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The real impact of reservations

 
By Anonymous at Sun, 2006-05-21 20:46 | Politics | Reservation

Copied below are the views of Prof. M Balakrishnan, a computer science professor at IIT Delhi as expressed at the iit4equality yahoo group.

Nearly six decades after independence, this country is planning to announce that majority of its population is backward and does not have equal opportunity to pursue education and employment. Along with this, it is going to open up a Pandora's Box by various caste groups to be classified as "backward". What an interesting way to begin the 21st century when finally India was beginning to emerge as a serious player in the new knowledge economy! The major carrot that is being doled out is the seats in the elite medical, engineering and management Institutes. What bothers me is no one is interested in even consulting the people who have built these institutions and brought them to this stature. I have strong views on efficacy of reservations in general but here I would confine myself to the issues concerning IITs. At least here with my three decade long association, I can claim to know something. Many of these arguments may be applicable to the other elite Institutions in medical and management disciplines as well.

Today IITs are considered excellent educational institutions. There is a countrywide scramble to get into these with many students spending the best part of their teen years in preparing for its entrance examinations. This should not be confused with ranking of universities where just a couple of IITs make it in the top 500. These rankings deal primarily with the research output and not with the quality of undergraduate education. I can confidently say that any ranking of quality of undergraduate engineers produced would put IITs in the top 20 worldwide if not in the top 10. And it is this achievement that is going to be hard to maintain with the proposed reservations policy. Before we go any further, it would be best to examine how this excellence has been achieved.

The fundamental contribution that the Central Government has made to these institutions is in generous funding (by Indian, not global standards) combined with unmatched autonomy. The main point of engagement between the Government and these Institutions has been through the appointment of Directors. Except for a brief period during the last administration, the Governments had refrained from any major politicking in these appointments. They have by and large appointed the best available applicant Professor from the same or another IIT for the job. These venerable people had themselves a great pride in these Institutions and have ran the Institutes with the best of their abilities (maybe not always efficiently but always fairly) without major vested interest.

For someone outside IITs to understand the power of this position is not easy. The Director virtually appoints the complete senior administration including the deputy directors and deans, chairs all the faculty selections including that for the Professors, is the chairman of the senate and thus the academic head, is the financial head and also the administrative head. For most people living in the
campus, which includes 90% of faculty and students, he is also the chairman of the local municipality (all major complaints on water, electricity, sewage etc. would reach him). This ensures that the buck almost always stops with him and thus decision making is unavoidable. This autonomy that has been the hallmark of these
institutions is being eroded. There were attempts in the last Government (fortunately not vigorously pursued) to tell IITs what to teach. The present decision would strike at the fundamentals of IITs as the Government no longer feels whom to teach and how many to teach is best decided by these Institutions themselves. This in my opinion is the most dangerous fallout as it strikes at the very core of the success of these Institutions. Once the lines of control gets blurred, there would be no stopping, as today's political functioning is clearly not dictated by long term vision. Soon we could have reservations in faculty and create a caste based patronage system which has destroyed many of the once excellent state universities.

In IITs, the faculty selected and promoted solely based on merit has maintained a high standard of ethical behavior, have taken their teaching and research seriously, refrained from politicking themselves and supported the Institute in many ways to fulfill its commitments. Who are these faculty members? A large number are our own alumni (undergraduates as well as postgraduates), majority of them have studied or conducted research in the west and almost all of them have had opportunities of pursuing financially much more lucrative careers in India and abroad. Thus each faculty member is here by choice and he/she has exercised that choice with one major attraction - opportunity to teach, interact and work with extremely bright students perhaps unmatched anywhere. It is this attraction that is being tampered with. In a situation where all IITs are short of faculty and desperately trying to innovate to attract faculty under the constraints of the pay commission dictated salaries (while competing with Sensex based salaries), this is not a pleasant development.

