NEEED OF SKILLS DEVELOPMENT IN PHARMACEUTICAL CURRICULUM _An essay by Shefali Ahuja
In
the world of developing globalization and advancement, Pharmacy Education needs
a reform. The current Pharmacy Education System is producing the
amateurish personalities with laggard minds. Education system
is giving more emphasis on theoretical lectures rather on practical skill
development. Students have been taught the old
traditional practical knowledge which has no relevance with skills that are
actually required in industries. A
number of colleges do not meet the instrumental needs of current requirement.
About
90 per cent of the employment opportunities require the vocational skills. Excepting 5
percent of graduates, other won’t get employment in industries; such students either
have to go for industry driven training programs or get job in basic data
entering-editing or a low paid labour. In this era of
innovations, companies need innovative plus skilled minds; who won’t find any
hardship to apply their academic knowledge in industries while working; they
should also have managerial skills, team working, conversational skills, and basic
computer skills. So for developing such employable skilled minds two
main factors of education system play important role. The first one is
that the pedagogy should be practical and the second one is the reformation of
curriculum.
Current scenario of education system:
As
per the Education Regulation (Drug and Cosmetics act, Government of India) numbers of hours for
practical should be 100 for the major subjects such as pharmaceutics and pharmaceutical
chemistry for diploma course.
The officials make the time table in
accordance with the rules laid down in Education Regulations but they are
rarely followed strictly.
Moreover, the nature of practical
work described under Education Regulations never match with the practical work
carried out labs. There is lack of instrumental exposure at grauation
level.
Co-curricular
activities are as much as important as studies. This brings out
ones innovative and creative corner, students learn how to work together in
groups and how to manage such situations. Cultural events and
annual fiesta are hardly organized in pharmacy colleges due to which an artist
within a pharmacist never gets the chance to be seen by mass. Sports develop
leadership qualities, team working ability and stress management qualities in
one. Though some students may participate in these
activities but due to lack of uniform opportunities all students cannot participate. Some elite
colleges promote co-curricular activities along with academic studies but
the situation is worst in other colleges.
If
education is a bird then training programs, workshops, educational\industrial
tours, seminars, conferences and A\V tutorials are wings of that bird. One cannot be
trained without participating in such activities. This is the major
sink point of our curriculum that such activities are never included. Exposure to real
working conditions and the growing world of technical instruments is necessary
for developing skills in a student.
India
is a country with diversity in its languages and traditions; the same conditions
can be found in educational institutes. Though a uniform official
language i.e.
English is supposed to be followed
but due to lack of any tutorials students from country side cannot adapt to
that. The proportion of such students is 8/10 and it’s really hard to
believe but it is the truth.
Language is the interface of one’s intellectual
thinking and his work but it’s pathetic for progress of an individual that the same
language becomes barrier for his work.
Any
field of this world hardly left to touch the vibe of information technology and
pharmacy is also unimpaired.
At any point of their career students
have to get familiar with technology but it would be very
easy to learn such things if they are included in curriculum. Though it is
described under Education Regulations to have a subject on computer
applications during under graduation program but practical knowledge is hardly
given to students, even very few colleges have developed computer labs with
latest version of system and facility of wireless fidelity. Unwillingly, students have to
do diploma courses in IT from private institutes to which is sometimes costly
too.
The loop holes:
As there are very less job opportunities in
pharmaceutical field, many students opt to run their pharmacies after
graduation which gives them not only sufficient money but also they work in
their comfort zone. If this shifting of pharmacists from industrial area
to pharmacies would have been carried for a decade then there could be a time
that we would have a new pharmacy in each lane.
In last decade, pharmacy field has become
research oriented. The pharmacists have become drug developer and patent
holder. But the current scenario is a different picture; the
old patents are expiring and very few drugs are being discovered. So the old patents
have to be replaced by new patents and this has opened new gates for
pharmacists in industry driven research and development. Again the research
and development field requires skilled and experienced pharmacist. Considering the
current situation of pharmacy education there are no skilled mind being
developed and in future India’s drug industries would have to depend upon foreign
patents.
What should be the change?
There must be options provided in curriculum
for vocational courses at the initial level and students should be counseled for
the importance and requirement of such courses. Many much courses
such as marketing course; certain management, language and IT courses can be
added and student should be given liberty to choose the course of their interest.
Learning can be enhanced by audio-visual lectures,
industrial visits, workshops, seminars, conferences, participation in industry
driven projects and training. Certain counseling session for need of skill
development should be organized at institutional level.
Certain projects can also be included at
graduation level which enhances the practical knowledge of students. Handling of at least
one instrument such as NMR, FTIR, FT-NMR, etc. should be included in syllabus of each
semester and institutes should support each other in this regard.
A Complete
Quality Skill Development (CQSD) includes not only
developing the skills required to grab a great job but it also includes
developing an innovative mind with entrepreneurship skills. This would obviously
require analysis and exposure of individual personalities at global level. So that students can
be innovative but not imitators. In the current scenario, Pharmacy Education
is known for the research and development not only in the field of medicines
but also in exploring the intervened chains of human body at molecular level. This requires a
thorough knowledge and practical skills along with leadership skills. So, the idea of CQSD also includes developing such
research oriented minds which can work for the betterment of Pharmacy Field,
for society, for world and the prime is for humanity.
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