BUZZ

IIT alumni, students shocked at quota move

Posted by: Abhay Kant on: July 5, 2008

Mumbai: The government’s decision to have reservations for faculty in the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) has evoked strong, negative reactions from the alumni as well as current students.
Some prominent alumni, now on the board of governors of various IITs, took up the matter individually with the respective directors, only to find that the issue had not even been discussed in the IIT Council and the decision was being thrust by the Union human resources development ministry. IIT-Bombay alumnus Nandan Nilekani said: ‘‘I think this is a very unfortunate decision. Matters of such strategic importance must be discussed in the IIT Council but, regrettably, the council has not met even once in the entire duration this government was in power.’’
The government diktat to the IITs says 15%, 7.5% and 27% quota in teaching positions be reserved for the SC, ST and OBC categories, respectively, with immediate effect. The IITs currently have reservations for backward category candidates for their administrative posts, from attendants
to the level of deputy registrar.
Nilekani, who is on the IITB board of governors, feels that higher education in India needs a complete overhaul. ‘‘Momentous decisions are taken without consultation and communicated by junior bureaucrats. Our higher education needs a complete revamp, just like the ‘licence permit raj’ was lifted in 1991.
The recommendations of the National Knowledge Commission on Higher Education should be implemented immediately.’’ Nilekani, one of the founders of Infosys, who contributed a generous purse to his alma mater, said that he
learnt the most important lessons of his life on the Powai campus.
A senior professor from IITDelhi said several alumni have expressed their concerns and willingness to talk the issue out with the government. ‘‘Students, current and former, know that IITs are what they are because of the kind of teaching that goes on here. Faculty members are the pillars of the IITs and these institutions will crumble if they are recruited on the basis of anything but merit,’’ he said. Another alumnus, Mastek chairman Ashank Desai, pointed out that the IITs stood for excellence and they must be given the autonomy to bloom.
Students and alumni are holding a candlelight protest march in Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore on Saturday evening. ‘‘To be a faculty at IIT, you need to have a PhD. Some institutes even prefer candidates with at least five years of work experience. No one can remain poor after that. Reservation for faculty is a politically motivated decision and it will degrade the IIT system,’’ IIT-B student Neeraj Jain said.

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