Re: RE: [MTC Global] Corruption undermining higher education in India

Education not on the foundation of values leads to corruption. The sams today we
see are the babies of highly educated and intellectual people having no vales,
sense for society. Thus on one hand education of the robust foundation of values
and culture and strict law enforcement on the other can reduce corruption.
Corruption first starts in mind, thoughts. during British Raj, people were
illiterate but simple, law and value abiding and British executives speedily and
mercilessly dealing with corrupt cases. Thus people and executives both play a
key role to curb out corruption. Unfortunately these both pillars in free India
are weak, self-centered, thereby permitting infinite tolerance to corruption.
_________________________________________________________________________________


On Sat, 05 Oct 2013 17:37:24 +0530 wrote
>


I agree with the views that Lokpal Bill will not be able to wipe out wide spread
corruption, rather it will add another layer of equally corrupt administrative
system. Simple reason is - who would appoint Lok Pals and where from these people
will come- from the moon or from another planet? After some time Lok Pals will be
accused of being corrupt and we need Gana Pals to control them followed by Jana
pals to control Gana Pals and so on. So there will be no end unless every citizen
of India gets the proper education on ethics and morality and takes oath not to
engage in corrupt activities. I may sound to be an impractical idealist but
unfortunately that is the only way to wipe out corruption.
Dr. Tarun Das
__________________________________________________________________________Subject
: Re: Re: [MTC Global] Corruption undermining higher education in India
To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
From: krishankhanna.iit@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 4 Oct 2013 08:51:01 +0000

Let's us do the easy things first.

Lokpal can follow.

Krishan
www.wakeupcall.org
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone on O2From: "kiran paranjpe"

Sender: join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Date: 4 Oct 2013 06:49:12 -0000To: ReplyTo:
join_mtc@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Re: [MTC Global] Corruption undermining higher education in India
Dear Sir, A very interesting document. But I have reservations regarding the
comment that a Lok Pal is not needed. As we all understand the canker of
corruption has come to be recognized by the supremacy of the secular common laws
that govern public behavior.

Historically, India never had a secular rule of Law. Even during the British
rule, the law favored the white men and their lackeys among the natives. They
even made subtle distinctions between laws for the Hindus versus laws for the
Muslims. This made them pass ordinances that we now recognize as their famous
'divide and rule' policy followed up with strict implementation. This gave the
impression that their rule was free of corruption that we know of.

The rule of a secular law is novel by itself ( modeled closely on the rights of
man). This requires mechanisms to record and pursue any violation of law in
letter and spirit by every citizen, high or low, either individually or in
concert. And we do not have such a mechanism with the Parliament abdicating its
role to serve very narrow interests. The Machinery of the Lok Pal comes in as an
alternative although not a perfect one. Our parliament has sat on this concept
without any closure.

The proponents of the Lok Pal have put even powers to punish the wrong doers.
While at the other end, the Lok Pal's role is to register alleged malfeasance and
report it to the Govt to prosecute. The Role would probably be somewhere in
between. It ought to record incidences of malfeasance, carry out a preliminary
enquiry, create a first document for the investigative agencies and monitor the
progress of the cases till closure, keeping its information publicly available to
all people.

I feel, that the institution of Lok Pal is essential and should be protected
under a constitutional amendment.

Best Regards,

K.Paranjpe

_________________________________________________________________________________
__________________

On Fri, 04 Oct 2013 05:49:59 +0530 wrote

>I am pleased to attach a short one page note on Corruption & Black Money.

best

_________________________________________________________________________________
__________________

On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 5:35 PM, Sri Joydip wrote:



corruption is a parasite which is eating everything in this country.However we
have always try to address it as a problem of law makers and law enforcer. It
seems that more laws are made and enforced more people had learned to bypass it.
Until unless ,the conscience is developed by value education , where people
inwardly face a resistence for becoming corrupt, there is no possibility, that we
can address a solution of corruption.



_________________________________________________________________________________
______________________

On 02-Oct-2013 10:13 AM, "Ramamirtham Gopal" wrote:



I heard about these statements regarding the price for a VC or Registrar etc.But
never believed them. I am really shocked if true, the values seems to be too
high. How will the VC be able to recover this cost that he has incurred?





thanksProf. Dr. R. Gp[a;



On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 12:05 PM, John Kumar wrote:







Dear Prof.Prabhakar,�Thanks a lot for those inputs and I'm really shocked by
reading those figures.





We asmanagement faculties, we need to uphold the ethics, because we
teachstudents- Business ethics.





On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:39 PM, Rajamanickam Rajan wrote:









Dear Professors and Eminent Academicians









What Professor Bholanath Dutta is absolutely right. The corruption is luting the
academic scenario in the country and hence the quality has been deeply fallen
down to ditches.�











Let me make it clear about the verdicts made beloved Prof. Dutta, it is true that
the appointment is purely made on the basis of money paid the one who wish to
become a Vice Chancellors of Universities.�











Some information about the appointment of various positions in the Universities











Vice�Chancellors �- � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � � � � � � � Rs. 15 - 50 Crores









Syndicate Members nominated by the The Honourable Governor(Chancellor) � � �
� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � Rs. 25.00 to 50.00 Lakhs











Registrars � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � � � � � � � � Rs. 8 - Rs. 10 Crores











Professors and Head of the Departments � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � �Rs. 25 - 50 Lakhs.













