria

To be eligible for the Post Matric Scholarship, students must meet the following criteria:

  1. Caste Requirements:
    • The applicant must belong to the Scheduled Caste (SC) or Scheduled Tribe (ST) category as recognized by the Government of Madhya Pradesh.
  2. Educational Qualification:
    • Students must have passed Class 10 (matriculation) from a recognized board or institution.
    • The scholarship is applicable for studies at the post-matric level, including higher secondary, undergraduate, postgraduate, diploma, professional, and technical courses.
  3. Income Criteria:
    • For SC students: The family income should not exceed ₹3,00,000 per annum.
    • For ST students: The family income should not exceed ₹6,00,000 per annum.
  4. Domicile:
    • The applicant must be a resident of Madhya Pradesh.
  5. Other Requirements:
    • The student should be enrolled in a government or recognized private educational institution.
    • Students receiving similar scholarships or financial aid from other sources are not eligible.

Benefits of the Scholarship

The benefits of the Post Matric Scholarship include:

  1. Tuition Fee Coverage:
    • The tuition fees for the course are reimbursed directly to the institution.
  2. Maintenance Allowance:
    • A monthly allowance is provided to cover living expenses, books, and other necessities. The amount varies based on the level of study and the type of institution (government or private).
  3. Other Expenses:
    • Examination fees, library fees, and laboratory charges are also covered under the scheme.

Application Process

The application process for the scholarship is entirely online through the Madhya Pradesh Scholarship Portal. Here’s a step-by-step guide:

  1. Registration:
  2. Fill the Application Form:
    • Log in and complete the scholarship application form.
    • Provide details about your academic history, institution, caste certificate, and income certificate.
  3. Upload Documents:
    • Upload scanned copies of the required documents (see the list below).
  4. Verification:
    • Submit the application. The institute will verify the details provided.
  5. Approval:
    • After verification by the institution and authorities, the scholarship amount will be credited to the student’s or institution’s bank account.

Required Documents

Applicants need to upload the following documents during the application process:

  1. Recent passport-sized photograph.
  2. Caste certificate issued by a competent authority.
  3. Income certificate of the family (issued within the past year).
  4. Domicile certificate of Madhya Pradesh.
  5. Previous year’s mark sheet.
  6. Admission proof (fee receipt or admission letter).
  7. Bank account details of the student (linked with Aadhaar).

Important Dates

  • Application Start Date: Generally announced in July or August each year.
  • Application Deadline: Typically by November, with extensions announced as needed.
  • Renewal Applications: Renewal students must reapply before the deadline, providing updated documents.

Key Points to Note

  1. Renewal Process:
    • Students who continue their studies in subsequent years need to apply for scholarship renewal annually.
  2. Monitoring and Transparency:
    • The scheme is monitored through the online portal, ensuring transparency in fund disbursement.
  3. Grievance Redressal:
    • Any issues related to the scholarship can be resolved through the helpline available on the MP Scholarship Portal.

Contact Information

For further assistance, students can contact:

  • Helpline Number: Provided on the official portal.
  • District Education Office: For offline inquiries and document submission.

This scholarship program plays a crucial role in ensuring that financial barriers do not hinder the education of SC and ST students in Madhya Pradesh. By covering tuition fees and providing maintenance support, it encourages higher education and helps bridge the gap in educational opportunities.

The Structure of Longing and Social Resistance: A Critical Examination of Vijay Tendulkar’s A Friend’s Story (Mitrachi Goshta)

Citation

Rathod, S. M., & Ashturkar, U. (2026). The Structure of Longing and Social Resistance: A Critical Examination of Vijay Tendulkar’s A Friend’s Story (Mitrachi Goshta). International Journal of Research, 10(7), 421–424. https://doi.org/10.26643/rb.v118i11.11253

Sanjay Mangilal Rathod1

Research Scholar

Dept. of English, Research Centre, KTHM College, Nashik

Prof. Dr. Uddhav Ashturkar2

Head, Dept. of English

MVP Samaj’s KSKW College, Cidco, Nashik

Abstract

Vijay Tendulkar stands as a foundational force in modern Indian drama, renowned for dismantling bourgeois morality and exposing the raw, institutionalised violence inherent in societal structures. While plays like Ghashiram Kotwal and Silence! The Court is in Session critiques political corruption and systemic misogyny; his 1981 masterpiece, A Friend’s Story (Mitrachi Goshta), ventures into uncharted thematic territory: the psychological and social alienation of queer identity. Set in pre-independence India, the play chronicles the tragic trajectory of Mitra, a protagonist navigating her lesbian identity within a fiercely patriarchal and heteronormative framework. This article explores how Tendulkar constructs A Friend’s Story as a profound critique of societal intolerance, analysing its dramatic techniques, its subversion of gender performativity, and its enduring relevance in contemporary queer subnational discourses.