IITs have had reservations for SC/STs for decades. Why would this be different? Aren't these students likely to be better prepared than the students admitted under the existing reserved category? Here I would like to share some of the facts with the readers. IITs have been admitting SC/ST students for years under two modes. From the general category, a significantly lower JEE cutoff is decided and reserved category students scoring above this cutoff are admitted directly to the UG programmes. Another still lower cutoff is decided and reserved category students from this set are admitted to a one year preparatory course conducted by IITs themselves. After passing this course, they can join the programmes without having to appear in JEE again. Even this exercise collectively yields less than 15% in IIT Delhi though the quota amounts to nearly 22.5%. Half of the reserved category students manage to clear courses comfortably while the other half struggle on the margins. What would be called a good performance (cumulative grade point average or CGPA of 8 and above) and is achieved by nearly forty percent of general category students, is rare and occurs once in many years among the reserved category students. It is not that all general category students do well. There is nearly a 5% "dropout" rate even among them which is a cause of concern but mainly attributed to the burnout due to JEE preparation phase. The "dropout" students have no effect on teaching as they neither are regular nor make their presence felt in classes. The remaining part of weak students is too small and at present hardly any instructor would pitch his / her course at that level. On the other hand, the present policy may introduce a large band of weak students which no instructor can ignore. This would definitely result in drop in the quality of education. It is the hypocrisy of the highest order that on one hand the reservation for SC/STs is considered a success and quoted for extension to OBCs, and on the other hand, no hard data on the performance of these students is available in the public domain. Some administrators I talked to consider this data as sensitive! Analysis of where the reserved category students go after graduation would be enlightening. I do not have the sensitive data but my experience shows that most of them either go to services like IAS/IES or to the public sector companies. Normally this choice of careers by IIT graduates should be a matter of satisfaction except that both these entries are again using the reservation quota. Is it empowerment or crutches for life?

In this whole episode, the most stunning news for me was when the Hon'ble minister announced increase in intake to compensate for the reservations. This would amount to nearly 56% overall increase in undergraduate intake in the IITs. This showed complete ignorance of what makes IIT undergraduate education tick. There are few Institutions in the world where undergraduate students get to interact one to one and so freely with such high-caliber faculty. Students are advised on courses in small groups, interact over hostel dinners, go on industrial trips and finally carry out a well supervised project. Every undergraduate student does an intensive "novel" project either individually or in groups of two and he/she is effectively "supervised" by a faculty member. Many of them result in publications. This system evolved when the student-faculty ratio was 6:1 and is getting strained at the seams when it has reached 12:1. In some disciplines like Computer Sciences and Electrical Engineering where market competition is heavy, it has already gone to 20:1 and above. Though currently producing excellent results, it is a highly non-scalable mechanism. Intake increase on this scale, when effectively faculty strengths in key areas are decreasing could sound a death-knell to one of our few international
brand names.

I have a poser for Prof. Jayati Ghosh, my well renowned colleague from JNU and a member of the knowledge commission. She has justified reservations in IITs based on the poor ranking of IITs internationally. Her argument is anyway these Institutions are not great, why they should crib about the quality of intake. She nowhere states that any of the 400+ odd Institutions worldwide which are ranked above IITs have achieved their status through reservations. In that case all Tamil Nadu Engineering Colleges with 69% reservation for decades (openly defying the Supreme Court suggested norm of 50%) now should be at the top.

Postscript: Finally, I would like to seek opinion on the composition of our next Olympics team. We have admittedly done much poorer in sports than education. Should our next Olympics team be chosen on caste basis or perhaps with adequate representation to athletes aged 40+ who are at present completely unrepresented? After all we do not have much to lose as we only win one bronze medal in
alternate Olympics. I would no longer be surprised if some future Sports Minister considers caste based quotas for our national cricket team. After all that would be worth a few votes and the nation would have been well prepared by then to cheer only for its own caste brethren!