Just couple of days before I happened to meet a sincere employee of a leading
universities in Tamilnadu.









According to the information received�

The Benevolent Vice Chancellor of the particularUniversityhad prepared a list and
respective demands by those who approach him for things to get done.











Grating Centre for Participating Programmes � � � � � � � � � �
�Rs. 10.00 Lakhs (in fact the fees this is Rs. 1.00)�









Additional Courses (Based on the demand for the course) � � � � �Rs.
5.00 to 10.00�New Institution affiliation � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � � � � � �Rs. 25.00�









Purchases made by university its various departments � � � � � � 20.00
percent to 30 percent on the value of the � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
� � �bill � ��









Unqualified personnels are placed in the top categoryasDirectors/Deans/Heads of
the Dept by collecting � � � � � � � � � Rs. 25.00 Rs. 50.00











Please note some of the officers even do not know the basic rules and regulations
of the University, poor in communication, and in fact they themselves declare
that they are in power steering positions of the University. They act as the
collection agents for the vice Chancellors. Apart from the above the respective
Minister must also be paid the respective share from the above collections.�











I am surprised how a person charged in a smuggling case and put in Tihar Prison.
Do the government is aware or unaware of it?� �











If this is thesituationhow come we prove ourselves that we are talented in the
Global Level and compete with rest of the world.�











It is well noticed that only because of few dedicatedinstitutionsand honest
faculty members we are able to produce quality candidates to the corporate
world.�











My sincere and humble request to all the members of the forum is let us keep
ourselves from this act and continue to do the best to thestudentsand education
arena.











Thanks for this opportunity to share my view to the subject taken by Prof.
Bholanath Dutta � � � � � � � � � ��















On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 3:36 PM, Prof. Bholanath Dutta wrote:























Corruption undermining higher education in IndiaBy�M Anandakrishnan [The writer
is chairman, Board of Governors of IIT Kanpur]



















People of India are deeply concerned about the form and extent of corruption in
almost all walks of life. What is particularly alarming is the conspicuous
corruption in higher education undermining the foundations of society. It has
become so pervasive, making it difficult to assess the root causes.









The general perception, however, is that the increasing degree of political
interference in higher education is a dominant factor. It occurs in many
insidious forms, making it appear almost legitimate.









For instance, the state legislations on appointment of Vice-chancellors (V-C). In
a few states, the chancellor, who is generally the governor, is required to
consult the state government in selecting the name of a person from the panel
submitted by the search committee. It is an open secret in some states that the
ministers demand from the persons in the panel to shell out a few crores to be
appointed as V-C. Currently, in one state the amount ranges from Rs 5 crore for
smaller universities to Rs 50 crore for large universities with hundreds of
affiliated colleges.









V-C aspirants accept the bait as the amount could later be collected from the
affiliated colleges and from the various appointments and promotions in the
university. It is sad that in several instances the chancellor/governor is also
known to indulge in such collections through intermediaries. It is not difficult
to see the spiralling effect of such a practice deeply penetrating every level of
the academia.









For aided colleges, the state education ministers delay the sanction of faculty
positions against existing vacancies till the college managements pay up the
amount on the basis of number of vacancies. The logic is the managements should
collect the amount from the selected teachers. The teacher in turn would engage
in all forms of illicit practices to recoup the sum from the students and others.
This is one reason for many competent persons not choosing to apply to some of
the aided colleges.









Likewise, stories about demands made on PhD scholars by research guides sound
like fiction but, unfortunately, are too widespread to be ignored. Besides
demanding sexual favours, thesis supervisors and examiners extract sizeable sums
from the helpless students before final approval.









Another cause for concern is the corruption in granting approval for new
institutions. Many worthless institutions had obtained the status of deemed
universities through bribing. So is the case with technical institutions.









Of late, the establishment of private universities under state legislatures has
become a lucrative venue for huge illicit collections in some states. Many such
universities tend to resist any form of regulation to maintain quality and
standards of academic programmes. Hopefully, the proposed mandatory accreditation
process will help raise the credibility of academic programmes of such
institutions.









These are matters that need urgent attention at a time when the higher education
system is poised for a steep growth. Fortunately, such undesirable practices are
confined only to a few states in the country, though the number of institutions
and persons affected are significantly large. In general, the institutions under
the purview of the Central government are largely, though not entirely, free from
such atrocious practices. Examples of several Central, state and private
institutions which have demonstrated their ability to function unaffected in such
a vicious environment can be emulated by others.









Fortunately, the regulatory authorities concerned with higher education at the
Central level and in some of the progressive states are conscious of the
prevailing malady and hopefully some of their initiatives will bear fruit.









��









Educate, Empower, Elevate









Prof. Bholanath Dutta







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Navraj Educational and Charitable TrustNew No. 41 R K K NagarN K Palayam











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Thanks & Regards,



Prof. John Pradeep KumarDepartment of Management StudiesCambridge Institute of
Technology

Bangalore

9008026522









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thanking you and with kind regards



Dr. R. Gopal,�D.Litt, Ph.D, MBA, ICWA, B.Tech (Hons) (Mech)�





Director, Dean and Head of the Department



Padmashree Dr. D. Y. Patil University

Department of Business Management

Sector 4, Plot on 10, CBD Belapur

Navi Mumbai 400 614

Tel. ++ 91 22 27565616 Fax. ++ 91 22 27575064







Tel. (M) 98203 56428 www.drgopal.org









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