NSN
slider image
  • Home
  • Conversations
    • Industry Conversations
    • All Conversations
  • Perspectives
    • Education
      • Higher Education
      • School Education
    • Emerging Technologies
      • AI Skills and Education
    • Government Initiatives
    • Industry
    • Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs)
    • NEP 2020
    • Skill Training
  • News
    • Latest Updates
    • News Archives
    • CSR and ESG in Skill Education
    • Skill Development e-Magazine
    • NSN PDF Newsletter Archives
  • Videos
    • Explainers
    • Panel Discussions
    • Student Stories
    • Video Conversations
  • Resources
    • Apprenticeship
    • e-Books
    • Resources
    • Success Stories
  • Events
    • Workshops
  • About us
    • Our Team
    • Our Clients
    • Our Services
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
NSN
  • Home
  • Conversations
    • Industry Conversations
    • All Conversations
  • Perspectives
    • Education
      • Higher Education
      • School Education
    • Emerging Technologies
      • AI Skills and Education
    • Government Initiatives
    • Industry
    • Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs)
    • NEP 2020
    • Skill Training
  • News
    • Latest Updates
    • News Archives
    • Skill Development e-Magazine
    • NSN PDF Newsletter Archives
  • Resources
    • Apprenticeship
    • E-books
    • Resources
    • Success Stories
  • Events
    • Workshops
  • About us
    • Our Team
    • Our Clients
    • Our Services
    • Privacy Policy
NSN
No Result
View All Result
Home Perspectives Industry

ASDC Annual Conclave 2019 – Role of the state in mobilization and making skills aspirational

nsnadmin by nsnadmin
July 30, 2019
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0

Does the state have a role to play in mobilizing the candidates for skill based courses? Why do we need to mobilize and pull them towards these courses, what works and what doesn’t? Apparently, skilling is yet to become aspirational. How do we create aspirational value for skills vis-a-vis mainstream education and degree courses? How do we bring changes at the systemic level and influence the mindset of youth? What about skilling in the automotive sector that has a considerable number of MSMEs and unorganized workforce? Issues such as these were deliberated in a session moderated by Mr Arun Malhotra, Former MD, Nissan India at the ASDC Annual Conclave 2019. Let’s go through the perspectives and insights shared by the panelists representing different organizations.

“The challenge to make skills aspirational. People don’t want to take up manual jobs. This has to do with how we have defined a skill by limiting it to manual and difficult tasks. People working in AC environment also need skills, managers also need skills. The definition is as skewed as we’ve defined a startup. We don’t consider MSMEs as startups. In the rural areas many people don’t want to migrate and work hard when they have an option to get freebies. Most degrees don’t land us in a profession and vocational training is not aspirational because hands-on work is highly de-valued, it needs to be given importance. We need to look at countries like Germany and learn how their ecosystems have evolved through product development and innovation, powered by skills. Ms. Shweta Shalini, ED,Village Social Transformation Foundation, Maharashtra 

“Many students don’t know their career paths after vocational programs. We need to have a clear system that shows higher education path. This can demonstrate how technical training can be combined with higher education and how it can lead to higher qualification. On the rural front, we are unable to mobilise the students even after offering free-of-cost training and stipend. This is mainly because hands-on training is not aspirational and it does not have a pull factor. It’s a major challenge to have a proper communication strategy, particularly in the rural areas, where we can positively impact the underprivileged rural students, by partnering the government. .Mr. Mukesh K Gupta, Executive VP,  Maruti Suzuki, India 

“We are not proud of our skills, we are obsessed with degrees and designations. People know each other because of their business cards and not because of skills. Our country has had a rich past that respected capability and hands-on work.  This tradition is lost and in the process we’ve degraded practical work that enables livelihoods and sustains the rural economy. If we create demand for right skills, everything will fall in line. Each one of us has to play a role here and as a society we need to ensure that the momentum for skilling is continuously built.” – Mr. Rama Shankar Pandey, MD Hella India 

“Manually skilled people are not valued but are we paying them well? Are we skilling for tomorrow’s jobs? It has to be just-in-time skilling. To do it at scale it’s an opportunity for the market, the most difficult part is to reskil and upskill because they are deeply entrenched in particular way of doing things, If you can’t change the middle management it is difficult to skill at the lower levels. Skilling has to be integrated with both at school level and higher education level, that’s how it will get into mainstream. We don’t really value skills in our country. We don’t value our carpenters and plumbers. They don’t get the kind of money others make. That is why skills are not aspirational” – Mr. Vijay Sethi CIO, Head HR, & Head CSR, Hero MotoCorp Ltd. 

