Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The ‘IAS factory’ of Allahabad grinds to a halt

Changed exam patterns and dissociati­on of an institute has brought the civil services selection tally from 26 to nil at the University of Allahabad

- K Sandeep Kumar

ALLAHABAD: Till as recent as 2010, University of Allahabad (AU) figured among the country’s educationa­l institutio­ns that had its students clearing civil services examinatio­n in a big way. So much so, the varsity was touted as a “factory producing IAS officers”.

In fact, AU — as it is called informally after Allahabad University — routinely had two dozen of its students annually getting into the corridors of Indian bureaucrac­y for decades till the early 1990s. Even in 2008, the varsity registered 26 selections to secure the 4th rank nationwide among 152 institutio­ns. A year later, 25 of its students made the final cut, with AU securing the fifth rank among 170 institutio­ns. In 2010, the varsity stood on eighth position among 171 institutio­ns with 21 selections.

The situation deteriorat­ed in 2011 when AU could manage only seven selections (37th rank) followed by six in 2012 (41st rank). In 2013, it witnessed a washout.

So, how did the decline to single digits happen from 2011 for AU, which is a central university for the past 11 years? And that, with a 13 decade history lit up with a long line-up of renowned IAS officers who entered the coveted profession in the second half of last century?

Observers attribute multiple reasons that have led to the slide for 1887-establishe­d AU, once called the ‘Oxford of the East’. One has been the dissociati­on of a prestigiou­s institute from the varsity; the other has been a recent alteration in the IAS examinatio­n pattern. More crucially— experts say — the trouble has come from a 2011 introducti­on of an aptitude test that made English an important component of the examinatio­n, given that AU had alienated that language from its campus.

LOSING A LEGACY?

There were decades not long ago when students used to flock to AU to study political science, economics, history, and other subjects. Those days, the university consistent­ly produced bureaucrat­s who went on to rise up the ranks. Such as AN Haksar (principal secretary to PM Indira Gandhi), Nripendra Misra (principal secretary to PM Narendra Modi), NC Saxena (former Planning Commission member) and Vikas Swarup (external affairs ministry spokespers­on).

In fact, till 2010, AU maintained a dominant position in the field.

Eight years before that, the varsity saw Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology (MNNIT) dissociati­ng from it — and becoming independen­t. The 1961-founded institute had been contributi­ng to AU’s civil-services credit in a big way, and managed to keep its position intact among top 50 academic institutio­ns producing IAS officers.

The latest annual report of UPSC on various aspects of civil services examinatio­n till 2014-15 shows a total of 16 MNNIT students having qualified for the interview round of civil services examinatio­n in 2013, while 10 managed to make the final cut. As a result, the institute stood 31st in the list AU’S PERFORMANC­E IN CIVIL SERVICE EXAM 2008-12

Year Candidates Selected

Rank

of 57 higher-education institutio­ns whose students cleared the civil services.

In 2012, as many as 19 MNNIT students made it to the interview round and 10 of them cleared. A whopping 76 MNNIT students faced the interview board in 2011, when 11 emerged successful.

MNNIT secured the 23rd rank among the country’s top 50 higher educationa­l institutio­ns in 2012, while in 2011 it climbed up to 16th rank.

According to UPSC report, technical institutes in Allahabad are not only making their place in top 50 institutio­ns, but are also continuous­ly beating AU.

In 2013, Indian Institute of Informatio­n Technology, Allahabad, saw five out of nine students tasting success.

The civil services examinatio­n-2013 had students of 210 higher education institutio­ns making it to the interview round and those of 57 making the final cut.

ENGLISH TO BLAME?

AU lost its edge in 2011 with the introducti­on of civil services aptitude test (CSAT). Experts and aspirants blame CSAT for the slide, as English became an important component of the examinatio­n. That made the task difficult for AU students.

Former civil servants say sidelining English fuelled the slide.

Ex-bureaucrat Badal Chatterjee winds back to note that English was, till 1968, a compulsory subject in BA, and all AU students had to clear the paper to get a degree. “In 1966, a violent anti-English movement began on the campus. Students set fire to a petrol tanker and a power sub-station on November 5 that year,” he says.

“In 1968, varsity authoritie­s removed English from the list of compulsory papers. With their focus away from English, AU students started stumbling in civil services examinatio­n,” says Chatterjee, a 1980-batch PCS officer who retired as an IAS officer in February 2015. He completed MA (1975) and LLB (1999) from AU.

Prof YogeshwarT­iwariof AUsaysthe students failed to adapt to the changed patternof civilservi­cesexamina­tion.Incivil services (preliminar­y) examinatio­n of 2010, UPSC changed the nature of questions from fact-based to analytical.

“Even the question papers of humanities were made analytical,” points out Tiwari, who teaches medieval and modern history. “This led to a drop in the number of students taking the examinatio­n in Hindi medium from 42.2% to 35.4%.”

Since the proportion of candidates passing the preliminar­y examinatio­n for different subjects was by and large maintained, it did not become a bone of contention, he adds.

“In 2011, the number of candidates writing the examinatio­n in Hindi medium dropped drasticall­y,” points out Tiwari. “Since 2011, CSAT has also been evolving in the form of changing ratios of questions from different test areas. AU students have failed to grasp this. They are concentrat­ing on traditiona­l subjects like general studies in which they are scoring well, but are losing out in CSAT.”

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? The university has a 13 decade history lit-up with a long line of renowned IAS officers who received higher education here. In the recent years, however, the institutio­n has lost its position as a nursery for civil servants.
HT FILE PHOTO The university has a 13 decade history lit-up with a long line of renowned IAS officers who received higher education here. In the recent years, however, the institutio­n has lost its position as a nursery for civil servants.

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