Skip navigation
advertisement
sponsored by 

India high-tech school curbs online use

Students were showing up to class bleary-eyed from Net surfing, gaming

  Tech Holiday Gift Guide  
  More
Holiday Retail
10 best Xbox 360 games of 2009
With all the incredible games that have been released for Microsoft’s Xbox 360 this year, trying to write a “Best of 2009” list feels an awful lot like trying to stick 20 pounds of sand into a 2-pound sack.

  Real Women’s Guide to Technology

An MSN special that focuses on consumer technologies that can benefit women.

Tech and gadgets videos
Tool lets insurance firms monitor driver habits
Insurance company monitors driver habits with special device. WKYC's Michael O'Mara reports.

Video
Tech Watch
The latest in technology and entertainment news.
  Auto Tech

A better economy may lure buyers, but these trends could seal the deal.

Go to Auto Tech

By Ramola Talwar Badam
updated 5:27 p.m. ET March 21, 2007

MUMBAI, India - A half-hour before the clock strikes midnight, India's top technology institute pulls the plug on Internet access in students' dorm rooms.

Attend classes, turn out for sports and socialize. That's the Indian Institute of Technology's message to students, many of whom were showing up for class bleary-eyed, if it all, after late nights spent Internet surfing and gaming.

"We found attendance for the first lecture at 8:30 a.m. was falling," said Aruna Thosar-Dixit, an IIT spokeswoman. "Students were not alert, they were sleepy, some were even sleeping."

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The ban has been in force since March 13 at the Mumbai IIT, one of seven prestigious engineering and technology institutes in the country. Access in individual dorms has been blocked starting at 11:30 p.m. each evening. It is restored 12:30 p.m. the next day.

Professors found students spent more time on the Internet than socializing and attending sports and cultural functions, Thosar-Dixit said.

Predictably enough, students are upset.

"It's true some students are addicted to gaming, so a partial ban was required, but this long a duration will hit all students," said second-year student S. Saurabh, adding that fewer students would complain about a shorter ban, such as one beginning at 1 a.m.

Former student Manesh Patel, now employed with a top business consulting firm, said pulling the plug on the Internet would only hurt students working on school projects.

Besides, he said, the country's brightest tech minds will find ways to circumvent the rules.

"Hard-core gamers will continue no matter what," Patel said.

The Mumbai institute said it would review its ban after a month.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Resource guide