INTRODUCTION TO GOVERNANCE IN INDIA - CES, IIScces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/ragh/ccs/posters/Introduction...
Transcript of INTRODUCTION TO GOVERNANCE IN INDIA - CES, IIScces.iisc.ernet.in/hpg/ragh/ccs/posters/Introduction...
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INTRODUCTION TO GOVERNANCE IN INDIA
BACKGROUND NOTE TO THE UG SIXTH SEMESTER HUMANITIES COURSE IISC JANUARY- APRIL
Dr.Uday Balakrishnan1, Visiting Faculty Centre for Contemporary Studies runs the 6th Semester Humanities
programme for UG Students at the Indian Institute of Science- Bangalore.
The columnist Frank Bruni, writing in the Times in 2014 said ‘If you want to feel much much older, teach a college course. I am doing that now … and hardly a class goes by when I don’t make an allusion that prompts my students to stare at me as if I just dropped from the Paleozoic era…..’ Frame of Reference by John McPhee Newyorker March 9,2015
While designing and implementing the sixth semester programme for young , post 1990 born students, one had to be acutely conscious of the danger of belonging to the Palaeozoic era especially since ‘common points of reference ‘ John McPhee alludes to in his article quoted above have actually dwindled and ‘the personal niche ‘ has indeed ‘supplanted the public square!’ In fact the biggest challenge in implementing this programme has been the need to constantly alert oneself to be contemporary, without ignoring the historical context, and also brief the ‘experts’ called to interact with such a young group accordingly – something they all admirably kept in mind to make sessions lively and highly interactive! Uday Balakrishnan
RESPONDING TO A NEED: A NEW PUBLIC POLICY PROGRAMME FOR UNDERGRADUATES
The sixth semester of the humanities programme for Undergraduate BSc. by research
Science students at IISc is on issues in Public Policy under the overarching title–
Introduction To Governance In India. This programme is now into its third avatar.
The basic premise of this course is the need to be critically analytical rather than be
subjectively judgemental of issues influencing public
policy in our country be it reservations, elections,
security, education or foreign policy among several
others. The students in the course are not only
encouraged but are
also required to
explore and discuss
these issues individually and in groups and share
their learning’s with the class.
A special feature of this programme is the
opportunity it opens out for the class to interact with those actually involved in policy
making and execution at the highest levels.
1 Dr. Uday Balakrishnan is a former officer of the Indian Postal Service and a former Registrar of IISc. His short resume
will be uploaded shortly.
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Governance is a vast area and the 6th Semester humanities programme is limited
to weekends between January and April of every year. The choice of topics for the
classes/Group Presentations therefore need to be topical enough yet adequately
linked to the past to improve understanding. Thus for example it was important
for the 2014 class to discuss the 42nd Amendment to the Indian Constitution - the
impact of which is felt to this day - and to contrast JP’s movement for ‘Total
Revolution’ from the seventies with the more contemporary and then topical one
of the anti corruption agitation led by Anna Hazare and how it morphed into the
AAP movement under Arvind Kejriwal. For the 2015 class, in view of the
heightened internal and external challenges to the Indian State ,it was considered
essential to engage the students on India’s struggle to Stay Together linked to
an expert talk on National Security and the State.
GROUP ASSIGNMENTS& CLAASSROOM SESSIONS
One important component of the programme is the Group
Assignment leading to Group Presentation (GP). For this,
the class of 2014 & 2015 were divided into groups for as
many Group Assignments. The students surprised
everyone with their well researched and crisp in-depth
presentations supported by excellent visuals. See
Annexure - PART -1
INDIVIDUAL ASSIGNMENTS
At an individual level, the students in the first programme (Jan-April 2014) were given
two written assignments i.e. one to briefly ( 300 words) yet critically evaluate their
group presentation and a second one to take a critical look at a specified Government of
India website2 and evaluate (in about 700 words) the same for content, presentation
and ease of understanding. This format was modified for the 2015 course asking the
students to give their take on the ‘One thing they would like to see change in the country
and why’ in a long essay with lower word limit of 750 words. In the time available to the
2One for each student was identified.