The author is a Professor of Computer Science & Engineering at IIT Delhi. He has been with IIT Delhi since 1977 except for a three year stint outside India. Currently he is on Sabbatical and working with a startup. The views represented here are completely his own.
M. Balakrishnan (mbala@...)
5, Taxila Apartments
IIT Delhi Campus,
New Delhi - 110016

Well spoken, professor. I

By Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 2006-05-22 01:44

Well spoken, professor. I have the same views ...
Glad some people are openly speaking up boldly. Let us hope the governement of India does not ruin INDIA.

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really kewl

By mridu chadha on Mon, 2006-05-22 10:22

very well written professor...im a class 8student and this really scares me...vot abt our kid's future..will ve manage admissions....i even wrote a letter to the editor of The Hindu but i dont think kids' opinions really matter as much as ur adults'. I hope that more and more ppl join the protest and speak up boldly aGainst our politicians who have taken this rather anti-progresive step. i have the same opinions abt vot u have written....i hope more adults come up and speak agains the govt of india who might just become the reason of india's downafall by their ways to get more votes and money in their pockets.

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RESERVATIPON ISSUE

By DEVIL GUY (not verified) on Mon, 2006-05-22 17:04

Hello, friend
i m gattu u r right. What u will u doing is right i my opinion.
Because i m just passes 12th science . I m doing hardwork whole year
To get success in 12th to become an software engineer .i have got
60%.some one says u don't get addmission in college but my friend who get only 45% .he is safe because he is belong from obc caste
Every one says that ur friend got admission in any college because
He is belong to obc caste.

We have to take strike steps against goverment
I think we have right to take steps like strike to save our feathure
If an

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Intelligent, knowledgeable OBC's are & should be against quotas

By Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2006-05-23 21:11

I am married to a wonderful man who belongs to OBC but has NEVER taken advantage of any reservation/quota that might have been available to him and I don't think he even knew of these. Ironically, He himself is dead against it even though as others point out this might benefit us, our kids. We are in the U.S. right now and have been thinking of returning but this quota policy is making us rethink our decision. We thought India was on the path to progress but what kind of a future will our kids have, if India is going to retrogress?. We thought that our kids should go to CBSE/ICSE/IB board schools but what will be the use if the reservations are going to kill any kind of professionalism and the private sector and what will be my kids' future?. Will I have to wonder every time I go to a doctor if he is an SC/ST/OBC & did he become a doc. based on merit or quota?. What is this going to do to those kids who work hard and are not in the reservations category?. As it is kids who copy or are rich enough to get leaked papers are taking away chances for the hardworking ones and to add this to the mix.
I always tell my kids they have to work and study hard to get good marks just like we had to study hard in India and now all this quota business is going to create discrimination even for people like us who may be OBC by chance but are just as hardworking as any other person.
This is going to bring discrimination all over again!!.

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Anti Quota

By Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 2006-05-24 18:56

We are all going to be dead and India will cease to be a country.. it ll be renamed OBC.. all thanks to the British Legacy carrying Congress I's Divide and Rule Policy.

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Sir,

By Neeraj Barnwal (not verified) on Thu, 2006-05-25 21:02

Sir,

I am a fourth year student in IIT kgp. And I feel proud to associated with an institution who has faculty like yourself. Sir, I belong to an OBC(on paper ofcourse, although i dont feel backward in ne field). I have come this far without even having my certificate made, and i wish to continue this forever, whether i succeed or fail. I will be giving my CAT next yr, and i am not going for the quota. I want to get into the esteemed institution because i deserve it, and not because according to some dumb asshole (sry for the slang) my caste deserves to be there.

It was very encouraging to read your views. Thank you again for all this.

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quota

By Nilesh Pampattiwar (not verified) on Fri, 2006-05-26 07:41

Simply, this reservation is a choice between VALUE and VOTE, lets hope PM chooses VALUE and NOT a VOTE. Lets check Govt realy want to build INDIA or CONGRESS.

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.A National movement....Chale Jao Resrvation..

