National Post

Suffocatin­g stress at exam prep academies driving students to suicide.

PRESSURE TO SUCCEED AND SUFFOCATIN­G COMPETITIO­N RESULTS IN MANY STUDENTS TAKING THEIR OWN LIVES

- RAMA LAKSHMI in Kota, India

Shivdutt Singh left his tiny village of wheat and barley farmers last summer with a dream of becoming the first doctor in his family.

Singh, 20, travelled more than 500 kilometres from the village of Kolari to Kota, a buzzing city in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan where students from all over the country come to cram for entrance exams to India’s highly competitiv­e engineerin­g and medical colleges.

More than 160,000 students f rom across India flocked to Kota’s schools last year, feeding the town’s reputation as the nation’s capital for test preparatio­n. But gruelling study schedules, frequent testing and round- the- clock stress are taking a deadly toll.

More than 70 students have committed suicide in the past five years in Kota, including 29 just last year — a rate much higher than the national average of 10.6 suicides per 100,000 people in 2014, reported by the National Crime Records Bureau. Students in Kota have hanged themselves, set themselves ablaze and jumped from buildings.

Two weeks ago, Singh became one of them. He had studied non- stop f or six hours in his dorm room. He even called a cousin with a biology question.

But then he locked the room and hanged himself from the ceiling fan. He left a note: “I am responsibl­e for my suicide. I cannot fulfil Papa’s dream.”

“He was very excited. We used to tease him by addressing him as ‘ Doctor,’ ” said his father, Mangal Singh, 52. “But after a few months, he began panicking. He was studying all the time, slept very little.”

Educators at the private test academies say they can’t explain the rise in suicides, but they concede that the intense psychologi­cal pressure is real.

“Students are under a constant state of anxiety here. They are unable to study, concentrat­e, remember, sleep or eat. They complain of headaches and breathless­ness. Many just weep in front of me,” said Madan Lal Agrawal, a psychiatri­st in Kota who ran a help line for students for three years. “They feel guilty because their parents have spent so much money and have high expectatio­ns. Parents often impose their own unfulfille­d ambitions on their children.”

“Daddy, I hate maths,” one student wrote in a suicide note last year. “I am a goodfor- nothing son,” another wrote with a frowny-face.

Police in Kota blame the news media for hyping the incidents and prompting copycats.

Officials ordered coaching schools to appoint counsellor­s, organize special “fun” days in classrooms and quickly refund fees to students who drop out.

“We have also told coachi ng s chools to conduct screening tests to determine if students are really capable of scoring in Kota,” said Sawai Singh Godara, the superinten­dent of police.

The police have also told the schools not to send results of bimonthly tests to parents via text message.

“This keeps the students on the edge all the time. The parents keep calling them to scold,” Godara said.

Rising middle-class aspiration­s, parents’ unrealisti­c ambitions for their children, poor teaching standards in schools and a fiercely competitiv­e college admissions race have spawned a US$ 400- million test prep industry here.

Kota, an unassuming city with a population a little over a million, had only a handful of private math and science tutors 20 years ago. But so many private schools have opened that studying in Kota has become almost an essential rite of passage for many seeking admission to India’s top colleges. Aspirants come and study from three months to two years.

Many dream of winning admission to the exclusive Indian Institutes of Technology, 16 public colleges whose graduates are lapped up by global companies that offer fat salaries. Graduating from one of the IITs, considered the Ivy League of engineerin­g education in India, is a ticket to an elevated social status and a sure shot for a job in a top tech company in India or Silicon Valley. Google chief executive Sundar Pichai is one of IIT’s most famous graduates.

Every year, about 1.5 million students take the entrance exam. Fewer than 10,000 are accepted.

The test prep industry has also motivated modest families from smaller towns and villages to aspire to prestigiou­s colleges, which until about a decade ago were largely the reserve of the elite from big cities. In the past two years, sons of a railway station baggage handler, a truck driver and a rickshaw driver studied in Kota and made it to top engineerin­g and medical colleges.

“All around Kota, the message is to excel, or be left behind,” the Times of India wrote.

Kota’s skyline is dotted with billboards featuring the faces of students who aced their entrance tests, instead of the usual supermodel­s and Bollywood stars. The best teachers are mini-celebritie­s.

Two weeks after losing his son, Shivdutt Singh’s father is still grieving and does not know who to blame.

“Is it wrong to be ambitious? My son wanted to make the village proud by becoming a doctor,” Singh said. “Every parent wants their child to become something big one day.”

‘PARENTS OFTEN IMPOSE THEIR OWN UNFULFILLE­D AMBITIONS ON THEIR CHILDREN.’ — PSYCHIATRI­ST MADAN LAL AGRAWAL

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada