Wednesday, June 07, 2006

BITS and pieces - reservation comes to Pilani

After years of resisting Government interference. by avoiding UGC grants and federal funding and being supported primarily by the Birla group, BITS Pilani finally got bullied into the reservation mess by Arjun Singh and his goons. Rashmi Bansal summarizes this fiasco in her aptly titled post Another one BITS the dust?

On May 29, the very day the Supreme Court observed that quotas can divide the nation and asked the Government to explain its rationale behind the 27% OBC quotas, HRD Minister Arjun Singh further tightened the quota screws on the higher-education sector, both public and private.

In a note prepared that day for the Cabinet, his Ministry has proposed a legislation with provisions that give the Government unprecedented power not only to impose quotas in over 100 “deemed universities” over and above 32 Central institutions but also to regulate their fees, selection procedure—and even take punitive action.

So not just IITs, IIMs and AIIMS, the institutions which are brought into the 27% OBC quota net include Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani; Manipal Academy of Higher Education; Pune’s Symbiosis International Education Centre and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences.

We BITSians have always been fiercely proud of ourselves. We knew BITS Pilani could have had better libraries, labs and furniture if only we went begging to UGC for funding. But we realized that this would come with strings attached like reservations, entrance exam mandates and such. And we decided we would rather have the best students than the best facilities. We were secure in the knowledge that only the creme de la creme of India would qualify to be our classmates and competitors at BITS. We were admired when we graduated, and the BITS brand name was second only to the IITs in India.

Well, say goodbye to the perfect world, because politicians like Arjun Singh have decided to dishonor the sanctity of private and elite universities and bring them all under Government control. I have no idea how the Government can suddenly manipulate the constitution so they can exercise control over institutes like BITS. What's next? Can these so-called OBCs have job reservation quotas in Reliance, Infosys and Wipro once they graduate from BITS and IITs through their reservation quotas?

Don't get me wrong. I believe that India has to have some kind of affirmative action in place to accelerate the development of those who have been left woefully behind in our society. But such over-arching and generic reservation schemes will only do more harm than good - they will further divide our society on the basis of class and cause resentment and hostility between them. More thought should go behind such schemes, and reservation should be done more along economic lines rather than just based on class. The push should come at the primary school level, so that these backward classes will have come up to par and ready to compete on equal terms with everyone else when they are ready to enter college.

Much has been said against this reservation scheme by the public, regular media and bloggers alike. But we all know how this is going to end. Even when all this was going on, I did not for a minute stop and think that my BITS Pilani would be subject to this disgrace. For we've always stood away from the rest of the pack and made our own path. We've always prided ourselves for our independence and freedom from Government-imposed quotas and restrictions. All that has been felled in one swoop. And for what?

I'm glad I graduated from BITS Pilani when I did, secure in the knowledge that I rubbed shoulders with the best India had to offer. It pains me to see that this might not be true anymore. Yes, Arjun Singh and company will leave a legacy behind. A legacy that will be India's bane. A legacy that will leave many a broken heart and shattered dream in its wake.

PS: If I have any BITSian readers, I would love to hear from you. This post will be updated with your comments.

3 Comments:

Blogger Ram said...

What India lacks is a long term plan for improving Education at various levels and making it available for the various sectors of the population.

Politicians who want to take the stage and grab some limelight come up with "reservation numbers" from nowhere! Why the 60% reservation in TN? How many of us know what goes behind arriving at this number? Do we have a goal in mind that has a number to it? Education is vast and it starts trivially with literacy. Do we atleast have a goal for literacy rate in mind?

Politicians trying to reserve seats in elite institutions with no plans to make the population literate seems no different from building a tower without a base!

We see how students with poor high-school education flounder at Colleges. Either the students would give up or eventually the University would give up. Increasing the reservation numbers on no solid grounds, Universities would give up only sooner.

Growth has to be organic especially for a country like India.

6/13/06, 9:28 AM  
Blogger c2c said...

I agree. Also, we don't seem to have good statistics about how the various OBCs etc are doing now after years of reservation policies. We'll have to stop relying on data that's 30 years old.

6/15/06, 1:33 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

By saying Go hang and sticking to the Merit Criteria, BITS has proved that Pilani is where the mind is without fear and the head is held high. BITS Pilani is a Leader who knows the way, goes the way and shows the way. I wish you had read the India Prwire news release titled BITS Pilani and Tagore Gitanjali.

12/9/06, 9:50 PM  

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