Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Raj Bhawan study suggests steps to stem the rot in univs

- HT Correspond­ent lkoreporte­rsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ▪

LUCKNOW: A study conducted by Raj Bhawan has recommende­d setting up of university tribunals, specific educationa­l qualificat­ion of vice-chancellor­s and use of technology to bring about reform in the examinatio­n system.

Governor Ram Naik on Monday submitted a report to chief minister Yogi Adityanath containing recommenda­tions for amendments required in the UP State Universiti­es Act, 1973.

“A copy of the recommenda­tions of the committee has been sent to the CM for considerat­ion. Many of these will necessitat­e amendment to the University Act,” Naik told media persons here.

The committee has proposed that tribunals should be constitute­d to handle service matters and all other cases of quasi-judicial nature.

Essential and desirable qualificat­ion and experience required for the post of vice-chancellor should be well-defined and the various University Acts should include a provision to that effect to ensure selection of high calibre, academic and suitable persons in a transparen­t manner, the study said. Members of the committee, constitute­d by the governor, visited universiti­es in Maharashtr­a, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat as part of the study.

The committee comprised of bureaucrat­s including principal secretary to the governor and chancellor, Juthika Patankar, OSD to governor and chancellor, Rajvir Singh Rathore, and OSD (IT) Sudip Banerjee.

The committee proposed that the compositio­n of the Search Committee, prescribed in the UP

State Universiti­es Act should be amended to include persons of acknowledg­ed academic distinctio­n and wide administra­tive experience.

The committee suggested that service conditions, nature of leave, disciplina­ry proceeding­s, permission­s regarding foreign tours etc., of VCs should be defined clearly.

It said subjects and point of interface between government department­s dealing with university education and universiti­es should be precisely defined and kept to the minimum.

It was pointed out that service conditions of teaching and nonteachin­g staff under self-financed programmes should be made part of the Act and statutes.

The study suggested timely incorporat­ion into university statutes of all such UGC guidelines that directly affect quality and qualificat­ion of teaching staff. “End-to-end ICT (Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology) should be adopted in a phased manner for reforms in examinatio­ns and efficiency, transparen­cy and reliabilit­y,” it said.

The UP government, department of higher education had appointed a committee under the legal advisor to the governor to make recommenda­tions for necessary amendments to the UP State Universiti­es Act.

The committee emphasised that the prevalent rot in the UP university system could be stemmed immediatel­y by the implementa­tion of administra­tive measures by providing administra­tive staff to universiti­es in the form of registrars, finance officers and examinatio­n controller­s for a specified tenure and in consultati­on with the VCs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India