Respected Dr. P H Waghodekar sir, Indeed, it is very unfortunate on the part of ugc to arrive at such a decision with regards to research...
.... teaching, research and surgery are three unique areas wherein experience plays a very vital role.....there are several good, experienced and highly committed retired professors in almost all subjects right from astrophysics, chemistry, computer science to social sciences.....
.....instead of availing their services in a better way, the ugc is totally discarded them as a junk like material....one more thing is, no retired professor will be paid any additional allowance for guiding the research scholars....
....coming to junior professors/ junior faculty, the less I speak, the better....of course, few exceptional luminaries may be here and there....when national level exams qualifying was not there, most of the faculty were selected based on non-academic factors such as caste, religion, region, sub-region, candidate influence and guide influence and so on so forth....
.... to the best of my knowledge and analysis, values were there in Educational institutions till the end of 1980s .....by and large, faculty recruitment used to be based on merit and/or talent only..... no extraneous factors like influence or bribing....no complaints and no court cases used to be there....
....... among the people who were recruited after 1980s, very few of them were only having good talent to guide researchers .....now the research scholars will be compelled to choose one among those with or without interest....
.... under these circumstances, it will be good if the UGC changes its stand with respect to retired professors ......
..... regards.... dr vishnumurty narra, psu officer, hyderabad....
On Friday, 28 April 2017 4:36 PM, Prabhakar Waghodekar <waghodekar@rediffmail.com> wrote:
The regulatory bodies have allowed the institutes to run PG programs and a few PhD Research programs. For instance, most of the UG engineering institutes run PG prgs. what is the admission status to such PG programs? To me vacancy is likely to be much more beyond expectations. Why?
As far as research is concerned, research needs know age limit. However, what is the percentage of research guides who fall in the age group 70-80 years? With proper accountability measure in place, adjunct professor can do this job. In one of the prestigious universities, one faculty over 70 years of age worked as regular Dean, guides over 200 PhDs.
Regards,
Dr. P H Waghodekar, PhD (Egg), IIT,KGP, IE&M, 1985,
Advisor (HR), IBS & PME (PG)
Marathwada Institute of Technology,
NH 211, Beed by pass road,
Aurangabad: 431010 (Maharashtra) INDIA.
(O) 02402375113 (M) 7276661925
E-Mail: waghodekar@rediffmail.com
Website: www.mit.asia
and
Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.
Engineering & Management Education: An Engine of Prosperity.
Classroom teaching must match with Boardroom needs!
From: "'Dr. Vinith Nair' via Management Teachers Consortium, Global" googlegroups.com>
Sent: Fri, 28 Apr 2017 12:32:35
To: "join_mtc@googlegroups.com" googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [MTC Global] UGC 'no' to retired professors as guides a big setback for research, say experts
As far as research is concerned, research needs know age limit. However, what is the percentage of research guides who fall in the age group 70-80 years? With proper accountability measure in place, adjunct professor can do this job. In one of the prestigious universities, one faculty over 70 years of age worked as regular Dean, guides over 200 PhDs.
Regards,
Dr. P H Waghodekar, PhD (Egg), IIT,KGP, IE&M, 1985,
Advisor (HR), IBS & PME (PG)
Marathwada Institute of Technology,
NH 211, Beed by pass road,
Aurangabad: 431010 (Maharashtra) INDIA.
(O) 02402375113 (M) 7276661925
E-Mail: waghodekar@rediffmail.com
Website: www.mit.asia
and
Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.
Engineering & Management Education: An Engine of Prosperity.
Classroom teaching must match with Boardroom needs!
From: "'Dr. Vinith Nair' via Management Teachers Consortium, Global" googlegroups.com>
Sent: Fri, 28 Apr 2017 12:32:35
To: "join_mtc@googlegroups.com" googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [MTC Global] UGC 'no' to retired professors as guides a big setback for research, say experts
bnath.dutta@gmail.com> wrote:
ALAPPUZHA: Toeing the line of the University Grants Commission (UGC), varsities in Kerala are refusing to entertain the services of retired professors as research guides.
