UGC Gazette Notification | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 07 Apr 2017 07:39:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png UGC Gazette Notification | SabrangIndia 32 32 Shut down JNU if not one way then another? JNUTA statement on UGC regulations https://sabrangindia.in/shut-down-jnu-if-not-one-way-then-another-jnuta-statement-ugc-regulations/ Fri, 07 Apr 2017 07:39:15 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/04/07/shut-down-jnu-if-not-one-way-then-another-jnuta-statement-ugc-regulations/ JNU administration has drastically cut intake into the university for the next academic session and perhaps for years to come, using the UGC ‘caps’ on research as a pretext. JNU Teachers’ Association demonstrates conclusively here through a survey of 46 Central Universities, that barring a handful which have definitively adopted them, most others are still operating […]

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JNU administration has drastically cut intake into the university for the next academic session and perhaps for years to come, using the UGC ‘caps’ on research as a pretext. JNU Teachers’ Association demonstrates conclusively here through a survey of 46 Central Universities, that barring a handful which have definitively adopted them, most others are still operating with other Regulations based on the preceding 2009 version. And even the few universities that have adopted them, barring JNU, have implemented modifications by way of harmonisation with the statutes, objects, and past practices of the institutions.

JNU

JNU not being targeted using the UGC Regulations as a pretext? Right.
Over the past few weeks we have been told that the mandatory nature of the UGC Regulations require them to be implemented by universities immediately and in a chapter-and- verse fashion. JNUTA’s survey of 46 Central Universities however shows that barring a handful who have definitively adopted them, most others are still operating with other Regulations based on the preceding 2009 version. And for even the few universities that have adopted them, barring JNU, modifications in the way of harmonisation with the statutes, objects, and past practices of the institution have inevitably resulted.

Table 1 presents the facts of 46 Central Universities, the year of their founding, and the research programmes they take admission to. To determine whether they had adopted the 2016 UGC Regulations, we examined the Ordinances and notifications on the university website in order to detect its adoption. (The value label unclear is to mark the cases where no explicit information of either type was posted on the university’s website.)CENTRAL UNIVS WITH UGC 2016
CENTRAL UNIVS WITH UGC 2016

Taking just a few crucial parameters, we find that amongst those universities who have adopted the UGC Regulations 2016, each one of them barring JNU has tried to harmonise them with past practices, standards of fairness of examination and good research.

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In fact, the University of Hyderabad, which has more or less a chapter and verse interpretation of the Regulations has decided through its Academic Council, not to reduce intake and has asked the UGC for clarifications.

It is JNU’s tragedy that we have an administration that refuses to stand up for the university in any fora, that refuses to hold an Academic Council meeting, and has implemented a completely unwarranted cull of seats for admissions and the adoption of crippling and illegal eligibility conditions for applications to various programmes, particularly in the science schools. UGC Regulations are being used merely as a pretext to cripple the research programmes of JNU.

See the post on JNUTA’s website.

Courtesy: Kafila.online

 

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JNU Students March to UGC, Struggle to Continue https://sabrangindia.in/jnu-students-march-ugc-struggle-continue/ Tue, 28 Mar 2017 10:54:11 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/03/28/jnu-students-march-ugc-struggle-continue/ JNU fights the UGC Gazette Notification   JNU students and teachers took out a demonstration today, against the UGC gazette notification of 2016. Thousands of students and teachers gathered in front of UGC today. A small scuffle took place between the protesters and the police.  We talked to the JNUSU Vice President Amal P.P. “A […]

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JNU fights the UGC Gazette Notification

JNUSU
 

JNU students and teachers took out a demonstration today, against the UGC gazette notification of 2016. Thousands of students and teachers gathered in front of UGC today. A small scuffle took place between the protesters and the police. 

