Technology is important in every point of life. From our Independence, the technical education system in the country has grown into a fairly large-sized system, offering opportunities for education and training in a wide variety of trades and disciplines at a certificate, diploma, degree, postgraduate degree, and doctoral levels in institutions located throughout the country.
The general scenario of higher education in India is not equivalent to the global quality standards. Hence, there is enough justification for an increased assessment of the quality of the country’s educational institutions.

Why is it important?
India is witnessing the age of science and technology. There is a huge demand for Technical Education in the modern age. The pattern of life evolving in age is very much different from the one we find in our society even some fifty years back.
General Education has been substituted by professional technical education in many cases. Technical Education offers good opportunities for employment and a successful career.

Besides, in this age of unemployment, only technical education can assure one of a job and a comfortable living. Those who are still in conventional institutions, passing examinations that have little relevance in the modern systems, find no opportunities for employment. And, quite naturally, they end up becoming the victims of frustration and find themselves alienated from the mainstream of the modern world. With their stereo-typed general education without any specialization and professional skill, they acquire nothing to contribute to the progress and prosperity of human society. They are quite aware of this and this awareness leaves them demoralized.
It was not just an end, it was the dream of modern India, and technical education was given due importance with a view to realizing that dream.
Prospects and Initiatives
India is renowned for producing graduates of the highest caliber, but only a very few compared with its population receive high-quality technical education. India has over the years significantly bolstered the quality and availability of technical education, doubling the employment rate of graduates who are now better suited to the needs of the Indian Industry.

For acquiring technical education, there are two structural streams in India – formal and informal. Polytechnics, Industrial Training Institutes, Industrial Training Centers, centrally sponsored scheme of Vocationalisation of Secondary Education by the Ministry of Human Resource Development are a few of the formal sources of technical education in India. Whereas self-learning and small private institutes providing short term technical course are covered under informal one
New industrial and labor trends in India have clearly specified the need for technical education. But, the base of technical education must be made strong at the secondary level of education and a clear-cut path for the students to move ahead in this field must be made. More technical degrees of high quality along with technical universities must be established.
Related Issues
Technical Education imparts knowledge of specific trade, craft, or profession.
Technical education, that is, education in some art or craft is the crying need of the hour. We are living in a time when old concepts of education have undergone a change. We are not in need of liberal education, education that implies training in fine arts, humanities, cultural patterns, and behavior, and aims at developing a man’s personality as it was in the pre-independence days. We need skilled workers. Manufactured goods worth crores of rupees are being imported every year. There is a dearth of food. Our industries are yet in infancy. We need engineers to man them. We need mechanized farming to increase the output of corn. All this is only possible if we give a technical turn to our education and if skilled labor is made available.