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Friday, March 06, 2020

Expert View: Step by step guide to clear competitive exams

Other than the syllabus, you should make a note of the weightage of various subjects so that you can plan your preparations like wise. Looking over previous years’ question papers assists in getting well acquainted with the exam pattern

The initial move towards your groundwork for any competitive exam is to comprehend the pre-requirements of the exam. You should also be well-rehearsed with the syllabus (you get that easily on the Internet). Other than the syllabus, you should make a note of the weightage of various subjects so that you can plan your preparations like wise. Looking over previous years’ question papers assists in getting well acquainted with the exam pattern.
Here are six steps that you can follow to prepare for any competitive exam:
1) Understanding the syllabus: First thing first, you should always put all your mind and heart in understanding the syllabus of the exam and the level of questions asked. It is very important for you to understand “what to prepare”.
2) Preparing a time table: After you have decided on “what to prepare” it is your turn to plan “how to prepare”. Prepare a time table including your short term and long term goals; this in turn will help you in timely preparation for the exam. A good time table is most likely to help you in better preparation and avoids haphazardness.
3) Study Smartly: Working hard is always important but smart study never goes out of fashion. Going through previous years question papers gives you an edge and also you can analyze the kind of questions being asked, including heavy weightage topic. Your major focus should be on qualitative studying rather than quantitative studying.
4) Revise regularly: Every candidate should have a regular revision strategy handy. It takes at least four times of regular revision to actually remember something for long term. Whatever you study should be revised on the third day then on the sixth day then on twelfth day and after than on twenty first day. A good revision cycle is definitely going to help you ace the exam.
5) Take Breaks: “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy”, as rightly emphasized by the proverb, it is equally important to take breaks. Rather than studying for long durations divided your slots and take a break in between, go out for a walk, take a nap or just listen you’re your favorite track.
6) Keep yourself motivated: The last and the most important thing is to keep yourself motivated. Motivation to achieve your goal is the key to success. If you are preparing for any exam and if you lack motivation then even a single failure is going to affect you badly. To qualify any exam we should have a strong desire to clear it and it should be maintained on a regular basis.
Belief’ is a very powerful tool. You must believe in yourself and your preparation. Ensure that you study the same way throughout the year, to avoid last minute rush and stress. Spend 10-15 minutes before going off to sleep to quickly recap all that you learnt throughout the day.
Also,a bit of physical activity and meditation helps to improve concentration. Do not take stress throughout the entire preparation time and stay away from stressful people. Each and every moment you must tell yourself “I Can, I Will” and trust me you will do it!
Author Akhand Swaroop Pandit is Educationist, CEO and Founder, Catalyst Group, Online Learning Platform. Views expressed here are personal)
Source: 5/03/2020

Overcome Suffering


I am often asked how to end suffering. You are so focused on action that you don’t realise that action born out of ignorance is an extension of ignorance. We have to enlighten our action with understanding. You are the creator of your suffering. This understanding will help you dissolve suffering. An unhappy person in heaven will convert even heaven into hell; a happy person can convert hell into heaven. So, change is not required anywhere except within you. If you have an unhappy mind, even if you are in heaven, you will ‘stink’. So, to overcome suffering, you have to understand that your unhappy mind is the cause. There are two types of sufferings. Legitimate and illegitimate. Legitimate suffering is sorrow that is proportionate to the situation. For example, your loved one dies. This sorrow is valid. But if you continue worrying for more than one or two years, then there is a psychological aspect to it. To handle legitimate sufferings, you should understand that such suffering is the result of your past deeds. Illegitimate suffering is suffering that is not proportionate to the situation. Surrender is real growth. Growth involves no suffering. Resistance to suffering creates suffering. Very often, we suffer because we are not open to the vastness of life. We are bound by our knowledge. We are dead to something that is beyond our knowledge. What we know is finite and what we do not know is infinite. To be alive and limited to what we know, and dead to what we do not know, is a deep cause for suffering.

