I came to NIAT Chalapathi Institute of Engineering and Technology as an introvert. Seriously. I would sit in the back of the classroom, rarely raising my hand, thinking the next four years would just be lectures and exams. But something happened here that I never expected. The campus pushed me out of that shell in the best way possible, and now I'm the NSGC president organizing club activities every single month.
From Shy to Running the Show
I did not wake up one day and decide to become a leader. It happened gradually. The college environment, the way teachers encourage you, the way clubs just exist everywhere -- it all matters. Friends invited me to events. I showed up. Then I volunteered for something small. Before I knew it, I was sitting in meetings actually talking about ideas instead of just listening.
NIAT Chalapathi gave me space to grow. That is genuinely rare. A lot of colleges are just about grades and placement numbers. Here, there is actual emphasis on who you become as a person. The teachers here are not just helpful in class -- they actually believe you can do more than you think you can.
What Four Club Activities a Month Actually Means
People ask me what I do as NSGC president. The honest answer: we organize a lot. Four club activities every month sounds like a lot until you realize how much college needs this. Every week something different is happening. One week it is a hackathon. Another week, a tech workshop. Then a cultural fest. Then something completely random that brings people together.
The best part is watching people show up. Freshers who have no idea what to do. Seniors who are about to leave. All of them coming together for something that is not about marks or GPA. That is the college life people actually remember.
College is not just a place to study. It is where you figure out what you are actually made of.
Why This Matters More Than Just Academics
Here is what I have learned: the most important skill you gain in college has nothing to do with your curriculum. It is how you handle people. How you organize things. How you stay calm when an event is falling apart two hours before it starts. How you motivate people who are tired or unmotivated.
- You learn to speak in front of people without dying inside
- You figure out how to make decisions when everyone has a different opinion
- You understand that showing up and doing the work matters way more than being perfect
- You realize that half the things you are afraid of are actually not that scary once you try them
NIAT Chalapathi gave me the platform to learn all of this. Not in a classroom. In real situations, with real stakes, with real people depending on me. That changes you.
The Fests and Events You Don't See Coming
The fests at NIAT are actually insane. I mean that in the best way. There is so much energy, so much creativity. When you are organizing them, you see the work behind the scenes. The all-nighters. The last-minute decisions. The arguments about logistics that somehow end up making things better, not worse.
But the coolest part is watching it all come together. Watching people who were strangers two weeks ago become a team. Watching people discover talents they did not know they had. That is the stuff that matters.