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The Pathetic Academic Culture of Mangaluru

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Mangaluru is a city full of educational institutions. But the quality of education remains poor. The memories of students passing out from Mangaluru colleges are usually restricted to extra curricular events. Very rarely anything interesting happens related to education. I found students and teachers holding a low opinion of each other in this region. My own experience of teaching at major institutions like NITK, NITTE and Manipal was filled with many challenges related to attitude and inefficiency.

The biggest hurdle I faced was the attitude of the administrators. When I faced a problem, people in command would say that this is India. Being India was good enough for not being good enough. When I pointed out that things were different in other colleges of India, they would then say those are the few good schools of India; I must not expect the same standards here. How do we argue with an excuse like that? It says we are not good enough and you simply have to live with it.

I have never seen the kind of hierarchies that exist in Mangaluru colleges anywhere else in the world. There were hierarchies in seating arrangements at events. Even how food would be served had a hierarchy. How fast you were served your free tea, would determine your status in the institution. The order in which people say ‘Hello’ to you had an hierarchy. In guest houses, different food in different crockery would be served to people sitting on the same dining table. Bottled water would be reserved for special guests. Of course, the teachers were way low in this hierarchy and the students were the lowest. Moreover, many institutions in Mangaluru are private. At every function, some member of the founding family would be present. The sycophancy exhibited at such events is so disgusting that it is stomach churning. The function maybe to felicitate somebody’s accomplishment but all the talks are focused on the founding member present. His mother, pet, wife, child, gardener, etc. will be praised. The speakers at such events would compete to prove whose grandfather was more eminent.

The priorities at these institutions were clearly off the mark. At conferences, the opening speeches, which typically had nothing to do with academics, were well attended. All the important members of the college would be present and took great joy in lighting lamps. The interest in academic talks was thin. Apparently, after the lighting the lamp, there was nothing left to stay back for. I have sworn since then that I will attend no more lamp lighting in my life.

Colleges in Mangaluru are in general affiliated to the Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU) in Belgaum. Among the choices they have, students prefer to go to VTU affiliated colleges because there are quality checks. But I found that you can write books about the faulty examination system of the VTU. I witnessed exams where more than 100 students in a class of 150 students failed. Such exams serve no purpose. Among all the challenges I faced, nothing derailed me like the VTU exam system.

I was a little concerned when I was told that the exam paper for the course I was teaching may be set by someone else. I knew it was better if they were tested on what I taught them but I was not prepared for what was to follow. In the first semester, the students faced my exam and very few students failed. These students I knew either did not study due to various reasons or found mathematics difficult. The semester ended satisfactorily. But the very next semester, the exam paper was an outside paper. This paper was approved by the department but there was no expert on the subject in the committee. It was clearly a substandard exam paper supposedly picked randomly by the controller of Nitte. I had spent a week making two exam papers for my students but quality did not matter. This would be a random choice. More than fifty percent of the students failed this exam to my utter horror. And the department blamed the students for not studying hard. I told everyone involved that this was not fair to the students but they said nothing could be done because they had to follow VTU rules. Then there is nothing more to say but that the rules must change. There is nothing more demotivating than leaving your performance to random chance. Students must be assured that if they worked hard they can shine.

Another problem I observed was that three or four people corrected the exam papers. There were no communications between them. Typically, the student was awarded the average grade. If there was a conflict, a third person would decide, again, without consulting people who had already graded the exam. I found that students who passed in my grading did not pass in this system. When students went in for revaluation, students who scored an average of eighteen points were awarded nine points. The students are not allowed to see their exams. They are forced to accept whatever scores they are given. This system is exploited by vindictive professors. There are stories that I heard of students failing exams for years in one subject because they angered some teacher. The performance of students in exams must be separated from their ability to enter into the good books of teachers. We need to make sure that students believe and work for a world where people are fair and sincere effort is rewarded. The VTU rules can be effective only if they are more transparent. The students must be able challenge a test and the scores they get. They must be allowed to defend their work. At this point, I see the system is rampantly used to enslave students and break their spirits.

Teaching remains an underpaid profession all over the world. Colleges think nothing about raising student fees. But the legal pay that teachers are entitled to always seem a waste of money to the administration. In Mangalore, colleges save money by hiring temporary faculty. These temporary hires are typically unqualified for the job. For example, recently graduated Mtechs are hired to teach Mtechs. This justifies the lower wages they receive. Some colleges do not do regular hires for years even though there is a severe scarcity of teachers. They make do with temporary faculty.

I ended up being a temporary faculty because NITK was not hiring regular faculty when I applied. Temporary faculty are required to sign a register to get paid. I was used to flexible working hours all my life. Everyone who teaches knows that teaching is a profession of passion. It is not a 9 to 5 job. There are days when you will work well past midnight. Except for NITK, no other college in this region believes in flexible working hours. Even at NITK, temporary faculty are not allowed flexible working hours. This meant I had to go to college just to sign even if I had nothing to do. And the department really cared about that signature more than anything about me.

The reason Mangaluru can get away with this kind of education system is because of the export culture prevailing in India. India has been exporting students for higher studies for centuries now. Gandhi, Nehru, Ambedkar, and most other national leaders went abroad for higher education. The IITs continued the tradition. Nowadays, students from small colleges in India aspire to go abroad for higher studies. Education abroad means a real career for students. With all the talk about make in India by the Prime Minister, it is time, we seriously think about making real graduates in India.