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students a single long essay was just about what they could handle and this format is
retained for the course3. See extract from some of the essays Annexure -PART 3
IMPORTANCE OF EXPERTS AND OBSERVERS.
Many of the classes had more than one external expert. Often these comprised one or
more senior Officers from the State or Central Governments along with well known
members of the academic community closely connected with policy formulation,
implementation and review. There was an advantage in having
such groups, as the students were exposed to different experts’
points of view. Refer to ANNEXURE – PART-2.
THE COURSE IS NOT SO MUCH TAUGHT - MORE SELF AND SHARED LEARNING.
Although the course runs through a full semester, experience has shown that the total
number of classroom interactions cannot exceed twelve to fourteen at the
most. By the sixth semester the students are well into their demanding
science courses and there is only limited time they can devote to the
humanities programme. The challenge therefore has been to make each
one count by making it engaging and very participative.
IN THE CLASSROOM
Classes were held on Saturdays and very rarely on Sundays.
The schedules were decided in consultation with the students
who were highly accommodative, often agreeing to evening
classes starting at 5.30 pm frequently concluding close to dinner time.. A typical
classroom session lasted about 120 minutes. This included an introduction to the topic
followed by the Group presentation, the invited expert’s interactive talk, all leading to a
Q&A session with the Group which made the presentation, as well as the expert of the
day. As this is proving to be difficult to manage, it is proposed to finalize classroom
schedules, Group and individual assignments in consultation with students entering the
6th semester by mid December 2015. The 2016 6th semester course is under
‘construction’ ! Annexure Part 4.
3Annexure 1 gives list of external experts who participated.
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ANNEXURE
PART -1
The Group Presentations (GP) topics and the associated Classroom Session ( CS )- in
red italics) for 2014, 2015 6th Semester Humanities course are listed below:
A. 2014 JAN-APRIL SEMESTER
1. GP: Examining the 42nd amendment of the Indian Constitution which made far-
reaching changes to the Constitution during the Emergency ( 1975-77) under
the Prime Ministership of Indira Gandhi.
CS: Overview of the Indian Constitution.
2. GP: Evaluating the 15th Lok Sabha ( 2010-2014)- the most disrupted one since
India became a republic.
CS: How the Indian Parliament works.
3. GP: Is IT cutting through red tape or increasing it?
CS: Understanding India’s bureaucracy and making it work for you.
4. GP: Ambedkar and the empowerment of the historically discriminated in Hindu
society – an appreciation.
CS:Affirmative action in India.
5. GP: Is democracy handicapping development in India?
CS:Development as a political porcess – the Amartya Sen- Jagdish Bhagwathi
debates.
6. GP: Challenging the State – a short account of peoples struggles since
independence.
CS: Important aspects of India’s internal and external security.
7. Comparing the 2G,CWG and Coal scams.
CS: Corruption and the Indian State.
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8. GP: Contrasting the JP Movement’s Total Revolution with Anna Hazare/AAP
movements.
CS: The Alternative- the AAP phenomena – challenging an established
political model.
9. GP: Challenging isolation in an increasingly globalizing and interdependent
world.
CS: International intradependence – an appreciaition of the UN system.
1- B- 2014 JAN-APRIL SEMESTER
1. GP: India’s struggle to stay together
CS: National security and the State
2. GP: Is India’s higher civil service in need of a transformation?
CS: The bureaucracy in India
3. The challenge of putting UID to use in India.
CS: UIDAI- The concept and implementation of the programme.
4. GP: Should we have an Income Tax?
CS: Your money and mine- howthe government of India is fundedand how it
becomes accountable
5. GP: Is India’s evolution from a Union of States to a quasi federal one good for the
country?
CS: India’s evolving federalism
6. GP: Evaluating the Swacch Bharat Mission.
CS: Our environmental mess
7. GP: Does the State need to specifically empower its citizens to better protect
their rights?
CS: Empowering the citizen.
8. GP: Special States special Status – Article 370 and special safeguards for the NE
States.
CS: The Indian constitution
9. GP: Before and after TN Seshan – The evolution of the Election Commission of
India.