Keywords: Longing, Resistance, archetype, Gender Performativity.

Introduction

Historically, post-independence Indian drama largely relegated non-heteronormative sexualities to the margins, treating them either with comedic dismissal or clinical erasure. Vijay Tendulkar shattered this status quo by writing Mitrachi Goshta (translated into English as A Friend’s Story), arguably one of the first explicit treatments of lesbian desire in modern Indian theatre.

Tendulkar does not present queer identity through a sanitised or idealised lens. Instead, he treats it with raw realism, mapping the intersections of personal desire against rigid societal expectations. By setting the play in the 1940s—a period dominated by nationalistic fervour and traditional collective identities—Tendulkar highlights a poignant paradox: a nation striving for collective political freedom while remaining completely hostile to individual emotional and sexual liberation.

Character Relation and Narrative Framework

The narrative architecture of the play relies heavily on a complex triad of characters, each representing a distinct axis of human agency and social conditioning:

CharacterRole / ArchetypeFunction in the Narrative Structure
MitraThe Protagonist: tragic queer figure.Challenges heteronormative conventions; embodies raw, uncompromising individual desire.
BapuThe Narrator: the empathetic observer.Represents the progressive yet ultimately constrained middle-class conscience. Acts as the bridge for the audience.
NamaThe Object of Desire: conventionally feminine.Represents fluid vulnerability trapped between societal safety (heterosexuality) and genuine impulse (homosexuality).

Tendulkar’s decision to route Mitra’s story through Bapu’s narration is a brilliant structural technique. Bapu represents the conventional, well-meaning societal observer. Through his eyes, the audience journeys through confusion, initial resistance, gradual empathy, and ultimate grief. This narrative positioning forces a largely heteronormative audience to confront their own biases alongside Bapu.

The Disruption of Gender Performativity

In A Friend’s Story, Tendulkar anticipates modern theories of gender performativity. Mitra actively rejects the performative markers of 1940s Indian womanhood. She walks with a masculine stride, dresses with defiant neutrality, and speaks with an unvarnished candour that unsettles both her peers and her academic institutions.

However, Tendulkar avoids making Mitra a flat, rebellious archetype. Her tragedy stems from a deep internal conflict. She is acutely aware of her differences but lacks the modern vocabulary of “queer liberation” to legitimise her feelings. Her desire for Nama is possessive, intense, and volatile—a direct reflection of the pressure cooking inside an identity forced to exist entirely in the shadows. Nama, conversely, succumbs to the safety of heteronormative marriage, demonstrating how societal institutions absorb and neutralise deviations to preserve status quo stability.

Systematic Abuse and Spatial Isolation

Throughout the play, violence is rarely physical; instead, it manifests through psychological policing and spatial banishment. Tendulkar illustrates this institutional alienation across multiple settings:

  • The College Campus: Nominally a space for progressive thought, it quickly transforms into an arena of surveillance, gossip, and moral panic when Mitra’s tendencies are discovered.
  • The Domestic Space: Home offers Mitra no sanctuary. It serves as the primary site of containment, where her family attempts to cure or conceal her “malady.”
  • The Subleased Room: The private spaces where Mitra and Nama meet are inherently temporary and fragile, constantly threatened by the intrusion of landlords, moral gatekeepers, and societal judgment.

Ultimately, Mitra’s inability to find a legitimate space within the socio-spatial matrix of her world leads to her psychological unravelling and eventual suicide. Her death is not an act of weakness, but a stark indictment of a society that offers no breathing room for authentic selfhood.

