As the government remains silent on the controversy over the common
entrance test for admission to undergraduate engineering courses, the
All-India IIT Faculty Federation and the IIT-Delhi Alumni Association
hope for an early response from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to their
request for an appointment.
“We are in touch with the Prime Minister's Office to seek an audience
with him in order to apprise him of the situation that has arisen out of
the Human Resource Development Ministry's announcement on May 28 of the
new joint entrance examination,” Somnath Bharti, president of the
Alumni Association, told The Hindu.
The association had got off a request to the PMO on June 6 but is yet to
get an appointment. It has been asked to wait, presumably, until Human
Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal returns home from the U.S. on
June 14.
He has a family engagement for a couple of days thereafter, before he resumes work.
Meanwhile, the faculty members of various IITs are busy holding informal
consultations among themselves on the future course of action. The
Senate of the IIT-Kanpur has already decided to hold a separate test in
2013 and set up a committee to work out the modalities. However, it has
offered to coordinate with the other IITs in the conduct of the
examination.
The Alumni Association has announced that it would challenge the
Centre's decision through a public interest litigation petition, to be
filed later this week.
Director criticised
The IIT-Kharagpur's faculty has also come out against the Director for
supporting the common entrance test, pointing out that the Senate had
never agreed to the new format.
There is also talk that the Senates of the IIT-Delhi and the IIT-Bombay
could also announce a separate admission process, but a final decision
is expected only by month-end.
Shiv Sahay Singh reports from Kolkata
Faculty members of the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur have
decided to seek West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's
intervention to put on hold the proposal of the Union Ministry of Human
Resource Development for a common entrance test for undergraduate
engineering courses across the country.
“We will bring it to the notice of the Chief Minister how the common
entrance examination will undermine merit and dilute the academic
standards of the IITs. The teachers will urge Ms. Banerjee to
communicate her views to the Union Ministry in this regard,” said a
senior faculty member of the IIT.
The proposed common entrance test has created divisions between the
administration and faculty members of IIT-Kharagpur. While the
Institute's Director Prof. Damodar Acharya has welcomed the proposal,
representatives of the IIT-Kharagpur Teachers' Association have opposed
it.
“The faculty members of the Institute will do everything possible
through democratic means to oppose the common entrance test,” said a
faculty member.
Referring to the protests in the past when the IIT teachers went on a
hunger strike over implementation of the recommendations of the Sixth
Pay Commission, he said that the teachers' association is contemplating
similar protest on the issue.
“The faculty members never agreed that the Institute should admit
students on the basis of a common entrance test from 2013,” he said,
adding that the views of a majority of teachers had not been
incorporated into the resolution of the IIT Senate.
“IIT-Kharagpur is willing to expand the ambit of IIT-JEE to other
institutions,” said the resolution taken by a special Senate meeting on
May 2.
-The Hindu
-The Hindu
Time for IITs to discard the JEE
The present selection system has failed to bring in students who are genuinely interested in path-breaking engineering work
Last week I came across a remarkable report on international education
tests conducted by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development. The Pisa 2009 tests indicate that China has an education
system that is overtaking those of many Western countries and that
Shanghai was on top of the international education rankings for schools.
Andreas Schleicher, responsible for the highly-influential Pisa tests,
claimed that the results showed the “resilience” of pupils despite tough
backgrounds, and the “high levels of equity” between rich and poor
pupils. He believes that it's a philosophical difference — expecting all
pupils to make the grade, rather than a “sorting mechanism” to find a
chosen few — and, that anyone can create an education system where a few
at the top succeed; the real challenge is to push through the entire
cohort.
This forced me to focus on the imbroglio regarding the entrance test for
undergraduate admissions to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT).
The Ministry of Human Resource Development believes the Joint Entrance
Examination (JEE) conducted by the IITs should be discontinued and
replaced by a common entrance test conducted by an independent agency.
The marks obtained in this test should be combined with weighted results
of high school board exams to determine a student's percentile ranking
in the country. These rankings could then be used for admission to all
engineering colleges including IITs. It is claimed that this new
procedure will give weightage to students' performance in school
(ignored at present) and reduce stress by not forcing them to take
multiple examinations as they are forced to do at present. At first
glance, perfectly logical and reasonable.
However, many faculty members of the IITs are upset that the government
is interfering in academic matters and compromising the autonomy of
these institutions. The Senate of IIT Kanpur has already passed a
resolution that they will not abide by the directions of the MHRD and
that the institute will conduct its own entrance exam in 2013. Senates
of some other IITs may pass similar resolutions, though it appears that
IIT Kharagpur, Madras and Guwahati will not. Faculty Forums of the
dissenting IITs and some alumni groups have expressed views similar to
those from IIT Kanpur. The attendances at meetings where these
dissenting resolutions have been passed have been a small proportion of
faculty strength of these institutions. It is clear that views are
divided among the IIT faculty members across the country. It would be
worthwhile to expand the terms of the debate and arrive at a consensus
that includes the best interests of students and of society at large in
preserving the academic standards of IITs.