CS: The elctoral process
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10. GP: Doing Away with Parliament –should India opt for the Presidential form of
democracy?
CS: How the Parliament works
11. GP: The same beaten path or new infrastructure paradigm for the future?
CS: Infrastructure –key to development
Additionally, apart from an Introductory session we had sessions on (1) Delivering
growth – UPA & NDA - Differing approaches followed by a discussion on Making the
best of India’s demographic dividend (2) Ecology Growth & Democracy in India.
PART -2 EXTERNAL RESOURCE
2A. The 2014 6th Semester programme *:
1. Justice J. Chelameshwar – Judge Supreme Court of India
2. Mr.Hormis Tharakan Former Chief of R&AW
3. Mr.IMG Khan former Member UPSC
4. Ms.Usha Mathur Former Secretary Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs GOI
5. Dr.PJ.Dilip Kumar former Special Secretary & Director General Forests GOI
6. Dr.DS.Ravindran Head Karnataka Government’s IT initiative
7. Mr.MP Joseph former country Head International Labour Organization
Cambodia and currently Special Adviser on Labour to the Government of Kerala
8. Dr. Lawrence Surendra Developmental Expert, Ex UN University Tokyo.
9. Professor Vinod Vyasulu Economist IIIT Bangalore
2B: The 2015 6th Semester programme:
1. Mr.N.Gopalaswami – Former Chief Election Commissioner of India
2. Mr.KS.Sripathi former Chief Secretary and Chief Information Commissioner
Tamilnadu.
3. Mr.R.Srikumar former DGP of Karnataka, Joint Director CBI, Vigilance
Commissioner at the CVC.
4. Mr.Jairam Ramesh MP former Union Minister & MP
5. Dr.Rajeev Gowda MP former Professor IIM Bangalore
6. Dr.MG Chndrakanta Professor of Economics at the UAS Bangalore
7. Dr.RS Deshpande ex-Director ISEC Bangalore
8. Mr.KK Sharma former ADG UADAI
9. Mr.Rajender Kumar former ADG UADAI
10. MR.CK Ramachandran Development Expert World Bank and Adviser to
Government of Bihar , Orissa etc
11. Mr. Anthony Tharakan formerly of the Indian Railways and now runs a Coffee &
spices plantation in Coorg and Kerala.
12. Mr. Rajan Singh former Commissioner of Police Trivandrum, later at Wharton
then with McKinsey New York, and now on his own startup in Trivandrum
13. Mr. Sethumadhavan Senior formerly of the IA&AS Adviser to Indian and foreign
Governments
14. Professor Vinod Vyasulu -IIIT Bangalore
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15. Dr. Lawrence Rajendra from Sorbonne - Ex UN University Tokyo, Mysore
University.
16. Dr. PJ Dilip Kumar former Dierctor Genral of Forests GOI
17. Ms. Radha Uday, former Financial Adviser, Indian Railways
18. Ms Meera Srivastava, Joint Director Direct Taxation Regional Training Institute
Bangalore
*Several of those invited came in pairs to give different perspectives of the same issue.
PART 3 – EXTRACTS FROM LONG ESSAYS – 2012 BATCH
These extracts ( few among so many) illustrate the range of concerns of the students of the 2012 batch.
A significant number of the essays wanted our educational systems to improve but there were other
concerns too. What a pleasure it was to go through them ; here are some extracts ….so read on!
1.Poverty, occupations, place of habitation, all contribute to backwardness and such factors
should also be considered as a criterion for reservation. India is growing at a tremendous rate, in
the present scenario the wrong people are getting the attention that others deserve which
involves a lot of investment that is sure to get a poor outcome.
______________________
2. Let me inform you about certain startling facts. India is going to experience a paradox of nearly
90 million people joining the workforce but most of them will lack required skills and the
mindset for productive employment according to a report in DNA. India has about 550 million
people under the age of 25 years out of which only 11% are enrolled in tertiary institutions
compared to the world average of 23%.
The above example just shows the effect of the quality of human capital on income inequality. So
if the government does not improve education system particularly in rural areas the rich will
become richer and the poor will get poorer.
