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In the winter of 1991, 5(Five) young minds were
debating on a coffee table regarding values in education.
There were heated arguments on the need for world
class education to prepare world class human resources.
Pradipta, who was an Aeronautical Engineer from
IIT Kanpur was pessimistic saying that India could
not become a knowledge hub because funds for educational
institutions came from coffers of the central and
state governments. With minimum budget allocation
for HRD purposes, these governments had no capacity
to build up quality infrastructure for setting up
the base for advanced education and research. On
the other hand, the ultimate beneficiaries i.e.
the students considered it a taboo to pay for their
qualitatively high education. There is no dearth
of cynics who love to discuss this as commercialization
of education.
“Good things in life never come cheap” remarked
Prabir, an alumni from Xavier’s Institute of Management
who had just come back from an assignment in the
UK. Why should the governments not allow self-financing
private institutions where excellent infrastructure
could be built by private entrepreneurs and excellent
faculty could be recruited with high salaries so
that students who are otherwise desirous for paying
for high quality education could benefit ? Harvard,
Stanford, MIT, UCLA – All top class international
academic institutions – have not been built by US
Federal Govt. These have come up through private
entrepreneurship in self-financing mode and top
class education in such top class institutions require
high payment of fees as well. Let the Govts in India
take care of students who can not afford private
education and genuinely need free/subsidised
higher/technical education at taxpayer's money.
Little did they understand in that meeting that
a revolution was coming barely after two years time
in form of the decision of the Supreme Court in
the landmark case of Unni Krishnan in 1993 where
Their Lordships clearly said that gone were the
days when Rajas and Maharajas who had funds, took
the responsibility for setting up free educational
institutions. Time has come when beneficiaries (students)
have to pay for the cost of quality education and
private sector should be encouraged to build quality
engineering and medical colleges in India in self-financing
mode. Over the next 15 years, the issue has been
fairly debated and finally it has now been concluded
by 11-judge bench decision in TMA pai foundation
case of the Supreme Court duly clarified by the
same court by a subsequent smaller bench in the
case of PA Inamdar.
Be that as it may, these young minds in 1991 did
not start a college but instead, they started a
software company under the name of “Trident Softech
Private Limited” (TSPL). Through this company, they
eventually set up a corporate finishing school in
software education where fresh engineering graduates
and engineers with experience were being trained
in special softwares like SYBASE, POWERBUILDER,
ORACLE, DB-2, JCL etc. The concept had ready takers
and quite easily with exposure to such software
packages, these trained people started securing
jobs in overseas markets. From this finishing school,
known at that time as “Trident’s Advanced Computer
Training” (A division of TSPL), the group has come
a long way from 1995 to have forays into many other
sectors of organized education in phases starting
two MCA colleges in 1998, Biotechnology college
in 2002, Social Science College in 2005 and a top-class
Engineering College in 2005 .Efforts are relentless
Institutions like B-Schools, Junior Science College
and Paramedical Colleges are in the anvil.
Besides forays
in organised education Trident maintains presence
in corporate business as well as NGO activities.
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