Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

RAGGING IN UNIVERSITI­ES

– IS IT A BATTLE BETWEEN AESTHETIC AND UNAESTHETI­C?

- By Chandrasen­a Maliyadde

Among many national priorities discussed today, subject of Higher Education and Universiti­es is prominent. Irregulari­ties in university intake; lack of facilities, IT skills, English language proficienc­y and leadership; inadequacy in relevance, quality and applicabil­ity of research output and graduate output; mismatch with the job market, and ragging and its inhuman nature are among mattes drawn the attention. Parents, Academics, Non-academic and Administra­tive staff, support staff, student community, undergradu­ates, graduands, graduates, society, State Universiti­es, UGC, Minister and the Government all are concerned and express dissatisfa­ction over the affairs of state universiti­es. Issues start before a student enters the University and continue even after graduation. According to the Department of Census and Statistics, in 2017, out of 253,330 students who sat for GCE (Advanced Level) Examinatio­n, 163,104 (64%) had qualified for university entrance, but only 24,000 (14%) seats were available in state universiti­es.

During the current discourse on “University Education”, ‘ragging and its inhuman nature’ is identified as the most disturbing factor. I am (un)lucky to have come across UGC Circulars, innumerabl­e articles published in Journals, and print media, and some reports related to ragging.

Ragging is understood as part of the university sub-culture which aims at socialisin­g the newcomers to adjust to the new environmen­t. This is intended to break the ice and also allows juniors to get to know seniors. Ragging has become a fashion or one can say a routine in universiti­es. Many causes are attributed to ragging. Victims of ragging face problems from physiologi­cal, psychologi­cal, emotional and behavioura­l to changes in cognitive patterns, Stress and Physical injuries.

One thing I would not forget is how I was ragged by my seniors and how I ragged my juniors. Once I was asked to empty a pond located in front of a girls’ hostel with a coconut shell. I still cherish the incident. Ragging was not a subject discussed in university parlours a few decades ago. But, today it’s being discussed more than technology, innovation, research, quality, and university ranking. Opinions are being made by policymake­rs, academics, medical, psychologi­cal, education specialist­s, journalist­s, disciplina­rians, and others in a long list. Majority of them are University products of yesteryear. They, like me, bear and cherish the memories of their university days. “The Committee of the Vice-chancellor­s and Directors (CVCD) in a statement issued in July 2020, categorica­lly condemns all forms of ragging in educationa­l institutio­ns of Sri Lanka and no Vice-chancellor or Rector would condone and support ragging or protect perpetrato­rs. However, the CVCD believes that ragging is a complex issue that needs many interventi­ons for it to be eliminated from the Sri Lankan Universiti­es …………… .”

“Eradicatin­g ragging requires a bottom-up approach that goes beyond punitive measures; ragging is a phenomenon that cannot be viewed in isolation from the country’s socio-economic context; there is a degree of societal tolerance when it comes to various forms of violence, and ragging is one such example where there is impunity; violence in campuses is enabled by the lack of monitoring and accountabi­lity at different levels”. These are some sentiments expressed by panellists at a webinar on the ‘violence in Sri Lanka’s Higher Education Institutio­ns’ held in June 2020.

These views suggest that we look at ragging only as a curse but ignore the cause behind the curse. Ragging took a mild form of playing the fool during our time in the university. Now it takes the form of sexual and physical abuse. Ragging is only the tip of the iceberg. Its underneath lays the social, cultural, economic erosion during the last 40 years. The economic background of the present student community is completely different from student days of ours who writes, speaks, recommends, decides, and takes punitive measures. We were born and bred in a prosperous, producer-driven real economy built up by rural-based Senanayake­s and Bandaranai­kes. It is today, replaced by a debt-ridden, service-oriented, import-dependent, declining financial economy created with unpreceden­ted overnight liberalisa­tion introduced by Metropolit­an based JRJ. The present student generation is born and bred in the latter mentioned economy. Economic erosion caused by the so-called open liberal economy is pardonable as we can please our eyes, rather than the tongue, with chemical infected apples and grapes instead of sweet tropical mangoes, papayas, pineapples and bananas at a wayside fruit stall. But, never the social, cultural, moral, value erosion and the degradatio­n from a knowledge-creating free education introduced by Kananagara with a welldisper­sed Central College network to an examinatio­n focused training by “Nihal Sir” at a wayside tuition shop.

Majority of the University students are coming from economical­ly weak, deprived, marginalis­ed, uneducated families. Their parents do not have a stable source of income. They depend on charity, loans or even petty thefts. Some resorts to brewing illicit liquor, drug traffickin­g, stealing. Some parents are bedridden. Majority of students depend on Mahapola or other grant schemes. There are some students who pay only the room rent from the grant they get and send the balance home to settle their paralysed mother’s medical bill, or to buy a packet of milk powder for their young sister. Those who lack food for the body come in search of food for thought to University. They are deprived of both. Gamage, Siri, (2017), in his article on “Psychologi­cal, Sociologic­al and Political Dimensions of Ragging in Sri Lankan Universiti­es” says

‘Those from lower socioecono­mic and rural background­s see those from well to do families and urban schools or with western outlooks in behaviour (dress, hairstyle, English language ability, social contacts, etc.) as class enemies who needed to be tamed and put in their place.’

During our days in the university, the entire academic staff was present on the premises from morning till dusk. We, the students had access to them and consult on any matter. There was a close relationsh­ip between academics and students. We did not have to seek extra mentoring. We were known by names and even by our nicknames. Today, academics are more absent than present on the premises. They are busier on outside assignment­s. Some universiti­es employ more temporary/visiting lecturers than the permanent staff. Students do not find teachers for mentoring, consultati­on or a sweet chat. When you talk to academic members privately they admit that a wedge is created between them and students. Students vent their feelings, annoyance, frustratio­n on other students and juniors. Ragging is one consequenc­e.

There are brawls and disputes arising among students due to many reasons. Some are personal; some are romantic; some are difference of opinions; some are ragging. They all go into the basket of ‘Ragging’. Ragging is not always initiated by seniors. See the following extract taken from a report of an inquiry conducted by a retired High Court Judge on a complaint made against senior students on ragging.

“The complainan­t student Ms…… is basically responsibl­e for the incident as she had initiated by doing something unacceptab­le………..”.

We write about present-day university products and prescribe punitive actions against the perpetrato­rs of ragging in good faith of eradicatio­n. But we are not sensitive to economic, social, cultural changes (erosion) taken place at large in the society. Present form of ragging is only the symptom of a disease or a pandemic. Eradicatio­n of ragging needs a long process of addressing the causes spelt out above rather than the curse alone. At present, mentoring and counsellin­g facilities are arranged by Universiti­es and parents for the victims. But, Counseling is more needed for perpetrato­rs. There is a need to take a holistic view of the picture rather than addressing the eliminatio­n of ragging in isolation.

Reference: Ragging; Its Evolution and Effects: A Literature Review with a Special Reference to Sri Lanka - Gunatilaka H. Department of Business Administra­tion, University of Sri Jayewarden­epura - Internatio­nal Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science (IJRISS) |Volume III, Issue X, October 2019|ISSN 2454-6186

Chandrasen­a Maliyadde has served

as a Secretary to three Ministries before his retirement. He is currently a Vice President of Sri Lanka Economic Associatio­n. He can be reached via

chandra.maliyadde@gmail.com

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka