Many of us appeared for NET held on Sunday gone by.
Now as we felt shocked at many questions during the exam, our views
has been echoed in an editorial in The Indian Express.
Hope better sense prevail among question-papers preparers next time.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/epic-fail/1136803/0
The UGC's test for entry-level university teachers reveals sexist and
condescending assumptions

The University Grants Commission has made some outrageous errors of
judgement in framing its examination for teacher aptitude in the
National Eligibility Test (NET). One of the multiple choice questions
asked: "At the primary school stage, most teachers should be women
because". This is a patently disputable assumption, and the choices
provided were all problematic, steeped in sexist stereotypes. The idea
that women teach children better than men is probably drawn from the
observation that, in many homes, it is a woman's responsibility to
provide early nurturing, to teach a child how to learn, and introduce
elementary ideas. This is not because women are especially talented at
it, but because men seldom take it up with enthusiasm. That women
"know basic content better than men" is equally condescending. The
unspoken extension would be, women teach children better with basics,
so that men can take over at the higher, more evolved levels? Another
choice, "can deal with children with love and affection", is also
about freezing gender roles, where women share and care and love,
while men compete and prod each other to greater achievement. It is a
crass reduction of human personality into two types. The most
appalling suggestion, of course, was that women make better primary
school teachers because they "are available on lower salaries". Even
if it was the wrong answer, it is incredible that it was even
articulated as an option by the body that regulates and oversees
higher education in India.

The NET was devised as an attempt to standardise measures of quality
for entry-level teaching staff. It is no surprise that this aim has
been undercut — the aptitude test speaks for itself. The questions are
clearly open to subjective interpretation. Several of the answer
options provided could be credibly argued in an essay, but they may or
may not be what the test-setters had in mind. Some of the analogies
are bewildering — for instance, "bee-honey, cow-milk, teacher-?" The
options are: intelligence, marks, lessons, wisdom. The test reflects
the unexamined prejudices of those who drafted it.

These bloopers are particularly egregious because they come from such
a powerful source. As a regulator of higher education, the UGC has
given itself the mandate to control curricula, to manage appointments,
to direct the flow of funds. It is alarming that this kind of dotty
thinking and illogic can pass among those who confidently dictate to
universities.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
MPhil Research Scholar
Centre for the Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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