Contemporary Relevance and Critical Response

When Mitrachi Goshta first showed in 1981, it faced strong opposition, censorship, and negative reviews from conservative audiences who saw it as a foreign Western idea. Tendulkar, however, believed that human nature and desire are the same everywhere and refused to let local taboos control his art.

Today, especially after important events like the decriminalisation of Section 377 in India, A Friend’s Story has seen a strong comeback in both academic and theatre circles. Modern directors and scholars see the text not just as an old piece but as a key starting point for Indian queer theatre. It offers important historical background, showing that the fight for queer rights in India comes from local stories and is not just a recent or Western idea.

Conclusion

Vijay Tendulkar’s A Friend’s Story remains a major success in Indian theatre. By shifting his focus from large political systems to the small, personal struggles of the human heart, Tendulkar created a lasting masterpiece about the high price of staying true to oneself. Mitra stands with famous figures like Antigone or Joan of Arc—a tragic character destroyed by her refusal to give in to a world too limited to understand her greatness.

References

  1. Babula, M. (2010). The Plays of Vijay Tendulkar: A Critical Study. Prestige Books.
  2. Dharwadker, A. B. (2005). Theatres of Independence: Drama, Theory, and Urban Performance in India since 1947. University of Iowa Press.
  3. Tendulkar, V. (2001). A Friend’s Story (G. Gowri, Trans.). Oxford University Press.
  4. Tendulkar, V. (2004). Collected Plays in Translation. Oxford University Press.
Daily writing prompt
What’s a word or phrase that annoys you?

Empower Your Insights with Julius: AI-Driven Analysis and Visualization Support

Daily writing prompt
What snack would you eat right now?

In today’s data-driven world, making sense of vast amounts of information is both a necessity and a challenge. Whether you’re a researcher, educator, business strategist, or data enthusiast, effective analysis and visualization can unlock new perspectives and drive impactful decisions. Meet Julius, your AI-powered assistant, designed to transform complex data into clear insights and visually compelling narratives.

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Performing the Unspeakable: Gender, Identity, and Transgression in the Plays of Mahesh Dattani

Citation

Deshmukh, B. R. (2022). Performing the Unspeakable: Gender, Identity, and Transgression in the Plays of Mahesh Dattani. International Journal for Social Studies, 8(9), 17–21. https://doi.org/10.26643/rb.v118i2.7625

Dr. Bharat Ranjeet Deshmukh

Assistant Professor, Department of English

Narayanrao Waghmare Mahavidyalaya, Akhada Balapur, Hingoli, (MS)

Abstract:

Indian drama has long served as a mirror to society’s evolving anxieties, yet few playwrights have challenged the patriarchal foundations of Indian culture as incisively as Mahesh Dattani. As the first Indian English playwright to receive the Sahitya Akademi Award (1998), Dattani occupies a unique position in the landscape of modern Indian theatre. Unlike his predecessors who focused on anti-colonial nationalism or economic injustice, Dattani turns his gaze inward to the family, the closet, and the female body. Through a careful examination of three of his major this article argues that Dattani deconstructs gender not as a biological given but as a performative construct enforced through language, space, and ritual. His plays expose how Indian patriarchy disciplines both women and men, while simultaneously offering moments of transgressive possibility.

Keywords:  Culture, Gender, Identity, Patriarchy, Space.

Theoretical Framework: Gender as Performance

Dattani’s dramatic technique aligns closely with Judith Butler’s theory of gender performativitythe idea that gender is not an innate identity but a “repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a highly rigid regulatory frame” (Butler 179). However, Dattani indigenizes this framework by situating it within specifically Indian institutions: the joint family, caste-based honor, and the postcolonial middle-class home. Critic Nandi Bhatia observes that Dattani’s “domestic spaces are never neutral; they are ideological battlegrounds where gender norms are scripted, rehearsed, and violently enforced” (Bhatia 67). The stage itself becomes a laboratory where the taken-for-granted naturalness of gender is systematically dismantled.

The Female Body as Sacrificial Ground: Tara

Perhaps Dattani’s most devastating critique of gender emerges in Tara, a two-act play based on the true story of conjoined twins. The play revolves around a brother and sister, Chandan and Tara, who were born with a shared third leg. Their surgeon father and conniving mother, Bharati, decide to “separate” them by privileging the male child. The leg is given to Chandan, while Tara receives a prosthetic. Dattani uses this medical metaphor to expose how Indian families systematically allocate resourcesnutrition, education, medical care, and emotional attentionto sons over daughters.