“After skilling when the youth get into jobs, they learn about other jobs and drop out hence there is lack of making an informed choice. For instance, in DDUGKY,  they take up the jobs, more for sustenance though there is no aspiration. In villages and small towns, they live in a comfortable environment, they don’t like city and challenging life that needs lot of adjustments. The youth have to be made aware of this before getting into a job, post training. If you have to create an aspiration, you need to do a thought process change and also promote the path from skill to entrepreneurship. Most of the people from rural areas don’t know about the jobs and facilities. Awareness is the key to communication” – Mr. Charanjit Singh IAS, Jt. Secretary – Skills, Ministry of Rural Development

RelatedPosts

Jobs and Careers in the Plastics and Polymers Industry

How CIPET:CSTS Hyderabad Prepares Students for Careers in the Plastics Industry

Insurance Industry in India: Skills, Careers and the Impact of AI

Tags: ASDC - Role of the state in mobilization and making skills aspirational
ShareTweetShareSummarizeSummarize
WhatsApp Join our WhatsApp channel for more updates:
WhatsApp Join Now!
YouTube Subscribe to our YouTube channel for more updates:
YouTube Subscribe Now!
Previous Post

ASDC Annual Conclave 2019: The launch of ASDC – TCS iON Digital Portal and Skill Gap Study Report

Next Post

ASDC Annual Conclave 2019: Industry institution partnership in the automotive sector

nsnadmin

nsnadmin

Next Post
ASDC Annual Conclave 2019 industry institution collaboration

ASDC Annual Conclave 2019: Industry institution partnership in the automotive sector

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

No Result
View All Result
samplead3 samplead1

Subscribe to our e-Magazine

Trending Topics

skilling in India (131) National Skill Development Corporation - NSDC (127) skill development news India (125) skill development (122) Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship MSDE (102) vocational education (99) Apprenticeships (93) skill development news (82) NEP 2020 (78) skill development programs (71)

