Re: [MTC Global] Professor , Teach Thyself by Markandey Katju, The Hindu dated 03.09.2012


It is shocking to see from the article written by Justice Markandey  Katju in The Hindu dated September 3, 2012 that the higher education sector after taking advantage of the Government's largesse are not facilitating the enhancement of the standard of living of the poor and marginalized as desired by the society. All institutions of higher education, I believe, have a responsibility to the society that sponsors and nurtures them, as well as to the students. They have to guarantee  a sustainable future to the underprivileged sections of the society too.
It has been accepted world over that human capital is the key for a vibrant knowledge- based economy and that education is the positive method that will nourish and nurture the development of a country. In this context,it should be appreciated that it is the quality of teachers apart from the facilities provided in the educational institution that defines the level of education on offer and the progress the students will make. When the teachers fail in their duty, the whole educational system will also fail in achieving its goals, especially in  improving the standard of living. Hence it is quite important that educational institutions must have dedicated and committed teachers and adequate facilities which always make them distinctive, and supportive of the nation building process.
If an educational institution, be it a school or a college is not able to provide an ideal learning environment through its academic, research and extra curricular activities, then it becomes one of those white elephants which survive on the charity of the society. Educational institutions are also character-building institutions of hundreds of students in the locality who pass through its portals every year. In all the areas of human development, it is the teachers who make the institution stand apart as a great pillar of strength of the nation.
My humble wish is that a teacher himself must never become a barrier to learning  to the students as explained by the eminent jurist in his article. In fact, teaching has to invigorate the learner to explore further into the unlimited boundaries of knowledge. Teaching , in the end, would reveal the indomitable spirit of a master mind.
To improve the standard of education, the authorities can conduct periodic evaluation of the teachers and the institution and ascertain the quality of teaching.
Prof Richard Hay 

On Mon, Sep 3, 2012 at 2:10 PM, Balaji Rao <balajiraodg@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Friends, indeed MTC is doing a great job by probing into various (topical) issues which thus far was considered as taboo. Hope one day everyone will reap desired results.

 

One aspect that I am dreaming with respect to quality education is to bring a law wherein the faculties from the beginning of the UG level (Graduation 1st year onwards) should teach only after gaining at least 5 years of industry experience (hands-on work experience in their respective domain areas). Without fulfilling this requirement no faculty should ever get on the teaching dais. The students are being taught textbook knowledge which is completely away from the application based teaching. Even though they refer Philip Kotler and  Peter F Drucker, the teaching should be contemporary as also futuristic which can be perceived only by a person who has been in the industry in the thick of things.

 

Secondly, the colleges and universities make loads of money by way of fees, donations and subsidies which they continue to invest on real estate building additional floors and classrooms, but they hardly pay the faculties as per the corporate standards. The situation cannot be chicken first or egg first. Someone has to bell the cat before things go out of our hands.

 

Warm Regards,

Balaji Rao

Visiting Professor

 

From: join_mtc@googlegroups.com [mailto:join_mtc@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Prof. Bholanath Dutta
Sent: 04 September 2012 03:16
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Subject: [MTC Global] Professor , Teach Thyself by Markandey Katju, The Hindu dated 03.09.2012

 

Professor, teach thyself

The Hindu, 03.09.2012

MARKANDEY KATJU

I was at Jawaharlal Nehru University recently with some of the top senior academicians in Delhi, before dinner.

I was told that the budget of the University Grants Commission was Rs.41,000 crore in the Five Year plan and the annual budget of JNU was about Rs.150 crore.

In my usual blunt way I said, "How has this benefited the Indian masses? It seems that the huge funds being ploughed into higher education in India are for the benefit of foreign countries and to give you professors huge salaries and fine houses to live in rather than to benefit the Indian people."

This sparked off a lively debate. Some of the professors tried to refute my statement, but I stuck to my guns.

I said that most of the money spent on education in India went to the institutes of higher education like the IITs and universities, and very little money was spent on primary and middle schools, particularly in rural areas, where the foundation of education was laid. There are very few facilities such as proper seats, electricity, books, classrooms, etc in these primary or middle schools, whereas the institutes of higher education are given huge funds and have very good facilities, state-of-the-art campuses, air-conditioning, etc. I then gave a few examples to prove what I said:

1. I once went to a village about 40 km from Allahabad (my native city) to meet a farmer friend of mine, with whom I had studied at Allahabad University.

