29. Reading Skills Comprehension: QUALIFIED YOUNGSTERS

QUALIFIED YOUNGSTERS

Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow:

1. Hundreds of thousands of our qualified youngsters take off from different international airports every year for higher studies or highly lucrative jobs in the US, the UK, Germany, France and Australia. And most of these Indians prefer to settle down abroad, attracted by the facilities and the higher quality of life provided by these countries. We have been crying hoarse about the brain drain from India over the last five decades or more, without going in for a well-set blueprint to check the counter-productive phenomenon. Some of the public schools in our metros and our IITs (Indian Institutes of Technology) and IIMs (Indian Institutes of Management) are providing a world-class education. One might wonder that having spent a lot on infrastructure, training and other facilities and the best teaching staff, can the Government and the people of India look away as the talent, assiduously nurtured in India, is utilised by other countries for their development and excellence in different fields.

2. During the decades-long debate on the brain drain, it was said that our youngsters leave India just because excellence is neither recognised nor rewarded in India. This could have been partly true at the beginning of this debate. But today, things have changed beyond recognition and talented people can reach the highest position possible if only they are prepared to work hard.

3. Youngsters from India – Whatever be the field they are working in – are today suitably recognised and rewarded.

4. Take the field of sports where many of the celebrities are household names – SaniaMirza, Narain Karthikeyan, Sachin Tendulkar, Anju Bobby George, P.T. Usha and several others. Innovation and managerial skill get recognition when Indians can vie with others in excellence from any part of the world.

5. If there is one individual who has catapulted India to the number one position in milk production in the world, it’s none other than Dr Verghese Kurien, the father of the White Revolution. A top engineer who completed the Konkan Railway in record time, Mr E. Sreedharan has built up the world class Delhi Metro.

Mr Amitabh Bachchan is no longer a megastar of the Indian screen only. His only presentation of KaunBanegaCrorepati and other ventures have made him a living legend of global proportions. Take the story of the Ambani brothers, the Tatas, the Mittals and others who are having their footprints in different continents. We have had so many Indians who rose to the summit as Miss Universe and Miss World, but none has earned so much acclaim globally, in Bollywood, Hollywood: or the Cannes Film Festival, as MsAishwaryaRai. In the wake of globalisation, India has produced a galaxy of eminent entrepreneurs in IT; Biotechnology, civil aviation, steel production and the like. Just mention a field and we are already in the vanguard or moving ahead at a frantic pace. A time may come when India would be capable of reversing the so-called brain drain to India’s supreme advantage.

6.And happily enough, this is already happening now. A report released by a high-tech lobbying group in the Silicon Valley in 2005 revealed that the highly skilled Indian born talent that once flocked to the US was returning home, “turning America’s brain drain into India’s brain gain”. Titled “Losing the Competitive Edge: The Challenge for Science and Technology in the US”, the report said that countries like India and China, through the restructuring of their economies, were dramatically increasing the skill sets of their workforce, thereby posing a challenge “to the US leadership in the technology domain. “Public-private partnerships (in India)’ have invested in technical universities and communications infrastructure to create cutting-edge technology parks in places like Bangalore in Karnataka. This will make India more competitive, and alluring to investors and multinational companies.” The report further said: “They are dramatically increasing the skill sets of their workforce, investing in research and development, and adopting advanced technologies, all to create wealth and spur economic growth.”

On the basis of your understanding of the above passage answer each of the questions given below with the help of options that follow:

(a) The qualified and talented youngsters go abroad for———-

  (i) higher studies and high paying jobs

 (ii) better quality of life

(iii) better facilities

(iv) excellence is neither recognized nor rewarded in this country

(b) A report from the Silicon Valley states that skilled and talented Indians were——- 

(i)unhappy in the US

 (ii) returning home to better work conditions

(iii) not being given enough recognition in the US

 (iv) none of the above

(c) technology parks in India are found in———

 (i) Delhi                      (ii) Bangalore

(iii) Mumbai                (iv) Chennai

(d) Choose the option which is not true———–

(i) Youngsters are returning to India because of the restructuring of the Indian economy

(ii) India is spending a lot of money on research and development

 (iii) All students from the IITs and IIMs prefer to go abroad

(iv) Today young Indian achievers are respected and rewarded in the country which was not always the case in the past

Answer the following questions briefly in your own words:

(e) What is meant by brain drain?

(f) Why is Dr Kurien held in such high esteem in India?

(g) What is the contribution of Mr E Sreedharan to modern India?

 (h) What does the counter-productive phenomenon refer to?

(i) How is India becoming alluring to investors and MNCs?

(j) What is the most essential quality a talented person must possess to reach the pinnacle of success?

(k) Find words from the passage which mean the same as each of the following:

(i) tirelessly/attentively ( para-1 )

 (ii) zenith (para- 5)

Answers:-

 (a) (i);                         (b) (ii);

(c) (ii);                         (d) (iii)

 (e) The movement of educated Indians to countries like the USA, the UK, Germany, France and Australia for higher studies or for lucrative jobs.

 (f) He was responsible for the White Revolution, which made India the top milk-producer in the world.

 (g) He was an engineer who completed the Konkan Railway in record time and developed the Delhi Metro.

 (h) It refers to the phenomenon of Brain Drain.

(i) The development of a public-private partnership for the establishment of technical universities and cutting-edge technology parks have made India alluring to investors and MNCs.

(j) Hard work is essential for a talented person to succeed.

 (k) (i) Assiduously;                  (ii) Summit

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