The play’s brilliance lies in its temporal structure. The adult Chandan (now calling himself Dan) narrates the past from self-imposed exile in London, tormented by guilt. Dattani stages the inequality not through polemic but through devastatingly casual dialogue. When Tara confronts her mother, Bharati defends her choice: “What was I supposed to do? Your brother needed that leg to stand onliterally! You have your spirit. He needed the strength” (Dattani, Collected Plays 212). Bharati’s justification reveals how patriarchy operates not through overt cruelty but through a logic of “sacrifice” that naturalizes female deprivation as virtue. Tara’s eventual death—from complications related to the prostheticbecomes a scathing indictment of a culture that valorizes the girl child only in death.

Scholar Anu Aneja reads Tara as an allegory of the nation-state’s partitioning of female bodies. She writes, “The shared leg represents the prelapsarian wholeness of the female principle, which patriarchy must sever to establish binary gender. Dattani shows that the ‘natural’ male-female difference is actually a surgical wound” (Aneja 134). The play refuses catharsis; the surviving brother cannot redeem himself, and the mother remains unrepentant. Dattani leaves the audience with the uncomfortable realization that gender violence is often enacted by women themselves as agents of patriarchal reproduction.

Masculinity in Crisis: Dance Like a Man

While Tara focuses on the female victim, Dance Like a Man examines how patriarchy also mutilates men who fail to conform to hegemonic masculinity. Set in a traditional Tamil Brahmin family, the play follows Jairaj, a man who wanted to become a Bharatanatyam dancer in the 1950s, when the art form was considered effeminate and associated with devadasis (temple courtesans). His father, Amritlal, a freedom fighter and rationalist, forbids him from dancing publicly, declaring, “My son will not prance around like a woman. We have broken the shackles of caste superstition, but we will not break the shackles of decency” (Dattani, Collected Plays 89).

Dattani complicates the gender analysis by introducing Jairaj’s wife, Ratna, who comes from a more progressive family and becomes a successful dancer herself. The play unfolds in flashbacks and present-time confrontations, revealing that Jairaj has sacrificed his art for his father’s approval, only to end up a bitter, impotent man living in his daughter’s shadow. Here, Dattani critiques not just patriarchy but its intersection with class and postcolonial nationalism. Amritlal’s rationalism, meant to oppose British colonial stereotypes of Indian “effeminacy,” becomes a new form of masculine discipline.

Performance theorist Rustom Bharucha argues that Dance Like a Man exposes “the homosocial anxiety underlying Indian middle-class respectability” (Bharucha 156). Jairaj is never explicitly homosexual, but his desire to dance is coded as feminine and thus threatening. Ratna, by contrast, succeeds precisely because she performs her femininity “correctly”she is a wife and mother first, dancer second. Dattani thus demonstrates that gender norms trap both sexes, albeit asymmetrically. The play’s tragic irony is that Jairaj internalizes his father’s contempt so completely that he becomes the enforcer of his own emasculation.

Communalism and Gendered Space: Final Solutions

In Final Solutions, Dattani shifts focus to the intersection of gender and religious communalism. The play confronts the 1992-93 Bombay riots, but rather than depicting street violence, it stages the aftermath inside a middle-class Gujarati Hindu home. The patriarch, Ramnik Gandhi, shelters two young Muslim men, Babban and Javed, during riots. The conflict unfolds through the women of the house: Ramnik’s wife Aruna, his mother Smita, and his daughter Sonal.

Sonal, the young educated woman, becomes the play’s moral fulcrum. Initially, she parrots her grandmother’s communal prejudices: “They are not like us. They breed like rats” (Dattani, Collected Plays 312). But as she interacts with Javed, she begins to question her own socialization. Dattani deliberately reverses gendered expectations: the men (Ramnik and his father-in-law Hardika) are paralyzed by their past secrets, while the women drive both violence and reconciliation. Smita, the grandmother, harbors a memory of a Muslim lover from Partition who abandoned hera trauma she converts into hatred. Dattani thus shows that communal violence is not just political but intimately gendered; women’s bodies become the repositories of collective memory and revenge.