At his home I met one of his sons who had passed class seven and promoted to class eight in his high school in the village. I asked him to bring his class 7 mathematics book and solve a few simple problems. He could not do so. I wondered how he had been promoted when he could not solve simple class 7 problems. I then solved those simple problems, and asked him to attempt the other problems in the lesson. He was obviously an intelligent boy, because having learnt how to solve the simple problems, he proceeded to solve the rest.

At this I asked him, "Did your teacher not teach you all this?" He replied, "Master Sahib thekedari karne lage hain, aur doosre master sahib class lene aate naheen hai " (the teacher has become a contractor, and the next teacher does not come to take classes").

2. I went to a reputed intermediate college in Allahabad and was told that in a section in Class 11 there are 250 students. I was shocked. Under the rules there should not be more than 40 students in a class. What teaching can possibly be done in a class of 250 students? I also learnt that in some of the sections at Allahabad University there are over 300 students, and there is not even place for a student to sit.

In view of this, much of the real education takes place in private coaching institutes, or at the residence of teachers who make much more money there than in their institutions. As a result, these teachers evince little interest in teaching in their institutions, and a student who does not join the coaching (paying high fees) finds it difficult to pass.

3. In many of the staffrooms of our educational institutions, teachers, instead of discussing academic matters, often discuss petty politics, often of a casteist nature or matters pertaining to their service conditions. Senior professors often try to promote lecturers of their own caste, whether they have merit or not.

4. Teachers are often appointed not on merit but on extraneous considerations, like political connection, caste, etc. They are appointed on contract basis. In some States, " shikshamitra " who have been appointed on a salary of Rs.1,500 a month have no degree or teachers' training qualification.

5. The level of intellect of many teachers is low, because many of them have not been appointed on merit but on extraneous considerations. To give an example, when I was a judge of Allahabad High Court I had a case relating to a service matter of a mathematics lecturer in a university in Uttar Pradesh. Since the teacher was present in court I asked him how much one divided by zero is equal to. He replied, "Infinity." I told him that his answer was incorrect, and it was evident that he was not even fit to be a teacher in an intermediate college. I wondered how had he become a university lecturer (In mathematics it is impermissible to divide by zero. Hence anything divided by zero is known as an indeterminate number, not infinity).

Brain drain

I gave them many more such examples, and told the senior academicians at JNU that huge amounts of money of the Indian taxpayer is spent on the IITs and other institutes of higher education, but the graduates of these institutes usually take up jobs in foreign countries. This results in brain drain. Thus, while Indians pay taxes which go towards educating our bright students, the benefit of their education goes to foreign countries and not to the Indian people. These foreign countries benefit because higher education in their own countries is very expensive, so they have to pay only a fraction of that amount to get our bright young students.

I posed them another question: the test of every system is one simple question. Does it raise the standard of living of the masses or not? I said that the huge amount of money being spent on higher education in India is not raising the standard of living of the Indian masses because over 75 per cent of Indians live in dire poverty. There is massive unemployment, skyrocketing prices, huge problems of health care, housing, etc.

Apart from that, I asked them how many Nobel laureates have our universities and other institutes of higher education produced. Hardly any.

In many American universities one will find half a dozen Nobel laureates. Australia, which has a population of about 25 million, has 180 academicians who have an F.R.S. (Fellow of the Royal Society), while India, with a population of 1,200 million, has only about 20. So what are the achievements of our scientists and other intellectuals? It is only when they go to the United States or Canada or Europe that they achieve anything.

What is the quality of research work done by our academicians in institutes of higher learning? Unfortunately it is abysmally low and does not benefit the Indian people. Their publications are mostly poor, and done only to improve their CVs in order to get jobs.

The purpose of education is to help raise the standard of living of the masses. But in India it seems that its purpose is to raise the standard of living of a handful of people who get jobs as teachers, particularly in institutions of higher education.

I must say to the credit of the professors assembled there that they did not take any of my remarks personally. I told them that I had no intention to insult them but was only voicing my genuine grievance about the educational system in India, and the need to make it more beneficial to the masses.

At the end it was agreed that my views required serious debate which hopefully shall be held at JNU or elsewhere soon.

(Justice Markandey Katju is chairman of the Press Council of India.)

 

 

EDUCATE, EMPOWER, ELEVATE

Bholanath Dutta

Founder, President & Convener: MTC Global

Web Link: www.mtcglobal.org Email: bnath.dutta@gmail.com/president@mtcglobal.org

Cell: + 91 96323 18178

 


0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
College & Education © 2012 | Designed by