_______________________
3. In the process of ensuring the religious rights of a Majority, are we not creating a hostile
environment for others and to be true are we not tactfully slowly smothering the very own
democracy that we take pride in ?
__________________________________
4. Many Indians students learn to idolize Dr A P J Abdul Kalam as a role model from their school
days and nurture dreams of joining ISRO as a scientist to contribute to India’s scientific growth,.
But the moment they pass out from an engineering college, joining a government lab is heavily
discouraged and joining an American MNC to earn crores is seen as the ideal thing to do. This
hypocritical behavior, which has become a part of our daily activities, is a major cause of various
social problems.
____________________
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5. These have a big impact on kids, an impact which can be seen from the joy in their faces. I have
personal experience in this. So, it would be great if there are enough parks and grounds in every
locality and if the parents spend time taking their kids to these places. It does not make sense
without the latter. It makes a huge difference in their growth. In short: in future, I don’t want my
children to wait in queue to play ball with a machine in a mall. I would rather like to see them
chase a butterfly in the park with a curious smile.
______________________________
6. We need a system where no Indian die of hunger, which is the ultimate target of NFSA. The Act
along with the clause ‘food for all’ emphasizes the word ‘nutritious’ as a prefix. A nutritious diet
can create a healthy society and a healthy society can make a wealthy nation. The way it all leaks
include (1) The intervention of middle men prevents the effective reach of Minimum Support
prices given to farmers (2) The Unhygienic conditions in storage go downs destroys the materials
(3) Overcharging and Black Marketing (4) Unauthorized ration cards and their misuse etc.
__________________________
7. Despite efforts to incorporate all sections of the population into the Indian education system,
through mechanisms such as positive discrimination and non-formal education, large numbers of
young people are still without schooling.
______________________
8. However, real progress in science occurs through small sciences carried out in little
laboratories in areas like biology, chemistry, physics and so on. These areas of small science
require much more support. [It is believed that India's investment in scientific research and
development is a fifth of China's and one-twentieth of US's funding in the same] We have to build
many outstanding institutions so that good young people have places to work in the right
environment. This is required urgently if India has to compete with our neighbouring nations and
education system in India has to change.
_______________________________
9. As our PM Narendra Modi said, the issue of reservation could be dealt with by creating more
opportunities, that, no one would care about reservation anymore. But this is easier said than
done. The humungous task of creating more vacancies, job opportunities and seats in higher
educational institutions, taking all its consequences into account, is not an easy job. Let us work
towards and hope for a better India, as Swami Vivekananda rightly said,
“Do you love your country? Then come, let us struggle for higher and better things; Look not
back, no, not even if you see the dearest and nearest cry. Look not back, but forward!”
____________________________________
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10. While I agree that it is essential to be critical and to constantly look for avenues of
improvement, being overly critical has its downside. It creates a feeling that we cannot move
forward and that we are in some way incompetent to deal with our problems. To tackle the
problems we face today, a great sense of confidence in our ability is absolutely essential which
cannot grow in the current atmosphere of negativity. Unless we believe that we have done well in
the past, how can we ever believe that we can do better in the future? So, if there is one thing I
would like to change, it is our perception of our country and ourselves as citizens.
_______________________
11. We hesitate to find out ways of helping someone, blindly believe in fake superstitions, have a
hypocritical attitude, a big gender imbalance and we keep saying lines like “yaha sab chalta hai”
(everything is okay here) and “is desh ka kuch naii ho sakta” (no good can happen in this
country), we dream of working in MNCs in US and UK etc., but do not bother to use our skills for
the good of our country.
________________________
12. It is high time to encourage a breed of superstar teachers. The internet has created this
possibility – the performance of a teacher now need not be restricted to a small classroom. Now
the performance of a teacher can be opened up for the world to see. The better teacher will be
more popular, and acquire more students. That’s the way of the future. Read here about why I
think that we are closing on to the age of rock star teachers.
____________________
13. We do have a low-cost high-throughput education system. What we need is a little
organization. Organization to improve the parameters of rankings, to set up education agencies
for promoting higher education in and outside India and to reduce complexity and increase
transparency.
