EducationWorld

Karnataka: Deep rot

Higher education in the southern state of Karnataka (pop. 59 million) is in deep crisis. Over the past few months the states 18 government-controlled universities have been hit by a series of scandals — massive fiddling with written exam papers at the Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences; corruption in recruiting non-teaching staff at the Hassan and Mysore medical colleges; and manipulation of exam answer sheets of over 800 engineering students of Visvesvaraya Technological University, among others. Now to this list of scandals add routine sexual harassment of students by faculty in Mysore University (MU, estb.1916).On March 5, the peace of the 739-acre main campus of MU was shattered following a suicide attempt by M. Saritha, a zoology Ph D student, because of allegedly constant sexual harassment by her research guide Prof. Shivabasavaiah. In a statement to the Mysore police, Saritha alleged that Prof. Shivabasavaiah had been harassing her for sexual favours for several months. She also alleged that when she comp-lained to vice chancellor Dr. V.G. Talwar, he advised her to change her guide and continue with her research. Subsequent to her FIR, Shivabasavaiah and Talwar were booked on sexual harassment and abetment charges with the state government also ordering an enquiry by chief secretary S.V. Ranganath. Unfortunately this is not a one-off incident. According to university authorities, 26 complaints of sexual impropriety against faculty have been registered in the past six years in this once prestigious university whose alumni include Dr. Sarvepalli Radha-krishnan, former president of India; N.R. Narayana Murthy, chief mentor of Infosys Technologies Ltd; and celebrated cartoonist R.K. Laxman. The rot in Mysore University is only one symptom of a deep malaise afflicting Karnatakas 1,500 colleges and 18 universities. Over the past three decades caste-based faculty appointments, admission and exam-related scandals, nepotism and routine interference from the states rustic politicians have played havoc and severely damaged the reputations of government-controlled universities. In particular, persistent political interference with faculty appointments has resulted in the steady decline of teaching-learning standards and reduced state government funded universities including Bangalore, Mysore and Karnatak University at Dharwad into degree dispensing shops producing ill-prepared, low-calibre graduates and postgrads rubbished by India Inc. With rustic neo-literate politicians scrambling to pack state government funded colleges and universities with kith and kin equipped with dubious degrees including Ph Ds awarded by obscure universities deep in the states hinterland, its hardly surprising that academic excellence is history in most government institutions of higher learning with rock-bottom standards and fees, caste-consciousness, marks-tampering scandals and sexual harassment of women students. Unsurprisingly in the period 1998-2007, the states 18 universities enroled a mere 2,789 students in doctorate programmes with less than half of them being awarded Ph Ds of suspect quality. Theres no doubt that theres wide scale corruption, nepotism and sexism in Karnatakas government colleges and universities. Over 50 percent of students who enrol in Ph D programmes drop out, unable to deal with these evils, says Dr. B.K. Anitha, associate professor, School of Social Sciences at the

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