Government College of Technology, Coimbatore

Government College of Technology, Coimbatore (GCT) is an autonomous state-funded engineering college located in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India. It is affiliated to Anna University.

Government College of Technology, Coimbatore.
Emblem of GCT Coimbatore
TypeAutonomous
Established1945 (1945)
DeanP. Thamarai P.hD.,
Location, ,
11.018208°N 76.936011°E / 11.018208; 76.936011
CampusUrban
Websitehttp://www.gct.ac.in

History

Government College of Technology, Coimbatore was founded in 1945 as Arthur Hope College of Technology named after Arthur Hope, Governor of Madras Presidency (1940–46) by G. D. Naidu. The College was modelled after the then famous Germany’s technical institutions with inputs by Stoll family and Hermann Weiler. Till 1950 the college functioned in Peelamedu, then a suburb of Coimbatore.

In June 1950, the college moved to its current location in Thadagam Road, Coimbatore. In 1951, the college was renamed as Government College of Technology (GCT). The college was initially affiliated to the University of Madras, later to the Bharathiar University and since the academic year 2001-2002 to Anna University. In 1981, the college was granted autonomy for its civil and mechanical engineering postgraduate programs. Subsequently, in 1987, full autonomy for all programs was granted.

Academics

The institute offers undergraduate courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Engineering and postgraduate courses award the Master of Engineering degree. Undergraduate students are admitted based on competitive student rankings in higher secondary examination.

Placement and Training Cell

Student life

Clubs

The various forums and clubs include Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE-GCT Collegiate Club), GCT-Motorsports, Mechanical Engineering Association, Biotech Forum, Civil Engineering Association, Computer Science and Engineering Association (CSEA), Information Technology Association (ITA), Electrical, Electronics and Instrumentation Engineering Association (EEEIEA), Electronics and Communication Engineering Association (ECEA), Production Engineering Association (PEA), Student Branch of IEEE, ISTE chapter, Administration Aspirants Council(AAC) [1] [2] [3], Rotaract club,[4] Green club, Science club, Y's club, Fine arts club, Orchestra, Literary and Debating Society, Tamil Mandram. Student Journalist Council-GCT[5][6] is the official media body of the GCT. The first edition of Aperture[7], the student e-Newsletter of GCT was launched on 21 February 2014[8]. The Rotaract club of GCT earned the most prestigious "Well-balanced Club" award at the Rotaract District Assembly 2017. Eliminators is the official dance team of GCT. The Administration Aspirants Council (AAC) is a council for developing the UPSC Civil Services Aspirants among the GCT students. It has set up an own Library called AAC LIBRARY within the college campus with the permission of the respected Principal and with the funds provided by the GCT Alumini Association (GCTAA). AAC Library is opened for 24 hours and students conduct early morning and late night classes among themselves and has interviewed many bureaucrats of our nation in their official Youtube channel[9] .

Hostels

There are 10 Hostel blocks available for both men and women in which 1500 students can accommodate. Boys Hostel names are Paalaaru, Ponnaiyaaru, Kayvery, Bhavani, Vaigai, Thamiraparani and Vellaru and Girls Hostel names are Kothaiyaaru, Manimuthaaru and Amaravathi

Rankings

College rankings
Engineering – India
NIRF (2019)[10]90
NIRF (2020)[11]104

Government College of Technology, Coimbatore was ranked 90 among engineering colleges by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) in 2019.[10]

Notable alumni

  • Mylswamy Annadurai, Director ISRO Satellite Centre, Bangalore
  • N. Valarmathi, Scientist, project director of RISAT-1 and the first person to receive Abdul Kalam Award.
  • Thamarai, poet, lyricist, writer and journalist

See also

  • List of Tamil Nadu Government's Educational Institutions
  • List of Tamil Nadu Government's Engineering Colleges

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.