I have a Solution that will reduce pressure on IIT aspirants but do not know how to get this across to HRD Minister of India. Suggestions are welcome. - Ram Krishnaswamy

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Thursday, April 29, 2021

Why IIT students need a political space


Why IIT students need a political space

The institutes are oppressive and discriminatory, and authorities are quick to shut down any space for dissent or debate.

ByRahul Kumar28 Apr, 2021



On March 28, as students at IIT Guwahati celebrated Holi, an undergraduate student was sexually assaulted by a fellow student on campus.

The assault was confirmed in a preliminary medical report but denied by the administration. 

A student was later arrested and charged with rape.

In the same month, a PhD student was expelled by the same institute for a Facebook post that questioned the credibility of the JEE. The institute said he “misinterpreted facts” resulting in “defamation”.

Earlier this month, the alumni body of IIT Gandhinagar issued a statement highlighting the college’s exclusionary measures during the Covid pandemic. 

Students were being forced to pay a “quarantine charge” if they wanted to use quarantine facilities on campus which, the alumni body pointed out, discriminated against marginalised students.

Students were also penalised for failing to meet attendance requirements during the pandemic.

More recently, a professor from IIT Kharagpur was captured on video abusing students from marginalised backgrounds during an online class.

We need to remember that the IITs are well-known for their high suicide rates. 

Last year during the lockdown, a PhD student died by suicide at IIT Gandhinagar

This is just one of the many things wrong with India’s “premier” institutions. Cases of suicide are deliberately buried in files to enable the institutes to maintain their public image.

The institutes are oppressive and discriminatory, and students have no agency to speak out against the authorities. 

The high suicide rates stem not only from academic pressure but issues of caste and religion. 

Compared to central universities like Delhi University, Jawaharlal Nehru University, University of Hyderabad, and Jamia Millia Islamia, the IITs have little or no political space. Elected student bodies have limited power, operating as extensions of the administration.

Some students groups have been trying to create space for activism at the IITs, such as 
APPSC at IIT Bombay, 
APPSC at IIT Gandhinagar, 
Chintabar at IIT Madras, 
Students for Change at IIT BHU, Science Education Group at IIT Kharagpur, 
and IIT Delhi for Justice, Freedom and Democracy at IIT Delhi. 

An inter-IIT support group called COSTISA has also attempted to promote progressive politics and campus democracy. However, many of the IITs have already cracked down on these initiatives, urging students to embrace the status quo instead and abandon independent thought.

In 1928, Bhagat Singh wrote a piece on students and politics to address the importance of student participation in political movements. He wrote: “It was the efforts of students and youth that has brought independence to any country which are now free. Will the youth and students of India be able to save the existence of themselves and their country by remaining aloof from the freedom struggle?”

Singh also wrote that students “should study, surely study. But along with it, they should also acquire political knowledge and, when required, should not hesitate to jump into the fray and dedicate their life to this work. Sacrifice their life for the cause.”

So, what are the IITs afraid of ? 
Should students at centres for higher education be involved in politics? Students are voters; therefore, they are already involved in the conventional political process. Students cannot be asked to ignore basic issues of human rights that affect them and their families and be told to focus on their studies instead. This is naïve, an assault on democracy, especially considering the irrational times we live in.

Political leaders and activists tend to emerge from campus politics. They gain trust and cultivate strategic skills and leadership qualities in the process. Student politics facilitates the reinforcement of social ties, the formation of new alliances, the promotion of communal unity, and helps hold the administration accountable. Without it, students will become mindless machines of corporate mills, unable to react to current issues. Or, in the case of the IITs, they become technological zombies.

Interestingly, most politically active students are from the humanities and social sciences disciplines in the IITs, nurtured by a general sense of trepidation against the authorities and their concomitant apparatus. But it’s important for students from other disciplines, primarily science and technology, to get involved

In the 21st century, new and emerging technologies have far-reaching political implications. If we analyse the relationship between science and state politics, we see how the science-state affinity can help shape social dimensions.

Hence, it’s high time for the IITs to equip its science and technology students with the space and know-how to familiarise themselves with changing socio political narratives of the global order rather than confining them to imaginary technological cocoons.

It’s also imperative that the student communities stand together for their democratic rights and fight against oppression, both obvious and invisible.

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Humanity Prof Seema Singh- IIT Kgp calls her students "Bloody Bastards"


“Bloody bastards”: India’s elite IITs have a history of deep-rooted casteism



YOUTUBE/IIT KHARAGPUR

Wrinkles to iron out.


By Ananya Bhattacharya

Tech reporter
April 27, 2021

A video of a professor calling her students “bloody bastards” has sparked outrage around how minorities are treated at India’s elite institutes.

In a video that went viral on social media on April 25, Seema Singh, a professor at the department of humanities and social sciences at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kharagpur (IIT-KGP), can be seen and heard foul-mouthing students and berating them after she thought some of them had not stood up for the national anthem.

The video was first posted on the Facebook page IIT-KGP confessions.

The video was shot during Singh’s Prep English Course, which is meant for students from the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes and persons with disabilities. 

The one-year preparatory class is aimed at helping students from these communities to secure a seat the following year if they make the cut-off but are unable to get direct admission.

“This video is connected to the larger issue of reservation. If you notice, the very nature of the course is based on the merit-based education system, wherein it is assumed that SC, ST, OBC students are not eligible to study here; that they need a preparatory English course to enter this institution,” said a member of Ambedkar Periyar Phule Study Circle (APPSC), an IIT-Bombay (IIT-B) student body that promotes the anti-caste ideologies of BR Ambedkar, Periyar EV Ramasamy, and Jyotirao Phule.