By dileep_ayachit (not verified) on Fri, 2006-05-26 22:06

We need to raise this movement as not only for elite institutes but for all india national level.We we are finding need to extend the existing reservation policy even after 60 years of independence is shamful.The govt. was supposed to wound the scheme with in ten years as targeted during initiation.But the govts have found this golden egg giving hen ,only to gather votes,without any up sensible liftment of under previledged.So the under previledged class is still there after 60 years,and in majority ,as this govt. shamfully states.The Govt. has also bothered to re view and analise faiures ut happy to extend further because it gives only votes and votes.Who cares for people.

Today there is a need of hour to have a political party by youths of india with modern ideas,for one india ,one national.Take this movement to masses not to elite classes alone.

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I am against the views of

By sushil (not verified) on Sat, 2006-05-27 22:47

I am against the views of the author and I would like to suggest to read below blog site.

http://sujaiblog.blogspot.com/2006/05/reservations-v-apotheosis-of-iits-and.html

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Some questions

By Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 2006-05-28 16:26

Your opinion about reservation is fine in an ideal world. But do we live in a perfect world?
Now I have some questions, Why do you think the SC/ST's in particular needs reservation. Is it due to their weakness or as a safety net against the all pervasive descrimination by the champions of equality. The bias is both conscious and unconscious. I have the oppurtunity of studying and working, both in general catagory and in reserved catagory. And it makes lots of difference.
Secondly, byond the wall of IIT there is a real india, an India of hunger, discrimination, injustice and lots of missed oppurtunitis. what you plan to do about it. Just remember it is 1.1 billion you are thinking about.
If you complain about our politicians, it is democracy, the politicians reflects the masses as they comes from masses. If the educated persons keeps the masses uneducated and unempowered you expect something like reservation. How about a dictatorship.
Ultimately if institutions like IIT's are created, they are for the people and not few elitists persons having all facilities of life to perpetuate themself. Who allows India to get split into privately educated haves and govt. school educated have nots.
It is not a great feat to take already cut diamonds and make ornaments, but the real feats will be make the uncut diomonds coming from the hinterland a real polished one. And I wish the Institutes of India can take the challange.

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Political statement or dividing force

By Ranjan Mazumdar (not verified) on Fri, 2006-06-02 11:18

As an NRI investing in India, it is deeply depressing to see the regression of this Congress Government and that with supposedly knowleageable, educated persons at the helm of affairs. This smacks of "Nehru" brand socialism where we, the middle class,had to give up dreams of entrepreneurship and be content with ration cards and telephone connections distributed as a grand gesture towards our performance as loyal workers. The only persons who mattered were the close circle of industrialists who were allowed to keep out competition through artificial barriers erected by the government and subjected the citizens to substandard goods and services. I thought with the indian revival and opening up of the economy such a key area as education would not have been subjected to this symbolic pandering to the vote bank. Creating artificial barriers is the same story with a twist. The least they could do is invest in new engineering and medical colleges to cater to the growing requirement of indian business rather than reducing the standards of existing ones. Put up another 20 new universities including 10 of them only for OBC. I want them to succeed as much as anyone, but giving them reservations in education, service etc. will create another a super class that is using reservations to improve. No need to go to the Middle East to be second class citizens. If the people of India, especially those in power, do not have respect for their country and students, why should other countries! And as far as J. Ghosh, she should read Dilbert. I have seen students from IIT's do well across the USA. Instead of breaking down good institutions let her try to build some NEW international class ones. Its not as easy as it looks; talk is cheap.

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I stongly agree with

By sowmya (not verified) on Fri, 2006-06-02 11:41

I stongly agree with author's idea.Its really shamefull even after 60 yrs of independence this is continuing.What ever may be the decision but the effect of this will be terrible. This is great injustice for the people who are really capable.I curse myself being born in a uppercastfamily eventhough im in a very good position today.But the suffering behind this was high and it was not a smooth way for me.

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