________________________
14. The twenty first century is going to be defined by connectivity. The efficiency of
administrative framework and the competitiveness of business processes shall depend on the
speed and reliability of communication network. Moreover, to train the future workforce and
bridge the digital divide, the next generation will have to have ready access to internet and
computational facilities. As such, given a choice I would ensure broadband connectivity to every
village and town of India.
_________________________
15. You might be wondering why the article is titled “The sixth river” If you ask a Punjabi living in
the land of five rivers, he will promptly say that this sixth river is "The River of alcohol and
drugs". But a Punjabi whose heart beats for Punjab and those Punjabis who are catalysts of
positivism and welfare of this land are its symbolic sixth river. Now, it is up to the people and the
government of Punjab to decide in what direction they want this sixth river to flow.
______________________________________
16. The purpose of education is not to give the proverbial fish; it is to equip learners with
adequate tools and skill-set (the fishing rod- if you want to stick to the metaphor), to build their
capacity and enable them to become who they want to be. Rather than being this, the education
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system in India has become one of ‘indoctrination’ with its focus on imparting facts and
information rather than building essential skills like critical thinking and rational analysis, and
enhancing student’s ability to learn new things he wants on his own.
Facts from history are learned by rote with very little analysis of context and why they matter,
students are made to note down answers and questions given by the teachers so that you can
reproduce them faithfully for an exam. Passing this exam i.e. SSLC or +2 has become more
important than gaining of knowledge or enhancement of capabilities itself; failure is looked upon
with so much stigma that people pass even when they don’t really know what they’re supposed
to (I can vouch for this from my experience at IISc).
____________________________
17. However, despite being the second most populous country and having the largest adolescent
population in the world, we simply refuse to talk to our kids about sex. Studies have shown that
vast majority of parents do not accept the responsibility for providing sex education to their
children. Most adolescents resort to sources like movies, literature, internet, or their friends, in
order to learn about sexual matters. Therefore, it came as no surprise when a survey of college
students conducted by the All India Educational and Vocational Guidance Association, reported
that 54% of males and 42% of females did not adequately know about sex, and alarmingly, only
45% of young women and 37% of young men were aware that intercourse could lead to
pregnancy!
___________________________
18. Two major differences surface which tend to be the stumbling blocks to our attaining
excellence: First, Indian universities lack in ‘critical mass’ of students; and secondly, the existing
affiliation system of colleges to universities is the bottleneck for their autonomy and freedom to
grow with innovations. There are many more other issues like faculty, infrastructure,
laboratories, library and a conducive ambience, which need to be addressed for our universities
to attain global parity.
___________________________
19. “The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically.
Intelligence plus character that is the true goal of true education”- Martin Luther King
As education have the power to change the world, it can transform our ideas. So, if our education
system is strong and effective we will we able to take our nation to the height of success. Two
recent studies that incorporate the collaborate inquiry model are described. Both studies
conclude that well planned, personalized and coordinated professional learning using a
collaborative inquiry approach has a profound influence on district culture, school and student
learning. Education is an essential prerequisite of modernization. It enables people to know the
world beyond their surroundings and transform them to became humanist in outlook world
view.
____________________________
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20. The step of privatizing IR while tempting has its demerits as well. A privately owned railway
would mean termination of any loss making services. An example of this is the Northeast Frontier
Railway, servicing the seven sisters, which has an operating ratio of 1.85. It could, though not
necessarily, mean a rise in fares which would make travel expensive and unaffordable to the
common man. A lack of government control would mean loss of job security to the 15 lakh people
IR currently employs.
__________________________
21. I would like to see Indians appreciate our cultural and spiritual heritage. It is so sad to see
how we, Indians are blindly following the western culture in name of modernization. In this rat
race we are leaving our culture and spiritual values which we cannot find anywhere in this
creation. The profound wisdom of Bhagvad Gita and other scriptures is not at all taken seriously.
All our education system is flooded with scientific, literature and arts books, which makes us
more and more literate, but do they really make us educated is questionable. Our education
system is becoming more fact oriented and less value oriented.
