Follow your passions and interests while choosing career options, experts advise students
The Hindu
All resource persons and experts at the 10th and last session of the 21st edition of The Hindu Education Plus Career Counselling at Poojya Doddappa Appa Sabha Bhavan on Sharnbasva University campus in Kalaburagi on Sunday were unanimous in advising students: just follow what your heart says in choosing your career option and not what others suggest or what they pursue as their career options.
All resource persons and experts at the 10th and last session of the 21st edition of The Hindu Education Plus Career Counselling at Poojya Doddappa Appa Sabha Bhavan on Sharnbasva University campus in Kalaburagi on Sunday were unanimous in advising students: just follow what your heart says in choosing your career option and not what others suggest or what they pursue as their career options.
Deputy Commissioner Yeshwanth Gurukar, Superintendent of Police Isha Pant, Chairman and Managing Director of United Hospitals Vikram Siddareddy and other resource persons categorically advised students to find, before finalising their career direction, what they are interested in, without getting influenced by what their parents want, what the children of their neighbours are pursuing or what their friends are aspiring to be.
Both Mr. Gurukar and Ms. Pant shared a number of experiences from their own lives and careers while advising students not to have inferiority complex but to have a feeling of being proud of what they are and pursue what they aspire to be.
“My salary package was around ₹1 crore at a private e-commerce company, Flipkart. I saw hundreds of crores of rupees coming in every day during the Big Billion Days Sale. But I was not completely happy as I was simply facilitating the sale of commodities to consumers. I quit the job and cleared the UPSC exams to become an IAS officer in pursuance of my passion to serve the people. Now, I am happy as I have the satisfaction of serving millions of people even though my monthly salary is just ₹1.51 lakh,” Mr. Gurukar said.
He specifically spoke about three Cs – Conviction, Clarity and Communication – for students who are aspiring to becoming civil servant. He also stressed the need for them to have command over English language and possess skills more than having degrees.
“If you want to learn English or any other language, you must have command over your mother tongue. Having command over your mother tongue will help you learn other languages. You should not have inferiority complex. You should have confidence that you are not less than anybody else,” Mr. Gurukar said.
Ms. Pant devoted much of her time to motivating the girls and encouraging them to take up challenging tasks to get equal footing in a male-dominated society.

Although students from Tamil Nadu remain the leading recipients of educational loans across India, there has been a significant decline in the number of active loans they hold. The number of active education loan accounts decreased from 27.4 lakh accounts to about 20.1 lakh in the period. The fall can be mostly attributed to the fall in Tamil Nadu’s numbers.