Follow us

  • This week’s developments across India’s skilling ecosystem highlight growing momentum in ITI reforms, AI-enabled learning, workforce mobility and industry-led training initiatives.From the launch of SARTHI and new-age courses in ITIs to future skills centres, teacher training programmes and global employment pathways, stakeholders across government, industry and academia continue to strengthen opportunities for a future-ready workforce.Explore the latest updates in this week’s updates: https://nationalskillsnetwork.in/newsbytes-skill-education-16-june-2026/#skilldevelopment #education #CSR #ITIreforms #training #AIcourses
  • Jobs and Careers in the Plastics and Polymers IndustryMany industries offer exciting career opportunities beyond the paths most students are familiar with.Our latest article explores jobs, skills and emerging career pathways in the plastics and polymers industry, highlighting opportunities in manufacturing, design, automation and entrepreneurship.Read more: https://nationalskillsnetwork.in/jobs-careers-plastics-polymers-industry/#skilldevelopment #plastics #polymers #injectionmoulding #manufacturing #jobs
  • A major milestone for India
  • This week, we visited Central Institute of Petrochemicals Engineering & Technology (CIPET) CSTS Hyderabad, as part of our ongoing effort at NSN to explore institutions that are building specialised skills for India
  • Tools for Applied Learning in Secondary Schools - explained in Bengali!As schools increasingly focus on skill-based education, vocational learning and experiential approaches under NEP 2020, applied learning is becoming an important part of school education.Watch this video in Bengali, explained by Mr. Sudip Chakraborty to understand the Applied Learning Toolkit and how it can support teachers, school leaders and trainers in implementing more practical and skill-based learning approaches.Watch the video here: https://youtu.be/D69XlSQJWTc?si=YMUxCUVhOtuFdbeX#appliedlearning #education #toolkit #teachers #schools #tafe #NEP2020
  • Announcing the 2nd edition of Bengaluru Skill Summit
Hon’ble Minister Dr. Sharanaprakash Rudrappa Patil, Minister for Skill Development, Entrepreneurship and Livelihood & Medical Education, Government of Karnataka, announces the 2nd edition of the Bengaluru Skill Summit.
Building on the success of the inaugural edition in 2025, the Summit has emerged as a powerful platform uniting industry, academia, policymakers, and youth to shape the future of skills.
📅 3–5 November 2026
📍 The Lalit Ashok, Bengaluru
This year, the focus is on strengthening industry collaboration, expanding global opportunities, and accelerating Karnataka’s vision of a future-ready workforce.
👉 Click here to join the movement and register: https://nationalskillsnetwork.in/karnataka-bengaluru-skill-summit-2026/
#BengaluruSkillSummit #SkillingIndia #FutureOfWork #Karnataka #SkillKarnataka
  • Women are increasingly participating in the gig economy through online freelancing, platform work, and digital services.Along with new opportunities, they also face unique challenges related to access, affordability, safety, visibility, and career growth.How can mentorship, peer learning, and community support help women navigate these challenges and build sustainable careers?This conversation explores the importance of trust, role models, inclusive support systems, and mentorship in empowering women gig workers and freelancers.Read more: https://nationalskillsnetwork.in/mentorship-learning-women-gig-workers/#womengigworkers #gigeconomy #mentorship #womenfreelancers #gigwork #gigjobs
  • The latest edition of NSN Insights explores important conversations shaping education, skilling, and the future workforce in India.This edition covers:🔹 India-centric multimodal AI systems and entry-level AI roles
🔹 Applied learning tools for secondary schools
🔹 AI quiz and learning resources
🔹 Repositioning ITIs and technical education for Gen Z
🔹 Weekly updates from the skill development and education ecosystemRead the latest edition here: https://sendy.nationalskillsnetwork.in//w/ehKjeXSLBTvEk1Ca7S763Few#skilldevelopment #artificialintelligence #appliedlearning #ITI #Education
  • This week’s developments across India’s skilling ecosystem highlight growing momentum in AI integration, semiconductor training, AVGC creative skills, industry partnerships and workforce readiness initiatives.From 5G labs for ITI students and EV technology courses to AI teacher training, vocational curriculum reforms and future-focused skilling programmes, institutions, industries and governments continue to strengthen pathways for employability and innovation.Explore the latest updates in this week’s NSN Newsbytes: https://nationalskillsnetwork.in/newsbytes-skill-education-26-may-2026/#skilldevelopment #CSR #AI #highereducation #ITI #academia #employability

About us

National Skills Network (NSN) captures and shares the positive impact of various training, skill development and vocational education initiatives in India.

To know more about Our Team: Click here

Address

NSN Digital Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
CIN: U74999TG2020PTC147299
MSME: UDYAM-TS-09-0086473
Gachibowli, Hyderabad – 500032

Email us: contact@nationalskillsnetwork.com

Important Links

  • Conversations
  • Perspectives
  • News
  • Skill Development e-Magazine
  • Resources
  • Our Team
  • Our Clients
  • Partner with us
  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Content Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy

© 2026 National Skills Network Content licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0. Commercial use requires permission.

loader
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Conversations
    • Industry Conversations
    • All Conversations
  • Perspectives
    • Education
      • Higher Education
      • School Education
    • Emerging Technologies
      • AI Skills and Education
    • Government Initiatives
    • Industry
    • Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs)
    • NEP 2020
    • Skill Training
  • News
    • Latest Updates
    • News Archives
    • CSR and ESG in Skill Education
    • Skill Development e-Magazine
    • NSN PDF Newsletter Archives
  • Videos
    • Explainers
    • Panel Discussions
    • Student Stories
    • Video Conversations
  • Resources
    • Apprenticeship
    • e-Books
    • Resources
    • Success Stories
  • Events
    • Workshops
  • About us
    • Our Team
    • Our Clients
    • Our Services
    • Privacy Policy

© 2026 National Skills Network Content licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0. Commercial use requires permission.