http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/3319507.cms


Now, IITs face shortage of students
3 Aug 2008, 0011 hrs IST, Hemali Chhapia,TNN

NEW DELHI: This year, six new Indian Institutes of
Technology were brought into being, each with 120
seats — that's a total of 720 seats.

And yet, because the OBC, SC and ST quotas could not
be filled up (as enough applicants could not get the
generously-relaxed pass marks set for these
categories), as many as 432 seats will go abegging.

Consider the absurdity of the situation. On the one
hand, new IITs are being created at enormous cost; on
the other, as many as 432 seats — that's the
equivalent of three and a half IITs — are being
allowed to go waste.

In Saturday's edition, we wrote a Times View saying:
"To let over 430 seats in IITs go vacant is a criminal
waste of infrastructure (such as faculty and physical
facilities). Reservations are meant to give
disadvantaged sections of society a boost. But where
quotas cannot be filled because there aren't enough
suitable candidates, the cut-off for general category
should be relaxed so that all seats are used up — the
cut-off will still be higher than for SC/STs, so no
one can argue that it will dilute academic standards.
As with airlines seats and hotel rooms, these seats
are 'perishable' , they must be filled the same year.
This should not affect next year's quota."

This sorry situation is the result of two major
education policies framed by the Centre. The
government not only commissioned six new IITs, but
simultaneously increased the number of quota seats
(for which there are simply not enough eligible
applicants). Despite the cut-off percentage being
lowered in the name of affirmative action, the
students have not made the grade. The old IITs can
fill some of the seats with students from the
preparatory course, but the new IITs have nothing to
fall back on.

IIT-Guwahati director Gautam Barua said that the
institute heads who are meeting later this month may
ask the HRD ministry to dereserve unfilled quota
seats. "There is no time this year but we may try to
seek permission to transfer the vacant seats to the
general category for next year," said Barua.

The prospect of empty chairs in the classroom has
disheartened faculty members, many of whom echoed
Saturday's Times View.

'Nearly 50% of reserved seats lying vacant'

Despite Centre's affirmative action by lowering the
cutoff percentage for IIT exams, 432 seats still
remain unoccupied. "Every IIT seat has the potential
to produce a Nandan Nilekani or a Vinod Khosla," said
a senior faculty from Kharagpur. "To allow even one
seat to go vacant is like crushing a million dreams
and aspirations... "

Another professor from IIT-Bombay said that the
empty-seat syndrome while not new had been aggravated
this year because of the "unthinking way in which the
HRD ministry merrily commissioned half-a-dozen new
institutes and expanded quota seats without so much as
a thought as to whether or not reserved candidates
would qualify".

Down the years, IIT deans have faced the brunt of
political interventions. When the first batch of
IIT-Delhi students graduated, 47 of the 53 reserved
category students failed. The dean was summoned.
Recalling the meeting with the "big fat man",
education minister Nurul Hassan, P V Indiresan said,
"He kept his bulky hand on my shoulder and asked me,
'Professor, yeh kya kar diya?' (Professor what have
you done?)" Little has changed. Only two months ago,
IIT-Delhi was pulled up by the Minorities Commission
for asking 20 reserved students to pack their bags
because of "very poor performance" .

These instances of political pressure though fairly
common rarely come out in the open. IIT heads who are
accused of casteism or deliberately failing reserved
category students prefer to stay silent. Most are
reluctant to even broach the topic of transferring
vacant seats to the general pool, said a former IIT
director. "Any issue regarding reserved students has a
lot of political repercussions, " said Indiresan.

According to a government report nearly 50% of the
reserved seats remain vacant. And of those who make
it, 25% drop out. The situation in the next academic
year is likely to be even worse. This is because the
six newbies do not have the back-up preparatory
course.

IIT-Madras head M S Ananth said that while filling SC
and OBC seats is still manageable, it is much more
difficult when it comes to the tribal quota. "Despite
this, these seats cannot be de-reserved as they were
created as super-numeric seats over and above the
existing number so as to ensure that quotas did not
eat into the open category."

Ananth added that transferring seats was not
encouraged — except in the case of OBC quota —
"because of the fear that the IITs would try to fill
them up with forward candidates. It's just that the
government wants us to make enough efforts to look for
backward students. Hence, if unfilled, the seats have
to go vacant." Old hands like Indiresan rue the fact
that the government is killing its golden goose for
short-term political profit.

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