A system that works
IITs have a formidable reputation in the country and abroad for
producing outstanding graduates over the last five decades. The reasons
for this includes the selection of high performing students through the
JEE, which the IITs have run without blemish. This has happened because
those running the system take pride in their work as loyal members of
the IIT system. IITs have also developed reasonably democratic systems
for academic functioning and selection of course content, fair and open
systems for grading and evaluation, and student management. Faculty
selection and promotion processes are also reasonable considering the
environment we have to operate in.
However, the glass is only three-quarters full. It is important that we
now focus on why it is one-quarter empty. Mr. Schleicher has a point in
that “anyone can create an education system where a few at the top
succeed”. The success of our BTech products is partly due to the
selection process. Unfortunately, many IIT faculty members and alumni
base their entire pride and self worth on this “success”. The fact is
that if we admit only those from the top few per cent of a national
exam, they will do well no matter how the test is conducted.
It is time to consider what kind of students we want from among those
who are excellent in mathematics and the sciences. Anyone teaching in
IITs is aware that many of our undergraduate students are just not
interested in engineering. A small proportion of them know they will
never take up an engineering career even before they enter IIT. They
just want an IIT ‘stamp' and opt for these institutions because of
parental pressure or a lack of excellent institutions offering liberal
arts or science education. A significant proportion of students develop a
dislike for quantitative and laboratory work after entering IITs. They
just do not have the aptitude for engineering work. This latter group is
sending a strong signal that the current JEE is not adequate to select
the right students for an elite engineering education.
There are other reasons why the IIT entrance procedure needs a major
revamp. The present selection system depends on machismo in physics,
chemistry and mathematics — ideally suited for coaching classes,
condemning young boys and girls to a concentration camp atmosphere for
two years or so. This is the period these youngsters should spend
exploring their interest and aptitudes but are prevented from doing so.
This straitjacketing is probably filtering out the innovative and
curious ones who hate such narrow perspectives, ensuring that IITs are
denied some young Indians who might be truly interested in path breaking
work. It is time for a rethink on the objective of the selection
procedure for IITs.
Real contributors
Another unfortunate aspect of the JEE debate is that it obfuscates the
real issue facing IITs. The future of IITs does not depend on the
selection process of undergraduates. No matter what process is adopted
they will do well. Within a decade IITs will have little to show for as
academic institutions unless policymakers and faculty members start
taking pride in the MTech and PhD programmes. It is worth remembering
that BTechs comprise less than half of IIT graduates every year. The
majority are MTech and PhD degree holders. They make a huge contribution
to technological development in India in the public and private sector.
It is this group that needs constant improvement, encouragement and
recognition. This will not happen unless IITs transform from mid-20th
century, narrow-visioned technical institutions to modern,
multidisciplinary research universities.
This can be done, as is evident from the Chinese experience. The
prestigious Global Research University Profiles publishes a ranking of
the top 500 World-Class Universities (Shanghai rankings) by their
research output every year. In the 2011 list only three made it from
India — Indian Institute of Science (300-400), and IITs at Delhi and
Kharagpur (400-500). Those from China totalled 35, Brazil seven, South
Africa three, Saudi Arabia two, and Iran one. They also list the top 100
for engineering. From India only Indian Institute of Science made the
grade, but there were eight from China! Obviously, we have a lot of
catching up to do. Just ensuring the purity of JEE will not do it.
But there is an impasse at hand and it must be resolved amicably. Those
protesting from the IITs have a point — that they must have a role in
selecting their students. Any university should, as long as it is done
within the concepts of fair play, social justice and societal
obligations. An ideal entrance procedure should include high school
performance, marks in a common all-India quantitative entrance
examination and, if desired, any institution should be able to set their
own entrance test/criteria also.
If an institution wants to conduct its own test it must be very
different from the current JEE and not require students to prepare too
much. It must test aptitude and not just mathematical prowess as that
would already have been tested by the common all-India test. It would
have to be free from language and class biases.
Devising such a test would need collaboration with national and
international education and testing experts and will take time, but it
would free IIT faculty from wasting their time on the JEE and focus on
what will actually benefit their institutions. It should be possible to
design IIT specific aptitude test procedures within the next year. If
the IITs agree to such a change in entrance procedures the MHRD should
agree to introduce the new system in 2014. If not, the current proposal
of MHRD should stay. As for the JEE, it needs to go.
(Dinesh Mohan is the Volvo Chair Professor Emeritus, Transport
Research and Injury Prevention Programme, WHO Collaborating Centre, IIT
Delhi)
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