Source: Economic Times, 6/03/2020

Higher Education Revolution


The following set of reforms would make Indian universities world class

Going by media reports, the government is now actively working on a major overhaul of the regulatory system in higher education. This reform has been long overdue and, after the passage of the landmark National Medical Commission Act, the natural next step. The current context for the reform is set by the draft National Education Policy (NEP). While NEP is to be applauded for its recommendation of full autonomy to higher education institutions (HEIs) in areas such as administration, teaching, research, curriculum setting and foreign collaboration, the regulatory and institutional structures it has proposed are much too complex and unwieldy to yield the desired outcome. The government will do well by considering a simpler, more flexible architecture suitable for the 21st century. A review of systems governing higher education in the United States, United Kingdom and China, which have been most successful in delivering quality education and research, suggests that the new system be designed to promote rather than regulate education. To make this intent explicit, the government must designate the successor institution to the University Grants Commission (UGC) the Higher Education Promotion Commission (HEPC). In turn, HEPC should be designed such that it cannot resurrect the Inspector Raj of the UGC regime. I provide, in my forthcoming book, additional details on the proposals that follow. The chairperson and members of HEPC should be selected from amongst the most eminent persons of unimpeachable integrity. They must come from diverse academic disciplines. The commission should be assisted by three bodies: (i) Advisory Council; (ii) Office of Registration of HEIs; and (iii) Committee for Quality Assessment. The Advisory Council should include as members scholars from different fields and representatives of the states. Its job would be to sensitise the commission to issues relevant to education in different fields and states. The Office of Registration would maintain the Register of HEIs. Guided by the commission, it would develop a classification that categorises HEIs into those that are fully autonomous, partially autonomous, degree granting, non-degree granting, private, public, foreign-owned and of national importance. The commission would formulate transparent criteria for entry of new HEIs of domestic as well as foreign origin into the register. It would take the decision to grant or deny entry to an HEI applicant in a timebound manner. It would also formulate transparent criteria for the existing HEIs to maintain entry into the register. These criteria will be based principally on outcomes and not inputs. Enforcement would be entirely through a clear statement by each HEI on its website that it satisfies the criteria stipulated by HEPC. Any false claims would attract punitive action. Degree granting power would be vested in HEPC and implemented through the Office of Registration. The commission would develop transparent criteria under which an HEI is empowered to grant degrees. It will be free to confer such power on both universities and colleges allowing the more distinguished ones among the latter to develop their own brand names and even transform themselves into universities. The commission would also specify criteria under which an HEI will be granted power to authorise other HEIs to confer degrees on its behalf. This power would be available to both public and private universities. Furthermore, the commission would develop criteria that would qualify an HEI to use ‘university’ in its title. These criteria would offer paths to set up an institution directly as a university as well as to convert an existing HEI into a university. The Committee for Quality Assessment would develop criteria for rating different categories of institutions. With its help, the commission will identify and designate outside agencies to rate different categories of HEIs. It will be important to identify multiple agencies to carry out assessment so that they can rapidly cover all HEIs. HEIs with full autonomy will be entirely free to develop their own curriculums and choose textbooks and readings. HEIs with less than full autonomy would follow the curriculums and textbooks of one or more HEIs with full autonomy. They would be required to identify the source institutions of their curriculums on their websites. A separate, independent committee that is at arm’s length from the government would allocate government funds for education and facilities (but not research except that relating to pedagogy). The criteria for such disbursements would give considerable weight to the quality of institutions as assessed by agencies designated by the commission. The eventual goal should be to allow private and public HEIs to compete for these funds on equal footing based on the quality of education. Finally, it is critical to forge a path to ending the current separation between research at independent councils and teaching in HEIs. India needs to integrate the councils into HEIs and incentivise research at the latter in a major way via funding and reduced teaching. This requires the creation of a National Research and Innovation Foundation with a large sum of funds at its disposal. The foundation would offer project based research grants through a peer review process. It will have to pay particular attention to research in social sciences and arts and humanities, areas in which India has lost much ground to other countries, especially China, in the past two decades.

 The writer is Professor of Economics at Columbia University

Source: Times of India, 6/03/2020

Thursday, March 05, 2020

Quote of the Day


“Love is what makes two people sit in the middle of a bench when there is plenty of room at both ends”
‐ Anonymous
“प्रेम ही है जो बेंच के दोनों किनारों पर जगह खाली होने पर भी दो लोगों को बीच में खींच लाती है।”
‐ अज्ञात

Higher education has become a waste of money

The gap between jobs, needs and knowledge, and the absence of role models, could be turning India’s demographic dividend into a nightmare.

