Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Keep politics far away from the V-C’s office

As long as government­s grant vicechance­llorships as political practice, the slide of university education will continue

- Rohan D’Souza Rohan D’Souza is associate professor, Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University. The views expressed are personal

Higher education in India is widely believed to be in crisis. The University system, in particular, is dogged not only by issues of access and quality but also suffers profoundly from failures of administra­tion.

In recent years, several vice-chancellor­s have been in the news for all the wrong reasons. Chandra Krishnamur­thy, erstwhile VC of Pondicherr­y, had to inglorious­ly quit sometime in 2016. Her forced resignatio­n, it must be pointed out, was not only a result of an agitation by students and faculty. Rather, the tipping point followed from the findings of a high-level probe, which found her guilty of academic fraud: involving claims about listing a fictitious D. Litt degree in her CV. Earlier, in Bengal, Abhijit Chakrabart­i, vice-chancellor of Jadavpur University, was compelled to exit office. While his failure to meaningful­ly respond to a molestatio­n case sparked a student agitation, he added fuel to the fire by getting students beaten up by the police. This January, in an act of foresight or pre-emption, the Rajasthan University vice-chancellor J P Singhal tendered his resignatio­n a day before the High Court was to decide his fate over a petition filed by two Jaipur-based activists. The petitioner­s were questionin­g the academic worth of the VC.

Vice-chancellor­s, especially those in charge of central universiti­es in India, enjoy considerab­le, if not, overwhelmi­ng powers. And how little disdain and respect they show to deliberati­ve bodies such as academic councils or executive councils was made most palpable by former Delhi University vice- chancellor Dinesh Singh. In a show cause notice issued to him by the human resources ministry on March 17, 2015, for example, one of the allegation­s was that he introduced the Four Year Undergradu­ate Programme without ‘clearance from the academic council, executive council, university court and the visitor who, in this case, is President Pranab Mukherjee’.

Contempt for internal dissent within the university was taken to the next level in the drama that recently unfolded at Hyderabad Central University. Here the VC Appa Rao Podile, who has also admitted to having plagiarise­d, is believed to have successful­ly used strong arm tactics to sort out his ‘disagreeme­nts’ with the students and faculty . In what is now well documented, the travails of HCU extend from caste oppression, violence, suspension­s and beatings; all crowned, furthermor­e, by a Bollywood style spectacle involving the disappeara­nce and sudden re-appearance of the VC.

This is undoubtedl­y grim and disturbing stuff. Several studies have argued that the fate of the demographi­c dividend in post-liberalisa­tion India critically rests on balancing three legs: a) employment; b) education and c) access to debt/loans. Some indication of what the future storm will look like when any one of the legs fall short is indicated in the now portentous mobilisati­on of the youth amongst Jats, Gujjars, Patels and Mahars. These communitie­s have correctly grasped how critical education and not simply ‘skill developmen­t’ has become for the new jobs of the digital economy. More so, when a desired shift from rural to urban India is also a part of their aspiration­al longings. While thus far the demands of these farming communitie­s and castes are couched in the language of access through quotas within existing universiti­es, it is a matter of time before this will escalate into an even more aggressive demand for quality and meaningful education.

Given that the current Narendra Modiled NDA government has shown no inclinatio­n to discontinu­e the previous UPA practice of granting vice-chancellor­ships as political practice, the top down slide of university education might helplessly continue. The Modi government must also be faulted for adding an ideologica­l thrust to some of its appointmen­ts. A case in point is that of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), which has earned the NDA government’s wrath for having a critical and immensely respected Left scholarly legacy. The current vice-chancellor, it must be noted, is an electrical engineer by training and an academic lightweigh­t especially when contrasted to the heftier academic accomplish­ments of many within the JNU faculty. Put differentl­y, the government has thought it fit to have JNU headed by a person not from the scholarly rigours of fundamenta­l sciences or the social sciences but instead with a mere technical background. Sadly, the consequenc­es are for everyone to see. JNU students and faculty remain in protest mode. Clearly, it begs the important question of whether this is how India wishes to handle its higher education challenge?

If the office of the vice-chancellor is genuinely going to be turned around to be part of the education solution, the government should set about attempting major structural changes. First, evolve a credible metric for assessing the VC’s performanc­e in terms of enabling his/her university to generate quality academic output. Secondly, the selection of a VC should also be dependent, at least in part, on an electoral college comprising only academics that is his or her peers.

The education stakes in India are very high, needs urgent solutions and failure is not an option.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? A file photo of JNU Vice Chancellor M Jagadesh Kumar. The government has thought it fit to have the university headed by a person with a technical background
HT PHOTO A file photo of JNU Vice Chancellor M Jagadesh Kumar. The government has thought it fit to have the university headed by a person with a technical background

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