Showing posts with label view point. Show all posts
Showing posts with label view point. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2013

Ad-hoc appointments and quality education

View Point:-
KC PRADHAN
We sympathize with the Ad-hoc Teachers going on chalk-down, pen-down and hunger strike with appeal for regularization of their ad-hoc induction, but cannot, at the same time, ignore that this is at the cost of the education of students at the fag end of the academic session.
Now that the issue has been raked up, I would be good to know the basis on which they were appointed and whether their blanket regularization will have any adverse effect on our educational system. Make no mistake, many of the ills that we have inherited are largely due to faulty and sub-standard education imparted by teachers, Jangira’s militia, brought from all over in the advent of universalization of education in the mid-1970’s. Thankfully, that lot is now superannuated and slowly and steadily the education system in the State coming on track with vision and purpose.
It is necessary that all regular appointments fall within establishment rules and the candidates should be prepared to undergo tests for the purposes intended with teaching aptitudes uppermost in mind. Though teaching qualifications have been made mandatory under TET [Teacher Eligibility Test], looking at the circumstances as perceived, this could perhaps be relaxed and specified qualifications best acquired as in-service trainees within a time-bound period and during that duration they can be retained on probation. Those who fail to qualify, could be kept on waiting list to be slotted in other departments as and when vacancies arise.
Since a Departmental Committee has already been constituted and the Hon’ble Minister has opened a dialogue, we hope the matter will be resolved amicably.
Sikkim is at last refining its education system with 20% of the budget set aside for it. It’s efforts have to be appreciated and supported by the people at large. This is one area there should be no compromise.
Having done a short stint in the Education Department, I know how challenging the job is, but can also attest that it is equally satisfying as well. The unending dilemma of not knowing how many teachers there are in the Department, I am given to understand, still exists with supplementary budgets year-in and year-out to the perplexity of Finance Department. There are substitute teachers, substitute of substitutes, substitute of those going on maternity leave, and then the substitutes continue to remain even on the return of regular teachers - a never ending dilemma. Then again sipharishi appointees of MLAs and Ministers. All this must end and the department must devise methods for appointment of teachers, in whose hands the destiny of Sikkim lies, in a fair and transparent manner.  To know that in Rolep Secondary School there is only one regular staff and the remaining eleven teachers are on ad-hoc basis, and this speaks volumes about the kind of human resource management at Human Resource Development Department.
[The writer is a former Chief Secretary, Govt of Sikkim]

Monday, October 21, 2013

Sikkim, Where to? KC PRADHAN

View Point:-
With the repealing of Sikkim Companies Tax Act, 1961, consequent upon enactment of the new Indian Companies Act 2013, Sikkim has lost one more Old Law, the protection of which is guaranteed by the Constitution. It was our sanguine hope that some clause would be incorporated so that Sikkim did not become a playfield for companies of all shades. We hope they will not go on penetrating all nooks and corners of the State, blatantly violating the laws of the land on strength of the well coined 99 years lease. We already have enough companies established in the best of our lands and how much they have contributed to the beleaguered State exchequer would be interesting to learn. The oft repeated rhetoric that they have provided ample employment opportunities to the sons and daughters of the soil may be partially true and needs a closer look and analysis with the cost-benefit criteria meticulously worked out.
Sikkim is unique not only in its geo-physical location, but more importantly in its pristine environment where peace and tranquilly prevail mainly due to the very nature and temperament of the people who abhor violence. It is time that the people of Sikkim who have come of age due to the very many befitting programmes launched of late, especially the younger lot in the age group of 18 to 35, who constitutes nearly 44% of the population and on whom the future lies, made some concerted efforts to understand, analyze and take a stand so that their future is not lost by hasty decisions.
The development in Sikkim must keep pace with the capacity and capability of the people of the State and in consonance with the environment. To think that the world is a global village and Sikkim willy-nilly must get sucked into, in my humble opinion, is erroneous thinking.
In the given situation, the best course is for our younger generation to venture into industrial, trade and business activities, no matter how small they are, and for which the Government should give them level playing field in the truest sense duly acting as cushion in the areas of uncertainly. This much the younger generation has the right to demand and receive from the powers that be.
Good-bye Sikkim Companies Act 1961! You were born to protect the interest of little Sikkim and we have perforce thrown you out with the bath-water. Let us take it as a solace that four decades were long enough for us to mature and become capable to playing in bigger arenas where tough guys play. Good luck and God bless.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

ON THE SPSC LAPSES Make amends instead of offering excuses- TSHERING EDEN

view point-
The eagerly awaited preliminary exams for the posts of Under Secretary and Deputy Superintendent of Police have just been conducted. As expected by many, it hasn’t been a smooth affair. Questions are being raised about the questions supposed to test the candidates’ aptitude for the two coveted posts in the state administration. With the ever prevalent paranoia among the youth who sit for such exams regarding alleged ‘fixing’ or ‘push and pull’ - not to forget the high voltage political scenario of present - one would have expected the SPSC to do a better job or at least be better prepared.
The clamour of voices crying ‘unfair’ conduct of exams will rise once the results are out. RTI applications will be filed and some might take the commission to court and should the Courts stay the examination process, the still-far-from-complete process, with the mains and the viva voce yet to be held, will get pushed back even more. And the charade will play out as it has for the past many years with similar exams. The paranoia surrounding such exams for government office is not baseless either. Glaring errors have been made in the past. Not surprisingly, rumors regarding the recently conducted SPSC exams had started surfacing even before the application process had started. The last dates for applying for the said exam being pushed back by about two months, the sudden announcement of the prelims with only a month’s lead time, the duration of the exam being extended by half an hour in the last week, only added grist to the rumor mills.
With the odds stacked against it, the SPSC ought to have been better equipped and motivated. Getting into the state civil services should be a matter of pride, an emotion the recently held exams fails to inspire in any way. Minor or major, a lapse is a lapse. For an institution tasked not only with conducting such exams but which is more importantly responsible for recruiting workforce to administrate the state, errors are unbecoming. Such lackadaisical attitude of an authority like SPSC cannot be excused or justified in any way.
Responsible behavior is not exclusive to those in authority. Candidates who have appeared for the exam are equally responsible to bring the lapses to light and demand accountability. For those aspiring to hold positions of power and responsibility, raising their voice against discrepancies regardless of whether they get through the exam or not, should not need urging. Otherwise, the call for better will always be exclusive to the disgruntled and lose the credibility it deserves.  
The only way the commission can hope to restore faith amongst the candidates and the people at large is to first accept that it has faltered, miserably at that, and then propose amends. Otherwise, rumor mills are again pregnant with another one, of the commission itself sabotaging the whole examination process, for reasons best known to it.
[The writer works with Sikkim NOW! and had also appeared for the recently held SPSC prelims]