________________________________
22. In a country like India where there has been a lot of artificial discriminations made by the
society based on sex and given the fact of increasing cases of rape, molestation and female
foeticide, I think India requires a more friendly environment amongst boys and girls (or men and
women) in the society. Now as any member of the society grows up, his/her mentality builds up
on the surroundings and the people he/she interacts with.
If Co-education is introduced more and more into the system, pupils will have a chance to
interact with opposite sex more often and would get much more time and scope to understand
them. On the other hand the concept of single-sex school by itself seems to be sexist. Because the
society includes both the sexes and each one necessarily requires to confront the opposite sex in
most of the time in his/her life.
__________________________________
23. But the mere presence of all these religions has created a unique problem in our country.
Somehow we have failed to live together as a peaceful country. Everyone is so much into his own
religion and trying to prove it to be superior to others that we have lost the basic sense of
humanity in this mad race of religion superiority. So to answer the question about one thing that
I would like to see change in India, it would be this very attitude of our people, which leads to
communal clashes hence crippling India in so many ways.
________________________________
24. The biggest Indian start-up facing is the nemesis of prospective in- laws, Nemesis of doting
parents and their self –inflicting concern for you to have a job and a wife as a single channel of
nirvana that a human being can possibly have. Whether the job is shitty like a hell, I mean, what
they are really thinking. Really. What are their chances? First they have to survive most outdated
education system that there is. If they come to 23-24, they are expected to marry and settle down
by 27.
_______________________
25. If the sole objective of the reservation is to lend a helping hand to the backward communities, then so be it. But one has to be very careful while choosing the word ‘backward communities’. In
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a democratic India, even in 21st
century, why should we define ‘backward castes’ according to ‘castes’ itself? The incentive was to remove caste-based distinctions, not recreate and embrace it, was it not? A more logical and efficient way to determine the beneficiaries of the reservation system should be the financial status of people.
If there is one thing that I would like to see changed, it would be the attitude of the people
towards problems. Most of the Indians don’t mind turning a blind eye to a problem if it does not
concern them, something that bothers me a lot. The ‘chalta hai’ and ‘jugaad’ ways of India are
something that needs immediate change as I shall explain below.
__________________________
26. First of all as parents or elders we should set an example of high thinking and good moral
conduct. Moral values and samskar should be inculcated into their unspoiled minds from the very
beginning. After all they become the future citizens. Elders should take a vow not to take or give
bribes, seek or provide undue favors and sincerely discharge their duties. People usually blame
the politicians, but if we go to vote and vote the right candidates, the system can considerably
improve.
“HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY”
_________________________________
27. I guess, there are a lot of things to change in this whole education system, but the first thing to
do is to see that each child is different with his/her own abilities and interests. And even though
they are kids, we elders should learn to respect them. Teachers should try to motivate them and
make learning fun. It is important to know that the foundation is really important for the whole
building to stand through time. And so, it is at the primary education that decides what a student
will end up doing in his life, go find answers to his curiosity or end up not knowing how to write
his own name. It’s not so difficult to implement, but yes, it is definitely going to take time to work.
As goes the famous saying, “Be the change you want to see in the world”, I see my fellow students
feel the same way and I have hopes that change will come.
_________________________________
28. The problem is really in the infrastructure. As the framework document itself notes:
“Inappropriate classroom design may drastically affect the teacher’s productive output and
classroom management”. Yet, there are no benches to sit, no blackboards to write, defunct toilets,
and I’ve even been in a roofless classroom! If this is the case with schools in urban and rural
Bangalore, one can only imagine the situation elsewhere. The system has miserably failed in
creating an atmosphere that encourages learning. Every parent I have met has the same refrain:
the mid-day meal is the only reason their wards go to school. Can there be a bigger failure than
this? A place to fill children’s minds has become a place for them to fill their stomachs. The
pathetic infrastructure manifests apathy in the children, which then results in indifference in the
teachers. As Sugata Mitra has shown in her famous Hole in the Wall experiment, a conducive
atmosphere is the most important thing for children to learn. Thus, infrastructure is the first
thing that needs to be in place. As I have seen across schools under NoteBook Drive, the simple
act of providing books and stationary increases 10th standard pass percentages by over ten.
Schools, which have better facilities, tend to do better, even though the competence of the
teachers is same on average.