Should there be a National Curriculum? And if yes, what should be its guiding principles? Given our heroic times, we may perhaps demand that it should be “in the spirit of the Constitution, respect the idea of India and serve its people without discrimination”.
It turns out that we already have a national curriculum. It is a fixed set of topics prescribed in all subjects — from physics to geography, and engineering to planning. And it is taught in English at our elite MHRD institutions. It has not been designed by politicians but by our elite professors and bureaucrats: It is what they believe the nation really needs to know. It is imposed on ordinary students and parents through competitive exams and on colleges and universities through various central regulatory agencies, most egregiously, through the UGC-NET, an objective-type multiple-choice (!) exam that decides who is fit to be a college teacher. Much of this does not apply to elite MHRD institutions. For the rest of us, what is taught and who can teach it, has already been decided. What remains for us is to see how it serves our people.

We already know that the national engineering curriculum fails miserably in meeting regional needs. Engineering for Himachal Pradesh needs to be different from that in Maharashtra or Kerala. And it must address the needs of core industries, local enterprises, the provisioning of basic amenities such as water and energy. None of this is in our national curricula or practised at the IITs. Moreover, there is no mechanism for engineering colleges to work with their communities.
Coming to the social sciences, let us look at the UGC-NET curricula, which is largely what is taught in our elite institutions. At the BA level, it is divided into several disciplines — for instance, political science, sociology and economics. This is unfortunate since much of life in India is interdisciplinary. As a result, many activities such as preparing the balance sheet for a farmer, or analysing public transport needs, and development concerns such as drinking water or even city governance, are given a miss.
The UGC-NET curricula in economics has 10 units, the very last unit is Indian Economics. Unit 8 is on Growth and Development Economics, where the student must know Keynes, Marx, Kaldor, and others. There are various mathematical models, for example the IS-LM macroeconomic model, whose validity in the Indian scenario is questionable. The study of sectors such as small enterprises or basic economic services such as transportation is absent. The District Economic Survey, an important document prepared regularly by every state for each district, is not even mentioned.
Moving to sociology, we see that as with economics, there is no preamble nor a list of textbooks or case studies. Again, there are 10 units, and each unit is a list of about 30 topics. Unit 1 is “Sociological Theory” which is a breathtaking list of 22 thinkers from the West, starting from Durkheim, wending through Foucault and ending with Castells. We then have six Indian thinkers — the usual four, Gandhi, Ambedkar, G S Ghurye and M N Srinivas, and two others. Under “Social Institutions”, we have a list of timeless words such as culture, marriage, family and kinship. Peasant occurs two times, but there is no farmer. Here is a sample question: “Who uses the phrase ‘fetishisms of commodities’ while analysing social conditions?” followed by four names.
There is also no mention of important data sets such as the census or developmental programmes including MGNREGA in either curricula.
But why blame a bureaucracy like the UGC. They are merely following what the IAS or the elite institutions ask in their entrance exams, albeit in an essay format. For example, see Question 1 from the 2018 JNU entrance exam for MA in sociology: “How did Emile Durkheim develop his ideas of social integration and structural-functionalism?” For thousands of non-metropolitan students, this is rote learning, unconnected with the practice of sociology or their own situation. If indeed Durkheim is useful, why not ask “Apply Durkheim’s theory to a social context of your choice”. Question 2 is on comparing Marx with Weber on capitalism. Question 3 tests adherence to a pet discourse: “How do caste and class intersect in the field of education and reproduce social inequalities?” The fact is that the bottom 80 per cent, that is, the vernacular society and its caste apparatus, now owns less than 20 per cent of India’s wealth. Moreover, the roots of this inequality lie not in history, but in the construction of Indian modernity.
Indeed, the training at our elite institutions, and consequently, in the national curricula, is not to empower ordinary students to probe their lived reality. Or to contribute professionally and constructively to the development problems around us. Rather, it is to perpetuate a peculiar intellectualism which is divorced from the community in which these institutions are embedded. Hardly any social science department bothers to translate key state government documents, articles or texts from the vernacular press to English, let alone study them. This shortage of facts leads to a peculiar ghetto mentality which privileges classroom discourse and critique as the primary way of generating knowledge and dissent as an important output of the university. They forget Kosambi, who said the cognition of the material condition and its measurement by the people is the first step to freedom.
Thus, the social science curriculum has the same structural limitations as engineering. The national curriculum today is antithetical to the idea of India as an organic union of intelligent people, diverse in their ways of life and their geography. It diminishes their intellectual capability and hinders their right to pursue their culture and improve their material conditions. That is the real reason why higher education has become a waste of money. As per the Constitution, higher education is the business of the states. The role of the Centre is circumscribed by items 62-66 of Schedule VII. Much of the conduct of MHRD and its institutions, and certainly competitive exams, is against the spirit of the Constitution.
What is to be done? One-nation-one-curriculum certainly has some advantages in enabling mobility of some jobs, especially in the national bureaucracy and a multinational economy. But it is at the cost of the developmental needs of the states and the emergence of good jobs there. This asymmetry is behind the aspirational dysfunction in higher education. It is this disconnect between jobs, needs and knowledge and the absence of role models, which is slowly turning our demographic dividend into a nightmare on the streets.
Our top-down elite bureaucrats and professors are not about to loosen their hold over what is taught in the states. The way ahead is political, perhaps for a committee of chief ministers, assisted by regional experts, to decide how to rebalance the role of MHRD. The European Union offers many models.