Feminist critic Jasbir Jain observes that Final Solutions “refuses the easy binary of women as peaceful and men as violent. Instead, Dattani shows women as both victims and agents of communal ideology” (Jain 201). Aruna, the liberal mother, tries to maintain “civilized” behavior while the Muslim men are locked in her garage, revealing how domesticity is itself a structure of exclusion. The play ends without resolutionthe Muslims leave, the family remains intact, but Sonal’s final silence suggests a fragile, uncomfortable awakening.

Staging Gender: Dattani’s Theatrical Innovations

Dattani’s thematic concerns are inseparable from his formal choices. He consistently employs non-linear narratives, flashbacks, and simultaneous staging (two or more scenes happening on stage at once) to show how the past haunts the present. In Tara, the adult Chandan watches his childhood self like a ghost; in Dance Like a Man, older and younger Jairaj appear together. This Brechtian estrangement prevents audiences from identifying comfortably with characters. Moreover, Dattani uses “plays within plays” to highlight gender as performance. In Final Solutions, the grandmother Smitareen acts her youthful romance with a Muslim man, blurring the line between memory and drama. Critic Erin Mee argues that Dattani’s “metatheatrical techniques compel audiences to recognize that gender and communal identities are not natural but stagedand therefore capable of being restaged” (Mee 44).

Conclusion:

Mahesh Dattani’s contribution to Indian drama extends beyond his awards and publications. He founded the alternative theatre group “Playpen” in Bangalore in 1984, creating a space for taboo subjects that commercial theatre avoided. More importantly, he gave Indian English drama a new vocabulary for discussing gender—not as a women’s issue but as a structure that deforms all human relationships. His plays have been criticized for their urban, upper-caste, English-speaking milieu, and indeed, he rarely represents Dalit or Adivasi experiences. Yet within his chosen terrain—the Indian middle-class homehe has exposed patriarchal violence with unmatched precision.

In the final scene of Tara, the dead Tara speaks directly to her brother: “You could have refused the leg. But you didn’t. So don’t pretend you’re innocent” (Dattani, Collected Plays 256). This accusation haunts not just Chandan but every audience member who has benefited from unearned privilege. Dattani’s theatre does not offer salvation; it offers recognition. And in a culture that prefers to keep gender violence unspeakable, that recognition is a revolutionary act.

Works Cited

Aneja, Anu. “The Body as Allegory: Mahesh Dattani’s Tara and the Politics of Difference.” Modern Indian Drama: A Reader, edited by Nandi Bhatia, Pencraft International, 2010, pp. 128-42.

Bharucha, Rustom. Theatre and the World: Performance and the Politics of Culture. Routledge, 1993.

Bhatia, Nandi. “Gender and the Politics of Space in Mahesh Dattani’s Plays.” Contemporary Indian Drama in English, edited by Chitra Panikar, Sahitya Akademi, 2005, pp. 65-82.

Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge, 1990.

Dattani, Mahesh. Collected Plays. Penguin Books India, 2000.

Jain, Jasbir. “Women and Communal Violence in Dattani’s Final Solutions.” The Plays of Mahesh Dattani: A Critical Response, edited by R. K. Dhawan, Prestige Books, 2008, pp. 195-210.

Mee, Erin B. “Theatrical Transgression and the Performance of Gender in Mahesh Dattani.” Asian Theatre Journal, vol. 27, no. 1, 2010, pp. 37-58. JSTORwww.jstor.org/stable/40985006.

Daily writing prompt
What’s the most fun way to exercise?

EDUindex: Correlation Coefficient for Curriculum Relevancy and Employability

Daily writing prompt
If you could meet a historical figure, who would it be and why?

The EDUindex is a quantitative measure designed to evaluate the relevancy of educational curricula to post-educational objectives, especially in the context of employability. It serves as a Correlation Coefficient that quantifies how well an academic curriculum aligns with the demands of the job market, skills required by employers, and overall preparedness for professional careers. The EDUindex is an insightful metric for educators, policymakers, and institutions to assess the effectiveness of their educational programs.

