Azim Premji On His School Days: 'Spent Lot Of Time Outside Class Kneeling For Being Naughty'
Bengaluru:
Reminiscing about his school days, Wipro Chief Azim Premji on Saturday
said he spent a lot of time outside the classroom kneeling for being
naughty.
"Yes, I was very naughty when I was a kid and those
days, we got rapped on the knuckles and hit on the head and you had to
be kneeling outside the class for a long time. Some of these practices
are no longer there, but I spent a lot of time outside the class
kneeling," he said.
He was replying to a query in an interaction with students at the celebrations of Wipro's 2016 Earthian Awards here.
Asked
why he left college early in his life, Mr Premji said he did it for
taking up responsibilities of his father who died very young, but
completed masters in electrical engineering many years later.
"I
left the college in between, primarily because I had to take
responsibilities from my father who died at a very young age, but
eventually many years later I did get masters degree in electrical
engineering," he said.
Asked about the future of children,
especially girls, Mr Premji said girls are more serious than boys about
their career, provided they are getting support from parents.
"Girls
take their careers much more seriously, and girls particularly in
villages take their careers even more seriously, once the parents give
them the latitudinal support," he said.
"Unfortunately, though,
too many parents put young girls to take care of the younger child,
because the mother goes out to earn in addition to husband's earning,"
he said.
Mr Premji further said girls fare well than the boys in getting academic awards and are street smart.
"I
have travelled enough to schools in villages and colleges too, the
girls always turning out to be street smart, consistently. Just look at
the quality of questions you get from the ladies in the audience. In my
opinion, girls ask far more intelligent questions than boys," he said.
"I also find, wherever the school are following ranking system, fifty per cent of the awards go to girls in a class," he added.
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