This article first appeared in the print edition on March 5, 2020 under the title ‘A disconnected pedagogy’. The writer teaches at IIT Goa and IIT Bombay.
Source: Indian Express, 5/03/2020

NU Admission 2020 begins, check prospectus, syllabus, important dates, details here

JNU Admission 2020: JNU admission process has been started. JNU entrance test (JNUEE) will be conducted from May 11 to 14. Candidates can apply online till March 31. Check prospectus, syllabus,important dates and other details here.

Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) has started the admission process for the session 2020-21. National Testing Agency (NTA) has opened the online application window for the JNU entrance exam (JNUEE) 2020 for admissions to undergraduate, postgraduate, PhD and M.Phil programmes.
Interested candidates can apply for the admissions at ntajnu.nic.in or jnu.ac.in/admission. The last date to apply for admission is March 31. The entrance exam for all programmes will be conducted from May 11 to 14, 2020.
JNUEE 2020: 
JNU entrance exam will be conducted by National Testing Agency (NTA). It will be a computer based test of three hours. The paper will be in English medium only (except language papers) . There will be only multiple choice questions carrying one mark for each question. There will be no negative marking.
Schools of studies:
1. School of International Studies
2. School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies
3. School of Life Sciences
4. School of Social Sciences
5. School of Environmental Sciences
6. School of Computer and Systems Sciences
7. School of Physical Sciences
8. School of Computational and Integrative Sciences
9. School of Arts and Aesthetics
10. School of Biotechnology
11. School of Sanskrit and Indic Studies
12. School of Engineering
13. ABV School of Management and Entrepreneurship
14. Special Centre for the Study of North East India
15. Special Centre for E-Learning
16. Special Centre for Molecular Medicine
17. Special Centre for the Study of Law and Governance
18. Special Centre for Nano Sciences
19. Special Centre for Disaster Research
JNUEE 2020: IMPORTANT DATES:
Correction in Particulars of Application Form on Website only ---07 to 15 April, 2020
Downloading of Admit Cards from NTA website ---30 April, 2020
Dates of Examination--- 11, 12, 13 and 14 May, 2020 (15 May as Reserve Day)
Duration of Examination ---03 Hours (180 minutes)
Timing of Examination First Session ---09:30 am to 12:30 pm
Second Session ---- 02:30 pm to 05:30 pm
Source: Hindustan Times, 3/03/2020

Churning for The Butter


Satsang, the company of spiritually minded people, either in the form of actual get-togethers where spiritual discussions take place, or via social networking platforms, provides the opportunity for churning one’s thoughts and contemplating. During contemplation, our mind raises questions and tries to find answers, thereby increasing the assimilated knowledge. It is similar to a teacher benefiting by teaching a class of students who are interactive and who ask a lot of questions. After the churning, there is no point in simply extracting the butter, you must eat it and experience it. Similarly, the spiritual essence one derives by churning the inputs received, has to be put into practice to experience its benefit for oneself. That is why revered gurus exhort us to experience through actual practice, at least one principle everyday from the spiritual injunctions by saints and seers. It is no good knowing all the spiritual concepts. It is important to contemplate on the applicability of those concepts in every life situation and to actually put into practice the appropriate concept. Who gets inspired to get on to the spiritual path in the first place and how? There is a Divine plan behind it that we may not be able to figure out. The starter (coagulating agent like some curd, lemon juice or gelatin) in the form of an intense desire to pursue spirituality is added to the milk by the Creator Himself or through the medium of a living guru. Those of us who are fortunate to receive this Divine grace should be thankful to the Creator

Source: Economic Times, 5/03/2020