1. Understanding the EDUindex

  • Definition: The EDUindex is a value that ranges from -1 to +1, similar to traditional correlation coefficients. Here, a value close to +1 indicates a strong positive correlation between the curriculum and employability objectives, while a value close to -1 indicates a negative correlation. A value of 0 would indicate no correlation.
  • Purpose: It aims to bridge the gap between academic content and the skill sets required in the real world by providing a measurable framework for evaluating curriculum relevance. The primary focus is on ensuring that graduates possess the skills and knowledge necessary to meet the evolving demands of industries and employers.

2. Components of the EDUindex

The EDUindex is derived from various parameters that can be broadly categorized into the following components:

  • Curriculum Content Relevance: Measures how well the topics and subjects taught align with industry standards, technological advancements, and contemporary practices.
  • Skill-Based Learning: Assesses the extent to which the curriculum incorporates practical, hands-on experiences such as internships, projects, and case studies that enhance employability skills.
  • Soft Skills Integration: Evaluates the inclusion of communication, teamwork, problem-solving, and other essential soft skills in the curriculum.
  • Industry Collaboration: Looks at partnerships between educational institutions and industries, including guest lectures, workshops, and industry-based projects.
  • Graduate Employability Rates: Analyzes the percentage of graduates securing employment in their field of study within a certain period post-graduation.

3. EDUindex Gap Analysis

The EDUindex Gap Analysis is a diagnostic tool that identifies areas where the curriculum falls short in achieving alignment with post-educational goals, particularly employability. It helps institutions recognize missing elements or gaps that are crucial for enhancing the relevancy of their academic offerings.

How Gap Analysis Works
  • Step 1: Data Collection: Gather data on current curriculum structure, graduate employability outcomes, and industry feedback. This can include surveys from employers, feedback from alumni, and job market analysis.
  • Step 2: EDUindex Calculation: Using the collected data, calculate the current EDUindex score to understand the existing correlation between the curriculum and employability.
  • Step 3: Gap Identification: Identify gaps where the curriculum does not meet industry expectations. For instance:
    • Missing Skills: Lack of courses on emerging technologies like AI, Data Science, or Cybersecurity.
    • Outdated Content: Curriculum components that are no longer relevant in the current job market.
    • Insufficient Practical Exposure: Limited hands-on experience in labs, real-world projects, or internships.
  • Step 4: Recommendations: Based on the gap analysis, recommend curriculum changes such as the addition of industry-specific modules, skill development courses, or enhanced industry collaboration.

4. Benefits of Using the EDUindex

  • Improved Curriculum Design: Helps institutions refine their curriculum to better meet industry standards, thereby increasing the employability of graduates.
  • Data-Driven Decision Making: Provides a data-backed approach for curriculum reforms, ensuring that changes are aligned with market demands.
  • Institutional Benchmarking: Enables educational institutions to benchmark their programs against industry standards and other institutions.
  • Enhanced Student Outcomes: By aligning the curriculum with employability, students gain relevant skills that increase their job readiness.
  • Feedback Loop for Continuous Improvement: The EDUindex fosters a continuous feedback loop where institutions can regularly assess and update their curricula based on industry trends.

5. Case Study: Implementing EDUindex in Higher Education

Let’s consider an example of a university implementing the EDUindex for its Computer Science program:

  • Initial Assessment: The EDUindex score was calculated as 0.45, indicating a moderate alignment with employability goals. Key gaps included limited exposure to cloud computing and AI.
  • Gap Analysis Results:
    • Missing Courses: No dedicated courses on Cloud Technologies or AI.
    • Industry Collaboration: Lack of partnerships with tech companies for internships.
    • Outdated Curriculum: Focused more on theoretical knowledge rather than practical applications.
  • Action Plan:
    • Introduced new electives on AI, Machine Learning, and Cloud Computing.
    • Partnered with industry leaders like Google and AWS for certification programs.
    • Enhanced internship opportunities and real-world projects.
  • Outcome: After implementing these changes, the EDUindex score improved to 0.75, and the graduate employability rate increased by 20%.

6. Conclusion

The EDUindex serves as a vital metric for aligning educational curricula with post-educational objectives, particularly in enhancing employability. By leveraging the EDUindex and conducting regular gap analyses, educational institutions can ensure that their programs remain relevant, adaptive, and effective in preparing students for the dynamic job market.