Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College
Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College, named after Swami Vivekananda, was formally inaugurated on 21 June 1946[1] by professor, philosopher, and politician, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan. It is in Mylapore, the centre of Chennai, India, on 20 acres (81,000 m2). This college is part of various educational institutions owned by Ramakrishna Mission.
Type | Autonomous |
---|---|
Established | 21 June 1946 |
Affiliation | University of Madras |
President | Swami Gautamananda |
Vice-president | Nalli Kuppuswamy Chetti |
Rector | Swami Dhyanagamyananda |
Principal | Dr. V. Chandrasekar |
Location | , , India 13.041629°N 80.264252°E |
Website | rkmvc.ac.in |
History
The college was founded with the help of a group of philanthropists and educationists,[2] the prime mover being M. Subbaraya Aiyar, then a prominent income tax lawyer of Madras and the founding secretary from 1947 to 1960. Aiyar co-founded two other educational institutions: Vidya Mandir in Mylapore and the Madras Institute of Technology in Chromepet. Vivekananda College began with 20 teachers and 339 students. The college then offered just four undergraduate courses. Vivekananda College was subsequently handed over to the sole control of Ramakrishna Mission and renamed Vivekananda College, a unit of Ramakrishna Mission Vidyapith, Chennai. It offers instruction in English and admits only male students.
Affiliation and accreditation
The college has been re-accredited with "A+" grade[3] by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) in 2017. The college has been granted autonomous status by the University Grants Commission,[4] New Delhi in 2004–05 to all the courses up to M. Phil degree. It is affiliated to the University of Madras[5] and provides arts, science and commerce courses at the Bachelors, Master's and Doctoral levels.
Infrastructure
The college has a main block, a Math block, a Life Sciences block, a Sanskrit block, the Obul Reddy Auditorium block, an open-air theatre, a Library block with 87,000 books in the day college and 8,000 in the evening college, a sports complex and a prayer hall. The college has a turf cricket ground, tennis court and gymnasium. Computer labs have Internet facilities.[6]
Training to youth
The college authorities have introduced National Cadet Corps, National Service Scheme, Youth Red Cross and Rotary Wings for students. Youth are trained in conducting night schools, laying the roads, educating slum dwellers, service to the handicapped, tree plantation, and health programmes.
Academics
The college runs eleven graduate and seven postgraduate programmes in the day college and eight Undergraduate and two postgraduate programmes in the evening college. Undergraduate degrees include B.Com, B.A, B.Sc, B.B.A, and B.C.A degrees in the evening college. Postgraduate degrees award M.A. and M.SC., and in addition M.S.W. in the evening college. There are research degrees awarding M. Phil or PhD.
Scientific research
The departments of botany, chemistry, physics, mathematics, economics, philosophy and Sanskrit offer research programmes. The Ramakrishna Mission Vidyapith has two research institutes: Vivekananda Institute of Tropical Mycology (VINSTROM) and Vivekananda Institute of Algal Technology (VIAT). They have originated from the department of botany.
Vivekananda Institute of Tropical Mycology
Mycological research in the Department of Plant Biology and Plant Biotechnology dates back to 1980s. Sustained research by Dr. T. S. Suryanarayanan for over 35 years in experimental mycology, environmental mycology, marine mycology and endophyte ecology and physiology brought international recognition to the college in general and the mycology research team in particular. As a mark of appreciation and encouragement, Ramakrishna Mission Vidyapith, under the secretaryship of Swami Satyapriyananda, created a separate institute – Vivekananda Institute of Tropical Mycology (VINSTROM) — in 2005 to continue the research in mycology under the directorship of Dr. T. S. Suryanarayanan.
VINSTROM focuses its efforts on understanding the biodiversity and technological potential of microfungi in forests and other environments. Articles are published in international magazines.
Vivekananda Institute of Algal Technology
VIAT was inaugurated by Swami Satyapriyananda, secretary of Ramakrishna Mission Vidyapith, in April 2006.
Based on the success of this new technology, industries such as Wheels India are seeking solutions for effective effluent treatment through phycoremediation. Sivasubramanian has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Chennai-based Indo-Japan joint venture company M/s Nichi-In Biosciences for a research project with emphasis on microbial biotechnology and environment safety to develop technology for environment-friendly plastic materials, to find ways to safely dispose the plastic materials using microbes and develop and validate polymers useful for water conservation in agriculture and horticulture. This project is supported by Japanese institutes like Waseda University, Yamanashi Medical University and Mebiol Inc., whose Indian operation is headed by Dr. Samuel J. K. Abraham, a cardiac surgeon. Prof. Mori Yuichi of Waseda University, Japan, and Dr. Yoshioka Hiroshi of Mebiol Inc., are participating in this collaboration.
PG and Research Department of Mathematics
Areas of research in the department are number theory, applied statistics, representation theory, algebra, functional analysis, topology algebraic geometry and Fluid dynamics. The department conducts monthly seminars and colloquiums, and hosts a yearly international conference in a particular area of mathematics. It has funding and support from the UGC, National Board for Higher Mathematics, Department of Atomic Energy, Govt. of India and Govt. of Tamil Nadu. More than 60 international papers were published during 2017-2023 from the mathematics department of Vivekananda college.
Events
The college Silver Jubilee was celebrated in 1971, the Jubilee in 1996, and the Diamond Jubilee from January 2006 to January 2007. As a part of its Diamond Jubilee celebrations, the Vidyapith organized the two-day exhibition Enrich-2006 on 6 and 7 October. It highlighted the activities of the centres of Ramakrishna Sangha, the teachings of Sri Ramakrishna, Holy Mother and Swami Vivekananda, and the recent developments in science, commerce, and humanities. Nearly 1500 students from neighbouring schools visited the exhibition.
Notable alumni
- Justice S. Manikumar
- M. P. Veerendra Kumar
- Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan, former cricket player and umpire
- Cho Ramaswamy, MP and journalist
- Jaishankar, Tamil actor
- Thiagarajan Ramani, Carnatic flautist and violinist
- P. Unni Krishnan, Carnati vocalist and a national award-winning playback singer
- Harish Raghavendra, singer in Tamil and Telugu films
- Sikkil Gurucharan, Carnatic vocalist
- Anil Srinivasan, pianist
- Mani Ratnam, film director
- P. Ravishankar, actor, dubbing artist
- M.A.M. Ramaswamy, industrialist
- S. Gurumurthy, Indian Express columnist
- S. Ramanan, mathematician, TIFR
- Maadhu Balaji, theatre personality
- Crazy Mohan, dramatist and scriptwriter
- T.M. Krishna, Carnatic singer
- Krishnamachari Srikkanth, former cricket player
- Laxman Sivaramakrishnan, former cricket player
- Lakshmipathy Balaji, cricket player
- Hemang Badani, India and Tamil Nadu cricket player
- Murali Vijay, Indian and Tamil Nadu cricket player
- Malolan Rangarajan, Tamil Nadu cricket player
- Yo Mahesh, Tamil Nadu and Delhi Daredevils player
- Rithvik Raja, Carnatic vocalist
- Abhinav Mukund, India and Tamil Nadu cricket player
- Chandran, Tamil film actor
- Srinivasan Chandrasekaran, organic chemist, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar laureate
- T. S. Tirumurti, Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations
References
- Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College, Chennai
- Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College, Chennai
- National Assessment and Accreditation Council
- ::: Inside H E - University Grants Commission :::
- University of Madras
- Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda College, Chennai Archived 22 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine