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International Day of Women and Girls in Science | How students are treated to the true extent of an institution: Professor Shubha Tole | Pune News

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4 minutes of readingUpdated: February 10, 2026 21:37 IST

Shubha Tole, distinguished professor at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Mumbai, who took over this year as president of the International Organization for Brain Research, said that the way an institution treats its youngest members (the students) is a good measure of its quality.

“If institutions implement progressive measures to better support students in PhD programmes, it will create a significant change not only in the quality of their research, but also in how the scientists of tomorrow perceive the future of Indian science,” Professor Tole said.

Professor Tole, speaking to The indian expresshighlighted some of the key initiatives taken during her tenure as Dean of Graduate Studies, TIFR, and on the occasion of the International Day of Women and Girls in Science (February 11) encouraged women “not to give up on their dreams, even if circumstances seem difficult right now.”

According to Professor Tole, PhD students generally have a manual of rules and requirements to guide them, but they have to discover the rest through conversations with final-year students or professors: what to expect from PhD training, what to do when things don’t go well, how to plan for their future after their PhD. “During my tenure as Dean of Graduate Studies, TIFR, we implemented several new initiatives as a result of examining our own graduate programs from new perspectives. Our country’s education system would benefit from a nationwide discussion on these issues to consciously promote an empowered next generation of scientific leaders,” said awardee Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar.

He cited the example of learning cultural values ​​and how students aspire to join doctoral programs but are not sure what their training is for afterwards, apart from becoming academics. “This is perhaps the biggest misconception that research training imparts a multitude of skills that are useful in a variety of different professions. We asked our students who had moved on to non-academic careers to send us 10-minute videos explaining how they started thinking about exploring career options, how they got their first job, what they love about their current job, what the challenges are, whether they wish they had continued in academia and then posted it on our career guidance website,” Professor Tole recalls.

‘They used their research training at TIFR to develop careers they enjoy’

Interestingly, it showed a range of productive and exciting career options in areas such as finance, share trading, patent law, scientific writing, content creation, data science, startups and industry, Professor Tole said. He gave examples, including Saumya Gupta, a student who completed her PhD in biology working on yeast genetics, then went to Harvard Medical School for her postdoc, and now works at Bain and Company, an international consulting firm.

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“What Saumya said was that the academy gave her everything she wanted to learn, the ability to think about the problem, analyze and solve it and eventually package a not-so-simple journey into a beautiful story in terms of writing and presentation. For Yukti Arora, who works in the Academic Communications office at Ashoka University, the problem-solving skills at TIFR, particularly learning to ask questions at the right point, were invaluable in meeting the challenges of her job,” Professor Tole said while quoting a small sample of the stories of his former students. “They used their research training at TIFR to develop careers they enjoy,” Tole added.

‘Not even trying is basically giving yourself a rejection slip’

On the occasion of International Day of Women and Girls in Science, Professor Tole, former chairperson of the Women in Science panel at the Indian Academy of Sciences, also reminded women that they should not give up on their dreams even when the situation feels difficult. “Not even trying is basically giving yourself a rejection slip! No matter what works later, we will only regret not having tried to follow the path we are most passionate about,” Professor Tole said.

Anuradha Mascarenhas is a senior editor at The Indian Express, based in Pune. With a career spanning three decades, he is one of the most respected voices in Indian journalism on health, science, environment and research developments. She also has a keen interest in covering women’s issues. Professional Background Education: Gold Medalist in Communication and Journalism from Savitribai Phule Pune University and Masters in Literature. Author: She is the author of the biography At The Wheel Of Research, which chronicles the life and work of Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, former chief scientist of the WHO. Key Focus: Combines scientific accuracy with storytelling, translating complex medical research into compelling public and human interest narratives. Awards and Recognitions Anuradha has won several awards including Press Council of India National Award for Excellence in Journalism in Gender Based Reporting Category in 2019 and Laadli Media Award (Gender Sensitivity -2024). She received the Lokmat Journalism Award (Gender Category-2022) and was also shortlisted for the RedInk Awards for Excellence in Journalism-2021. Her first book, At The Wheel Of Research, an exclusive biography of Dr Soumya Swaminathan, the inaugural Chief Scientist of the World Health Organization, was also nominated in the People’s Choice category of the JK Paper AUTHER Awards. She has also held competitive fellowships including Laadli Media Fellowship (2022), Survivors Against TB – New Research in TB Media Fellowship (2023) and is part of the prestigious India 2025 cohort of the WomenLift Health Leadership Journey.” Recent Featured Articles (Late 2025) 1. Cancer and Specialty Healthcare “Tata Memorial finds a way to kill drug-resistant cancer cells” (November 26, 2025): Report on a breakthrough for triple-negative breast cancer, one of the most aggressive forms of the disease. Discipline, Diet and Purpose; How a 97-Year-Old Professor Challenges Aging” (November 15, 2025) Report on Professor Gururaj Mutalik, the first head of department at Pune’s BJ Government Medical College, who at 97 attributes his longevity to healthy habits and a strong sense of purpose 2. Environmental health (“Breathless” series. Pune”) Prolonged exposure to even “moderate” air causes chronic heart, lung and kidney problems” (November 26, 2025) – Part of a research series highlighting that even “safe” pollution levels are harmful to vital organs. “For every 10 µg/m3 increase in PM2.5 level, there was a 6-8% increase in medicine sales” (November 23, 2025) – Using commercial data to demonstrate the direct link between air quality and respiratory diseases in Pune. 3. Lifestyle & Wellness News “They Didn’t Let Cancer, Diabetes, and Heart Disease Stop Them From Traveling” (December 22, 2025) – A collaborative article featuring survivors sharing practical tips for traveling with chronic illnesses. At age 17, his blood pressure shot up to 200/120 mmHG; Lancet study points out why hypertension in children and adolescents doubled between 2000 and 2020” (November 12, 2025) – a report that focuses on a 17-year-old’s hypertensive crisis and reflects the growing global trend of high blood pressure among children and adolescents. 4. Scientific Infrastructure and Recognition To promote science and communication and gender diversity: IUCAA professor featured in Nature” (November 25, 2025): Covers global recognition of Indian women scientists in gender studies and physics. Pune researchers find spiral galaxy like the Milky Way from early universe” (December 3, 2025): A report on how Indian researchers discovered a massive galaxy that existed when the universe had only 1.5 billion years. , one of the first to be seen so far Signature Beat: Health, Science and Women in Leadership Anuradha is known for her reporting on COVID-19, where she was one of the first journalists to provide detailed information on the trials of Covishield and Covaxin. She has a dedicated interest in gender diversity in health and science, and often profiles women researchers who are breaking the “leaky pipeline” in STEM fields. health experts from the institutions.
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