Agony of a Teacher

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    Agony of a teacher

    As professors in our premier institutes go on a strike, a teacher reflects on the profession and its rewards...

    Tagore in one of his famous poems titled Dui Bigha Jami wrote, alas, that those who own more in this

    world, desire to possess more. Some may say that the way some of the torchbearers of knowledge have

    been behaving may be explained by what Tagore wrote so many years back.

    Professors of premier institutes like the IITs and IIMs are on a hunger strike because they feel that the

    recent hike in their pay structure is unacceptable to them. They consider that it is below their dignity to

    accept a pay structure which is not in tune with their capabilities. The Union HRD Minister Kapil Sibal in a

    recent statement had interestingly said that the professors should be hungrier for knowledge instead of

    resorting to hunger strike for fatter pay packets. IITs and IIMs are no doubt the premier institutes of our

    country. There are also gradations and classifications within these groups of institutes. For example, there is

    a general belief that IIT Kanpur is the best among the IITs and IIM Ahmedabad is the best among the IIMs.

    But the professors of all the IITs and IIMs are demanding equal pay scale, not taking into consideration suchgradations and sub-gradations. But the fact remains that owing to the recent hike in the pay structure of the

    teachers of the colleges and universities across the country, the net amount which a teacher draws is simply

    amazing considering what they used to draw, say about four decades back.

    I knew a teacher who joined as a lecturer at a college about two decades back. The salary which he drew at

    the end of his first months service was Rs. 2,828. He was visibly thrilled while receiving this huge amount of

    money, which he could draw for the first time in his life. After getting the salary, he met the librarian of the

    college, who told him that when he would retire after about 35 years his salary would not be less than Rs.

    20,000. The young teacher believed that it was a joke as the salary of Rs. 20,000 was simply unimaginable

    and unrealistic, as well.

    Astounding raise

    But within about 12 years of his service he was able to draw more than Rs. 20,000 and after the recent pay

    hike; he is getting not less than Rs. 70,000. The teacher was known to be feeling that the huge amount of

    money that he is now getting is more than what he deserves for his capability and experience.

    The UGC, while announcing the pay hike which would be enforced with retrospective effect from January 1,

    2006, had mentioned certain conditionalities for the teachers to follow. As a teacher I am indeed desirous of

    following all these prescriptions in letter and spirit. But unfortunately, in spite of the best of the intentions

    on my part, I am unable to do so, owing to lack of interest amongst a section of the students, lack of

    adequate infrastructure of the college and the limited responsibility which is normally given to a college

    teacher.

    It is not my contention to say that the teachers need to be deprived when others who are serving in various

    departments of the government are getting a substantial amount of money as their salary. There is no doubtteachers are the backbone of our nation and they deserve to be rewarded, socially and economically. But my

    agony stems from the fact that I want to teach my students, I want to indulge myself in endless debates

    and discussions so that they may be enriched and in turn, I may be able to unlearn and refresh my

    thoughts. This form of intense debate may be able to make the realm of knowledge become fine-tuned to

    the day-to-day requirements of our society. But cultivation of knowledge, at least in some cases, has

    become more a matter of advancement of earning instead of advancement of learning.

    The cultivation of knowledge always needs experimentation and infusion of newer thought processes and

    ideas and often such initiatives meet with serious challenge and opposition. It thwarts the progress of

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    knowledge and it does have a detrimental effect. Many of the newer ideas in the process of modernisation of

    education may have important social bearing. But side by side it may have certain regressive effects. For

    example, the introduction of the new (1+1+1) three-year degree course as it was introduced by the

    universities may be a step in the right direction. But it is seen that once a student passes the part I

    examination at the end of the first year and gets a university certificate, he or she feels that the visa for

    sitting for the part II university examination has been gained. As a result, the rate of attendance in the

    second year class becomes thin and virtually invisible in the third year. In this way, college teaching has

    become a virtual mockery. We are paid so much and we get so little scope to serve our students in spite of

    our intentions.

    Extraneous affairs

    The thin attendance is also due to the rampant practice of a section of students involving themselves in

    college politics. Students politics is now no more related to the day-to-day concerns of our society.

    Students organisations, in order to extend their sway, often resort to distribution of notes containing

    suggestive answers for the preparation of the university examinations. It is again a matter of agony that

    many students are more eager to get superlative marks instead of gaining knowledge. This trend is quite

    discernible even in premier institutions which were once so boastful of their intellectual worth and acumen.

    Moreover, the bane of private tuition is also diluting the immense importance of quality class room teaching.

    Classroom teaching may well escalate owing to intense and dynamic interaction between a teacher and the

    taught. Once, I was teaching Asiatic Mode of Production. A 1st year student, after listening to me for about

    half an hour, stood up and said, Sir, what you have been saying all along is basically a statement of the

    fact. But what we essentially need is a clarification. I still remember these words. I am indeed sorry to say

    that after about two decades such lively, engrossing and touching interactions are on the verge of

    extinction. So, what I want to say is this that I want to teach by sharing a lifetimes acquisition, whatever

    little I do have. But there are no takers and that happens to be my agony!

    The UGC has recommended a high pay structure in order to attract and retain the best talent in the

    academia, who could become the backbone of our society. It is indeed a great honour to the members of the

    teaching community. It is indeed their due which they were unable to get in the past. But a teachers pride

    gets satiated once he is able to teach his pupils as a votary of the goddess of Saraswati. But when the

    goddess Lakshmi takes the front seat in the mindset of a teacher, it is obvious that the goddess Saraswati

    would move to oblivion. The quality content of education needs to be revitalised instead of laying too muchmechanistic emphasis on form.