Professor Jane Ohlmeyer, VP of Global Relations at Trinity College Dublin, one of Ireland’s oldest universities was recently in New Delhi as
part of the university’s ongoing deepening engagement with India. Apart
from being at the cutting edge of research, technology and innovation, Trinity
recently has had Bollywood on campus with the filming of Ek Tha Tiger. Jane Ohlmeyer spoke to me at length about the
university’s plans for India.
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Professor Jane Ohlmeyer with Salman Khan: Bollywood calling |
Debeshi: Can you elaborate on why you are
visiting New Delhi
Jane: We are
visiting to do a number of things: to raise the visibility of Trinity College
Dublin, the University of Dublin in India; to nurture high level collaborations
with leading Indian universities; and to promote our postgraduate and
undergraduate courses to prospective Indian students.
Debeshi: What are Trinity
College Dublin's
plans for India?
Jane: Trinity
has extensive research collaborations in India. Here are a few examples.
Trinity’s
Adjunct Professor Ravindra Dhir and Associate Professor Roger West, of TrinityHaus, the Michael McNamara Centre for
Construction Innovation and Sustainability at Trinity, have developed the initiatives:
The
Ireland-Indian Initiative in Civil Engineering (I3CE@TCD) sets out to foster
links between Trinity and a select number of high level Indian academic
institutions to facilitate the exchange of staff and postgraduate students in
the delivery of the MSc/MTech taught course programmes. It will allow Indian or Irish students to
spend one year in the partner institution with full credit towards their
degree. Indian students from partner
institutions who are accepted to attend for an academic year in Trinity will be
awarded a scholarship. Dissertations
will be co-supervised with a corresponding academic in the partner institution.
As part
of this process, Memoranda of Understanding have just been signed between Trinity College
and the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi
and Thapar University,Patiala. MTech
Internship students are currently in Trinity College Dublin researching
composite bamboo columns for structural use, in collaboration with Professor
Suresh Bhalla of IIT Delhi, supported by the Faculty of Engineering,
Mathematics and Science at Trinity.
The
Ireland-India Concrete Research Initiative (IICRI), is developing
collaborations in research with such partner institutions, including joint
funding and supervision of PhD students. There is a significant challenge for
both countries in developing more sustainable concrete, essential to
infrastructural, commercial and domestic building projects. The use of greener
alternative cements in concrete leads to changes in the durability characteristics
which have relevance for both life-cycle costings and the carbon footprint
associated with infrastructural development. The consortium of Civil
Engineering at Trinity and its Indian partners aim to share expertise,
knowledge, resources and facilities in order to disseminate the necessary
innovations to allow Irish and Indian engineers to take advantage of more
sustainable concrete materials with confidence in the future.
Trinity
College Dublin’s Professor of Experimental Brain Research, Shane O’Mara
recently visited the National Institute for Mental Health and Neuroscience,
NIMHANS, in Bangalore, in order to teach in a
Department of Science and Technology (India) sponsored school in the
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory. A competition was held to bring students
from all over India to
participate in a special teaching programme involving faculty from all over India, and from the USA
and Ireland.
The
school was organised jointly by Professor of Neurogenetics, Mani Ramaswami for
Trinity College Dublin, the University
of Dublin, and Professor
B S Shankaranarayana. Twenty-five
students were selected for the programme, coming to Bangalore
from as far afield as New Delhi, Bhopal, Calcutta and other
locations. Professor O’Mara taught on two topics: a) the functions of the
hippocampal formation in learning, memory and amnesia, and b) the neural coding
of memories by ensemble activity in the brain.
In
addition to his teaching at NIMHANS, Professor O’Mara also visited Professor
Shona Chatterji, at the National Centre for Biotechnological Sciences, NCBS
with whom he has established a Science Foundation Ireland-funded research
programme. A research student will visit Professor O’Mara’s laboratory for six
months during the course of 2012 to avail of advanced training in the use of
the TCIN 7T magnetic resonance imaging system. An exciting experimental
programme has been devised and joint publications between TCIN and NCBS are
expected.
Trinity
College Dublin, the University
of Dublin’s arts and
humanities research institute, the Trinity Long Room Hub, has a Memorandum of
Understanding with the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Advanced Student (JNIAS),
Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. It facilitates a bilateral
exchange programme whereby two fellows from each institution annually spends up
to three months in the partner institution.
There they contribute to the research environment of the host, via research presentations and one-on-one meetings, and carry out their own
research. Scholars named
to the programme for 2012 are Professor Eunan O'Halpin (TCD), Peter Arnds (TCD)
and Jyoti Atwal (JNU).
In the
first instance, the programme is focused on the arts and humanities, but
scholars outside of these agreements can be facilitated by agreement between
the institutions.
Debeshi: How many international students
are there on campus? How many of these are from India?
Jane: Today it
has a vibrant community of 17,000 students representing 122 nationalities, and
a wide range of social backgrounds, age-groups and cultures. About 10% of our students are from non-EU
countries, including India.
We have 140 Indian students at Trinity, 45 of whom are undergraduates and the
rest are postgraduates. These students
are studying a wide range of subjects: Engineering, English Literature,
Economics, Computer Science, Medicine, Business and Medicine. We are keen to increase the number of Indian
students studying at Trinity and in August will advertise scholarships for
postgraduate and undergraduate study.
Debeshi: Any other interesting updates you
would like to share with our readers.
Jane: The
Bollywood film, Ek Ta Tiger, which stars Salman Khan and Katrina Kaif was
filmed in Trinity in September 2011 and has a Trinity story line. The film will be launched on 15 August 2012
and we plan a range of activities in Delhi
and other Indian cities around the time of the launch.
Watch
this space for more!