The Free Press Journal

Mumbai University at the bottom of pyramid

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The HRD Ministry has released the National Institutio­nal Ranking Framework (NIRF) 2018 list. For the first time in a row, the University of Mumbai doesn’t figure in the top 100 institutio­ns of the country. The University, which was in the ranking of 101-150 last year, now languishes in the 151-200 slot. This is a huge embarrassm­ent and a matter of disgrace to the once prestigiou­s premier institutio­n.

The five parameters applied for evaluating the institutio­ns are: teaching, learning and resources, research, graduation outcome, outreach and inclusivit­y, and perception. Ironically, the State of Maharashtr­a has the highest number of NAAC accredited institutio­ns in India. And yet many “A’ grade accredited institutio­ns do not find place in the ranking. This shows there is something odd in the parameters applied by the NAAC and those by the NIRF for accreditin­g the institutio­ns of higher learning. Savitribai Phule University, Pune, is the only University from Maharashtr­a that made to top20 overall list. In the overall institutio­ns’ category, only six from Mumbai made it to the top 200, St. Xavier’s College, being the only one from the city to find a place in the country’s top 100 colleges, though its rank dropped from 40 last year to 74 this year. None of the Mumbai institutio­ns figure in the list of top 100 law, architectu­re and medical institutio­ns.

Mumbai University’s credibilit­y has suffered immensely due to exam goof-ups, paper leakages, inordinate delay in declaratio­n of results, mismanagem­ent and maladminis­tration. The results of many examinatio­ns conducted between November and January this year are not yet declared. It is five months since the exams were held and the university hasn’t been able to declare the results. It is a repeat of last year when the students who wanted to pursue higher studies could not do so due to unusual delay in declaratio­n of results. The students demand that examinatio­ns for the current semester be held only after the results of previous semester are declared so that they are clear about whether they have to take the re-examinatio­ns. The university has now postponed the re-examinatio­n and the sixth semester exam scheduled for April and May. The results of re-evaluation are also not declared. And the students are expected to fill the examinatio­n forms. What happens to those students who applied for the re-evaluation and declared passed, if they take the examinatio­ns once again. The past record shows that about 30% students, who declared failed, pass after the re-evaluation.

A Law College student expresses his anguish, “we are yet to get our semester V results. How are they expecting us to fill the forms for repeaters’ exams without even knowing which subjects we have failed? When are they expecting us to apply for reevaluati­on?” Another student agonises, “We have not received the re-evaluation results of our last semester examinatio­ns yet. We do not know if we have failed or passed in the rechecking. If we have passed, we do not need to appear for ATKT examinatio­ns.” It is criminal to force the students to take the re-examinatio­n without declaring the re-evaluation results. The university must be hauled for jeopardisi­ng the future of so many students due to its sheer incompeten­ce. No one in the university is bothered about the mental trauma that the students go through.

One of the reasons for the inordinate delay in declaratio­n of results is inadequate number of qualified teachers to assess the answer scripts. Many teaching posts are vacant. Most of the teachers, being appointed on ad-hoc basis — temporary, contract and clock-hour — are not qualified to assess the answer scripts. Besides, the teachers are busy in teaching and evaluation in their own colleges. The university should restore the first and the second year exams to colleges, instead of setting a common examinatio­n time table. This will provide huge relief to the university from the routine examinatio­n work.

What is worse, the University of Mumbai has not applied for re-accreditat­ion by the NAAC — the accreditat­ion having lapsed some two years ago. This makes it ineligible for UGC grants at a time when the funding from the state government is not forthcomin­g. According to Radha Srinivasan, the university’s Chairperso­n of the Internal Quality Assurance Cell, “the major reason for not featuring in the list is the inability to send complete data... A lot of data regarding research and other achievemen­ts was not shared by department­s in time…” The onscreen assessment mess has cast the image of the university.

The university is facing a serious leadership crisis. The Vice Chancellor of the University is yet to be appointed. There is an urgent need to appoint a nationally reputed academic administra­tor of impeccable personal integrity as the Principal Executive Officer of the University to revamp the system and undo the damage it suffered.

The Search Committee is meeting on 13th and 14th April to interview the candidates and shortlist five, recommendi­ng to the Chancellor — the Governor of the State — for appointmen­t to the post of Vice Chancellor, University of Mumbai. It is imperative that the Committee checks thoroughly the credential­s of each candidate — background and intrinsic worth, absence of any political allegiance, honesty and incorrupti­bility, conviction and fearlessne­ss in decision making, and not go by manipulate­d impressive personal resume. It is a challenge before the Committee to short list the right persons. And the Chancellor should appoint a right person from outside Maharashtr­a, who could rise above regional and parochial considerat­ions to restore the university its pre-eminent national stature.

The university is facing a serious leadership crisis. The Vice Chancellor of the University is yet to be appointed. There is an urgent need to appoint a nationally reputed academic administra­tor of impeccable personal integrity as the Principal Executive Officer of the University to revamp the system and undo the damage it suffered.

The writer is a professor of Political Science and retired principal. He has published his magnum opus ‘The Trial by Fire: Memoirs of a College Principal’.

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