We talked to the JNUSU Vice President Amal P.P. “A panel of representatives from JNUSU and JNUTA are waiting to talk to the UGC Chairperson. 4 teachers, JNUSU president and I, and 4 other MA final year students are waiting for the Chairperson of UGC for past 45 minutes. During our last visit as well, they made us wait. Last time, the UGC chairperson did not come at all. Only a Mr. Jagdish from UGC came and met us. He took the memorandum and walked away.”, he said.

“Police has lathicharged our peaceful protest. Many students have been hurt, some of them have even been hospitalized”, Amal added.

The UGC gazette enforced on JNU has led to a massive seat cut for research programmes. JNU is primarily a research university with 67% of the students enrolled in research. It has faced a huge set-back with the new UGC implementation. M.Phil and Ph.D seats in JNU have been drastically cut down by 84%. The seats have been reduced from 1,234 last year to 194 this year.

With the new prospectus, there would be no admissions for research this year in centres like Centre for Sociology, Centre for Pol. Science, Centre for History, Centre for Indian Languages and many more. The seats have been slashed in many other important centres as well. JNU’s oldest School, School of International Studies, will offer MPhil/PhD seats in only 3 out of 13 centres.

Three schools –School of physical sciences, School of computational and School of integrative sciences, and biotechnology – and two special Centres – Centre for law and governance and Special Centre for Sanskrit studies – have no seats for the integrated MPhil-PhD programme.

The JNUSU has also continuously pointed how the current Vice Chancellor, on diktats of the RSS, is dismantling the core structure of the University. Their press release on 3rd Jan read:

"The VC is repeatedly tampering with the autonomy and quality of the University in deciding course curriculum through his insistence on imposing courses dictated by the partisan views of the government of the day. For example, while JNU has no specialisation or departments related to areas like AYUSH, the VC forced the decision that the ‘AYUSH fellowship holders will be allowed to take admissions’ and also that the ‘AYUSH degrees can be considered for equivalence by centres’, without offering any academic rationale as to which centres and faculty will admit such students! In a situation where the already existing academic infrastructure is crumbling down, where no new hostel has been constructed for students, the sudden moves to introduce such spurious proposals is nothing but a toast to the loyalty of the JNU administration to the political agenda of the RSS-dictated government, at the cost of academic rigour and the inclusive infrastructure of JNU.”  Read more here.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in
 

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2017 JNU Admissions – Over 80% Seat Cut for Researchers https://sabrangindia.in/2017-jnu-admissions-over-80-seat-cut-researchers/ Sat, 25 Mar 2017 04:18:04 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/03/25/2017-jnu-admissions-over-80-seat-cut-researchers/ In the beginning of February, the JNUSU had gone on an indefinite strike against the same UGC gazette. Image Courtesy: Samim Asgor Ali   M.Phil and Ph.D seats in JNU have been drastically cut down by 84%. The seats have been reduced from 1,234 last year to 194 this year.  The new prospectus is out […]

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In the beginning of February, the JNUSU had gone on an indefinite strike against the same UGC gazette.

JNUSU
Image Courtesy: Samim Asgor Ali
 

M.Phil and Ph.D seats in JNU have been drastically cut down by 84%. The seats have been reduced from 1,234 last year to 194 this year.  The new prospectus is out and the admission process for the year 2017-18 is on.

The high court has given a verdict upholding the UGC guidelines. The JNUTA brought out a press release after the high court gave the verdict. Even as we respect the judgement of the Hon. Delhi High Court, our view is that the ruling has been given on an issue that was not before the court in the first place – the mandatory/binding nature of UGC Regulations.

They have demanded for an Academic Council meeting to be called. If the UGC Regulations are mandatory “without any deviation”, the JNUTA expects that the JNU administration shall, in service to the oath of fealty to the UGC that it has sworn repeatedly over the past few months, call an Academic Council meeting immediately.