______________________________________
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……and finally this on animation!
29. So, if the trainer really has so much power over a child’s mind, he should wield it with the
utmost care. And what really has the maximum authority over a child’s mind? I believe the
answer is cartoons. Yes, cartoons. Apart from my parents’ scolding while overwatching cartoon
shows I have seen children around me who are totally indulged in the love of the media. Chota
Bheem bags, Krishna or Hanuman pencil boxes, Tom and Jerry water bottles - cartoons are
everywhere around a child. Cartoons are probably our first friends and first stepping stones to all
forms of knowledge. However it is regrettable that Indian television does not offer high quality
cartoons. I grew up in a transition period, where Cartoon Network slowly moved away from
telecasting American shows like Tom and Jerry, The Looney Toons show, Yogi Bear, Scoobby Doo,
Popeye etc to indigenous shows like Chota Bheem, Krishna aur Balaram, Tenali Raman, Roll no.
21 etc. It is extremely unfortunate that these new shows cannot hold a candle against the older
ones. Be it in terms of story, animation quality, design or entertainment. The enthusiasm towards
enjoying these shows quickly wane out as a child reaches about ten years of age. The new
cartoons are uninspiring and unappealing. While it is true that growth of Indian animation
industry should be encouraged and creating these shows might be doing exactly that, only these
shows should not be allowed to satisfy the intellectual needs of a child. Changing the population
will need to change our children. And as a large section of a young child’s education does come
from the cartoon industry we really need to cater serious and sensible shows to our children.
This is our duty and responsibility. It is true that on an average India’s animation industry is
growing, especially due to outsourcing. Indian animation industry is predicted to grow to 2.9
billion USD in 2015 compared to the 1.8 billion USD in 2012. To me however it seems this is just
an increase in quantity without sufficient increase of quality. DreamWorks’ “How to Train your
Dragon 2” had an entire production team called the “India Team” and Indian VFX artists did reach
new heights with their contributions in Life of Pi. The animation that goes into making of our
advertisements is also quite remarkable. However the market of television shows and original
production is grossly overlooked. There seems to be a tremendous lack of seriousness and
originality in the television production. Popular shows are customized to be popular. The stories
are absurdly simplified and there is inadequate exposure to harder aspects of life. The educative
shows are just educative while the lighter ones are too light. The Japanese animation industry
wins over the entire world in this aspect. Japanese animation is categorized and prepared for
different age groups but nothing stops enthusiastic children to pick up a seinen (for adult men)
manga or watch a josei (for adult women) anime.
____________________________________
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PART 4
.WHAT IS PROPOSED FOR THE 2016 6TH SEMESTER PROGRAMME ( JAN-APRIL 2016)*
The 2016 6th Semester programme is still under preparation. Under the overarching theme of INDIA-
MANAGING THE MEGA STATE it is expected to address issues such as:
1. The role of media in a democracy.
2. The system of justice in India.
3. Centre-State relations
4. Security challenges to the Indian State
5. The increasing importance of India’s NE
6. Religion and the Secular State
7. The Panchayat Raj system
* The list is tentative and will be finalized by mid Dec 2015.
SHYAM SARAN NEGI FROM HP VOTED IN EVERY GENERAL ELECTION HELD FROM GROUP PRESENTATION ON ELECTIONS
ACKNOWLEGEMENTS
I have many to thank for making such a programme possible – Professor Raghavendra Gadagkar for
inspiring and encouraging me to, Professor Chandan Dasgupta, Professor Umesh Varshney ,Dr.Bitasta. the
UG Office , my colleagues in CCS and most of all the wonderful students – each so irreverant, questioning ,
thinking and debating and writing with confidence and enthusiasm. and dare I say hope?
A particular word of thanks to my friend of many decades and former Director General of Forests GOI Dr.PJ
Dilip Kumar.. Simply put ,this course would not have shaped up the way it did but for his close involvement
in its design and much, much more!
* Almost all the images appearing in this note have been taken by SIDDHARTH KANKARIA Student 7th Semester
UG Programme IISc. Thanks Siddharth!
Uday Balakrishnan