While the Central and State governments are exploring ways to strengthen higher education, the UGC directive is set to affect the quality of research adversely, experts aver. The commission says only regular professors of a university or affiliated colleges can be recognised as research supervisors. External supervisors cannot be allowed, says the notification issued in May 2016.
Before the year was out, Kerala University responded by terminating retired professors from guiding research. MG University followed suit, explaining the termination of retired teachers in an order issued on January 24 this year. "We have allowed existing guides to go ahead with the present research. But we cannot allow new students to continue research under retired teachers," says MG University Vice-Chancellor Babu Sebastian.
The decision has not gone down well with the state's academia."The expertise of a retired teacher is an asset to the country," says M P Ajithkumar, associate professor, SD College, Alappuzha.
"The new regulation is a setback to serious research and a dilution of academic standards. Retired teachers assist research scholars without accepting remuneration. The UGC and the Ministry of Human Resource Development should rethink the flawed decision."
Girish Kumar, a philosophy professor at MS University in Baroda, too demanded a reconsideration.
"Decades-long research work moulds a teacher for new discoveries. His expertise should be an asset to younger generations," he says.
While academics like K N Harilal, professor at the Centre for Development Studies, feel universities should think about an alternative plan to utilise the skills of retired teachers, current research guide and Kerala University History professor Suresh Jnaneswar had this to say: "The UGC order is a termination of accumulated knowledge to the new generation. After the implementation of the order, the chances of good research will decline by 70 per cent. The maturity of a teacher attained at the age of 60 to 65 is being wasted by terminating his talents at the age of 56.
A plagiarism test carried out by the Kerala University a few months ago found only 10 per cent similarity in the dissertations submitted to the university in the past 20 years. That is the kind of strong research happening with the guidance of senior professors."
When contacted by Express, joint secretary Sunita Siwach, coordination, UGC planning and policy, declined to comment.
Source: Indian Express
--
-- While the Central and State governments are exploring ways to strengthen higher education, the UGC directive is set to affect the quality of research adversely, experts aver. The commission says only regular professors of a university or affiliated colleges can be recognised as research supervisors. External supervisors cannot be allowed, says the notification issued in May 2016.
Before the year was out, Kerala University responded by terminating retired professors from guiding research. MG University followed suit, explaining the termination of retired teachers in an order issued on January 24 this year. "We have allowed existing guides to go ahead with the present research. But we cannot allow new students to continue research under retired teachers," says MG University Vice-Chancellor Babu Sebastian.
The decision has not gone down well with the state's academia."The expertise of a retired teacher is an asset to the country," says M P Ajithkumar, associate professor, SD College, Alappuzha.
"The new regulation is a setback to serious research and a dilution of academic standards. Retired teachers assist research scholars without accepting remuneration. The UGC and the Ministry of Human Resource Development should rethink the flawed decision."
Girish Kumar, a philosophy professor at MS University in Baroda, too demanded a reconsideration.
"Decades-long research work moulds a teacher for new discoveries. His expertise should be an asset to younger generations," he says.
While academics like K N Harilal, professor at the Centre for Development Studies, feel universities should think about an alternative plan to utilise the skills of retired teachers, current research guide and Kerala University History professor Suresh Jnaneswar had this to say: "The UGC order is a termination of accumulated knowledge to the new generation. After the implementation of the order, the chances of good research will decline by 70 per cent. The maturity of a teacher attained at the age of 60 to 65 is being wasted by terminating his talents at the age of 56.
A plagiarism test carried out by the Kerala University a few months ago found only 10 per cent similarity in the dissertations submitted to the university in the past 20 years. That is the kind of strong research happening with the guidance of senior professors."
When contacted by Express, joint secretary Sunita Siwach, coordination, UGC planning and policy, declined to comment.
Source: Indian Express
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