The TA says that Instead of addressing the ill-intentioned deviation from statutory procedure by the JNU administration, the judgement has undermined the JNU Act, and has grave implications for the autonomy of educational institutions. Are university statutory bodies to be reduced to mere rubber stamps and is the observance of due process a mere empty formality? JNUTA does not agree with this as a necessary reading of the UGC’s powers, as the very Regulations under consideration themselves assert the importance of adoption into the statutes of each university.

They added The JNUTA considers the first responsibility of teachers in this scenario is to ensure supervisory arrangements for the nearly 1000 students who took admission in the academic year of 2016 at once. While the JNU administration was forced to agree in Court that the Regulations would not apply to students enrolled in years preceding 2016, the batch of students currently doing M.Phil./PhD coursework or in the first year of Direct PhD is directly affected. It is essential that all students admitted into the M.Phil//PhD and Direct PhD programmes be assigned supervisors first, before the intake for 2017-18 is addressed.

Professor Ayesha Kidwai, the JNUTA President, wrote “total Intake Approved by AC: 1025 + 287 + 94 = 1406 (including Direct PhD seats). Total Intake as per e-prospectus dated 21 March 2017: 194”, “…And this too by a process that is in UTTER violation of their beloved UGC Regulations 2016, which says the number of seats for admission has to be determined by the "academic bodies" of the university. The Centres of JNU were never even shown these figures, let alone consulted. UGC should immediately take action against the JNU VC!”

JNU is primarily a research university. It is an institute of higher learning which is known to encourage critical thinking and research. 62% of its current strength is that of students pursuing MPhil and PhD programmes. It is interesting to note that the average of the students enrolled for MPhil and PhD in the 42 Central Universities is a mere 3.5%.

In the beginning of February, the JNUSU had gone on an indefinite strike against the same UGC gazette. The students had raised their voices against it.

The students had foreseen the seat cuts. They had made the following point. The UGC notification lays down strict rules regarding the eligibility of “research supervision”. It says: “A Research Supervisor/Co-supervisor who is a Professor, at any given point of time, cannot guide more than three (3) M.Phil. and Eight (8) Ph.D. scholars. An Associate Professor as Research Supervisor can guide up to a maximum of two (2) M.Phil. and six (6) Ph.D. scholars and an Assistant Professor as Research Supervisor can guide up to a maximum of one (1) M.Phil. and four (4) Ph.D. scholars.” This implies cutting seats for M.Phil./Ph.D. admissions.

With the new prospectus, there would be no admissions for research this year in centres like Centre for Sociology, Centre for Pol. Science, Centre for History, Centre for Indian Languages and many more. The seats have been slashed in many other important centres as well. JNU’s oldest School, School of International Studies, will offer MPhil/PhD seats in only 3 out of 13 centres.
Three schools –School of physical sciences, School of computational and School of integrative sciences, and biotechnology – and two special Centres – Centre for law and governance and Special Centre for Sanskrit studies – have no seats for the integrated MPhil-PhD programme.

The students called for a university strike against the seat cuts today.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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How do the new UGC regulations affect prospective students applying to JNU? Ayesha Kidwai https://sabrangindia.in/how-do-new-ugc-regulations-affect-prospective-students-applying-jnu-ayesha-kidwai/ Mon, 30 Jan 2017 12:27:18 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/01/30/how-do-new-ugc-regulations-affect-prospective-students-applying-jnu-ayesha-kidwai/ This is the first of a five part series in which AYESHA KIDWAI will explain how the UGC Gazette Notification of 2016, especially as interpreted by the VC of JNU, will affect different categories of students, faculty, and the general public. Ayesha Kidwai is Professor, Centre for Lingustics, School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies, […]

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This is the first of a five part series in which AYESHA KIDWAI will explain how the UGC Gazette Notification of 2016, especially as interpreted by the VC of JNU, will affect different categories of students, faculty, and the general public.

Ayesha Kidwai is Professor, Centre for Lingustics, School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies, JNU.

Courtesy: Kafila.online
 

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