Without any doubt, I, for one, am disgusted with the academic culture of the Mangaluru region. The green coconut trees of Mangaluru lured me into setting up home in Mangaluru. I hope, in the near future, Mangaluru will establish an institution which Indians can be proud of. When we hear someone say “This is India”, then it should be said to signify something good.


The author Dr Maya Mohsin Ahmed has a PhD in Mathematics from UC Davis and has taught mathematics in America, India and Africa. She was also nominated for the Excellence in Undergraduate Education Award at UC Davis.

Maya Mohsin Ahmed – from our archives:


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Jackson
9 years ago

One of the best Article i have read about Academic culture in Mangalore. Very well written and so true to the modern scenario . All wants their children to be engineers and then follow up by MBA. what about pure sciences. nearly 90% of Mangaloreans don’t know the carrier choices after SSLC. They just think either Medical or Engineering so they join Science.Parents think if you above 70% in SSLC then Science….above 50% but below 70% then Commerce….rest below 50% arts. This is totally bad and very cruel on part of the child. I would like to read more and… Read more »

Shobha
9 years ago

Well said, Dr Maya. I agree with your observations.

Original R.Pai
9 years ago

Very interesting observations!! While some of them are quite obvious (hierarchical, sucking up to managers and powerful folks), the other observations on exam handling and refusal to improve things are new to an outsider. I have a strong feeling that this is not unique to Mangaluru. This must be a recurring theme happening all over India – Agreed, the levels may vary.
Oh well…

kevin
9 years ago

True.

I stopped blaming the system. We should not risk our life believing colleges, parents, teachers.
I am learning online from universities like MIT(USA), Stanford University, Harward and sites like coursera. Forget teaching the content they teach are also outdated atleast in Computer Science. I realized that i need skills more than marks so i started to looking for better education for free and now i am learning from world’s best faculties for free!

Gerard Colaco
9 years ago

Excellent article, clearly articulated. For the last 28 years I have been guest faculty at various educational institutions in and around Mangalore, besides teaching for the last 10 years at a diploma course in personal investment. I can confirm that every line in Dr Ahmed’s article is true.

Maya Mohsin Ahmed
9 years ago

Online courses are great and everyone must use it as much as possible. But it is dangerous to depend on it too much. Especially with the culture of sanctions America has been exhibiting lately. But surely make hay while the sun shines. There is nothing to beat self learning.

Jawar D'Souza
9 years ago

Very well written by Dr Maya, it is only a money making idea. Hope these people read these articles and do the needful. Thank you Doctor for your Sincere observations.

Roy
9 years ago

Is the pathetic academic culture something that is unique to Mangalore or is it part and parcel of the Indian culture of mediocrity?

B. Dinesh
9 years ago

Dr. Ahmed, I am not sure where to start the response to your extremely well written article about academic issues in Mangalore. First of all, I am surprised that you decided to go back to Mangalore after earning a PhD in Mathematics from UC Davis! May be you felt that you had to give back something to your country. The issues you raised have been there since the 1960s. I attended St. Aloysius High School and did my Pre University at st. Aloysius College. I then left the country as I had seen no good opportunities in India at that… Read more »

Nelson Lewis
9 years ago
Reply to  B. Dinesh

Dear Mr. B. Dinesh, It was quite interesting to read about your experiences. The best Indian brains suffer due to the inherent red-tape, nepotism, corruption and all other evils prevalent in India, compelling them to emigrate to U.S.A. and other fresh pastures. And these brains have been a blessing in disguise to their adopted lands. I am told that every third or fourth engineer, professor, lawyer, scientist and other professionals are U.S. nationals (of Indian origin). 63% of U.S. nationals (of Indian origin) are graduates, whereas the “All America” percentage is 36 or 37%. Whereas, the average annual earnings of… Read more »

Praveen
9 years ago
Reply to  Nelson Lewis

Whereas, the average annual earnings of U.S. nationals (of Indian origin) per head works out to $ 90,000/-, whereas the “All America” average works out to $ 55,000/-. – Mr. Nelson

Mr. Nelson, a small correction if you don’t mind.

The figures you referred to are more-or-less OK. However, they are the MEDIAN annual earnings and not the “average annual earnings”.

B. Dinesh
9 years ago

Dear Mr. Lewis You are absolutely right. All that the Indian politicians have to ask themselves is – “why is it that Indians do a lot better in western countries and how is it that a few of them even were awarded Nobel Prize?”. And you have answered the question correctly – “The best Indian brains suffer due to the inherent red-tape, nepotism, corruption and all other evils prevalent in India, compelling them to emigrate to U.S.A. and other fresh pastures. And these brains have been a blessing in disguise to their adopted lands.” – Indian politicians have been interested… Read more »

Begar Kitta
9 years ago

Dear Dr. Maya, I would like to add a little to your write-up by way of a positive response. In India we do not have a regulated and self-regulating public sphere as in the West. Just take the education field you have written about: In South Canara you have several private education empires: the Catholic empire, the Dharmasthala empire, the Poojary empire, the GSB empire, the Brahmin empire and the Bunts empire. Each of these empires is only interestd in 100% result and money-minting. Given this, what would you expect? As for students, in South Canara as elsewhere in India,… Read more »

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