Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Jadavpur varsity students win, entrance restored

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: This is the victory of JU’s heritage, its teachers and students. All this happened because a nonissue and made into an issue.

ANANDADEB MUKHOPADHY­AY, former vice-chancellor of Vidyasagar University

Agitating students and teachers of the arts faculty at Jadavpur University (JU) tasted victory late on Tuesday evening when the university authoritie­s restored admission tests that were scrapped last week, leading to a marathon agitation on campus and outcry from eminent intellectu­als and academicia­ns.

Many people compared doing away with the decade-old examinatio­n system to moves made by the erstwhile Left Front government to influence the administra­tion at JU and other universiti­es in Bengal.

JU ranks fifth among the nation’s top 10 universiti­es according to a 2017 survey by the Union HRD ministry.

The first official announceme­nt on restoratio­n of the old admission system was made at 8.30 pm on Tuesday after two marathon meetings of the JU executive council. Interestin­gly, JU vice chancellor Suranjan Das and pro-vice chancellor PK Ghosh did not become party to the resolution­s adopted by the executive council. This fanned ongoing speculatio­ns that they might put in their papers since Das had offered to resign earlier. “We will meet the chancellor. If we cannot run the administra­tion properly we will step down,” Das said on Tuesday evening.

The admission tests were scrapped on July 4 allegedly under pressure from the Trinamool government because the official notice, announcing schedule of the written exams, was issued on June 27. Education minister Partha Chatterjee denied having any role in the fiasco but said two types of the admission system cannot co-exist in one education system. In most universiti­es in Bengal, students are admitted on the basis of board exam results.

JU students however continued their hunger strike even after the exam system was restored in six department­s of the arts faculty. The protest went on since the executive council did not decide whether the examinatio­ns would be conducted by JU teachers or an external body and left the matter to an admission committee comprising the registrar and the dean of arts faculty.

“This is the victory of JU’s heritage, its teachers and students. All this happened because a nonissue and made into an issue. The examinatio­n system has only elevated the standard of JU over the past decades,” said academicia­n Anandadeb Mukhopadhy­ay, former vice-chancellor of Vidyasagar University and an ex-student and teacher of JU.

JU registrar Chiranjib Bhattachar­jee said, “A female student who was on fast for 85 hour told us that the students were ready to face the consequenc­es but would continue with the agitation.”

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