In the clip, Singh threatens students that she will “give zero marks to everybody, all 128” and calls them “shameless creatures of prep course.” She then says, “when will you learn sense you idiotic people of prep course?”

The professor is also seen challenging the students to complain about her to the ministry of women and child development and ministry of SC/ST/Minority (coined ministry of social justice and empowerment now).

“She is aware of the power and immunity she holds as a faculty member,” the APPSC member said. 

“She knows that the savarna-dominated IIT administration will protect her from any backlash.” (Savarna refers to those belonging to one of four upper castes. SC/ST students come from the lowest caste, Dalits, and tribal backgrounds.)

IIT-KGP is considered among the most prestigious colleges even among the IITs. The college’s list of notable alumnus includes Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, and former Reserve Bank of India governor Duvvuri Subbarao.

“In the IIT system, we do not support such language. We will take some action,” IIT-KGP registrar Tamal Nath told daily newspaper the Hindu

Quartz’s e-mails to Singh, Nath, IIT-KGP director Virendra Kumar Tewari, and head of humanities and social sciences as well as SC/ST student coordinator Narayan Chandra Nayak went unanswered at the time of publishing.

Seema Singh and the law

Since the video started making the rounds on social media, there have not only been calls for Singh’s termination, but many say there should also be legal action against her.

A case can be registered under the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989, Rahul Singh, general secretary of National Dalit Movement For Justice, told Quartz. “She knows they are SC/ST community members and even then she’s using such language,” he said. 

Once a First Information Report (FIR) is filed, the police investigation has to be concluded within 60 days, and after a charge sheet is filed, a special court must complete the trial within 90 days,” he explained.

Systemic casteism at IITs

Although India outlawed the caste system in 1947, at the country’s elite engineering institutes, casteism—both implicit and explicit—is rampant, according to Thenmozhi Soundararajan, executive director of social justice organisation Equality Labs.

Soundararajan was horrified but also unsurprised by the leaked footage “given that dalit bahujans across the country have been speaking out of horrible casteism that is ingrained in IIT culture,” she told Quartz. “Caste violence goes on in these campuses because of the administration’s refusal to address this as a structural problem.”

The discrimination starts even before candidates bag a seat.

For starters, getting into an IIT is pretty expensive. The fees for the coaching classes in Kota, Rajasthan—the hub of IIT entrance test training institutes—can surpass Rs5 lakh ($6,702). This alienates students from marginalised backgrounds who cannot afford these courses.

Then, the reservation policy at IITs—that holds 15% seats for Scheduled Caste, 7.5% for Scheduled Tribes, and 27% for the Other Backward Classes category—has largely been skirted.

In 2020, as many as 12 departments in IIT-KGP, 15 in IIT-Delhi, and 16 in IIT-B did not admit a single SC student into their PhD programmes.

Between 2012 and 2017, nearly every undergraduate student expelled at IIT Kanpur belonged to the SC/ST /OBC/PwD category, “suggesting a systemic failure in addressing caste discrimination and accessibility on campus,” a post on user-generated content platform Youth Ki Awaaz noted.

Meanwhile, grievance redressal systems for caste-based complaints at the universities are lacking.

Even if action is taken against Singh due to the media glare on the incident, people worry such incidents will recur in the future.

“I know very few universities that would allow such behaviour from professors outside of India but because of caste apartheid, there is an acceptable level of impunity related to dominant caste professors who violate professional norms” said Soundararajan. She suggests system-wide caste equity training with a clear redline that any violations will lead to suspension and termination. “These policies must be enforced and the setting up SC/ST grievance cell on all of these campuses with real power for investigation and enforcement must be done,” she said.

Casteism beyond the classroom

There are issues around caste that extend beyond just the students.

Towards the end of 2020, a panel comprising directors of various IITs recommended that the colleges be exempt from caste-based quotas in faculty hires. The resistance comes even after the 23 IITs are meant to reserve posts only at the entry-level. And if they don’t find suitable candidates, they can de-reserve these posts after a year.

At IIT-Madras, the caste politics went beyond the campus walls when the institute shut the gate connecting it to a majorly Dalit residential area Velachary, citing “heightened security threat” from “undesirable elements” who hang out near the gate and to prevent the sale of “banned substances” and “assault on women” students.

The residents took issue with this caste-based discrimination that shut residents off from employment on campus, kept their kids away from schools they’d enrolled in on IIT land, and took away their right to worship at their temple on campus grounds.

What’s more, is that the conversations around these issues are often hushed. Odile Henry, a professor of sociology at the Université Paris 8, who was researching caste discrimination at IIT-Kanpur from December 2014 to December 2016, alleged that her research was cut short because she participated in a discussion on the suicide of University of Hyderabad research scholar Rohith Vemula. Vemula left behind a heartbreaking suicide note speaking of caste oppression and prejudice.

Now, alumni of various IITs, including some from Kharagpur, have come forward to share personal stories of pervasive prejudice.


Sunday, April 25, 2021

Netflix's Alma Matters is here to depict the inside details of the IIT Dream! Watch the trailer


Netflix's Alma Matters is here to depict the inside details of the IIT Dream! Watch the trailer


Come on, we've all been there - in those classes in which you're asked to study 18 hours a day so that you write the JEE Exam well and secure a seat in one of the IITs. But Netflix is here to shatter those ideas - that system. It's going to give us an inside into the lives of students at IIT Kharagpur ans the struggles they go through every single day, how their struggle is invalidated because they are "lucky enough to be studying in an IIT", how many of their friends and peers submit to the immense academic pressure and commit suicide, and how there's very little hope for many. 

The trailer itself is quite moving and deep. You can feel this one's going to be different. This one's going to shake you up as a parent, a student or even as a fellow citizen. Through the depiction of IIT Students, Netflix seems to aim to shake up the entirety of the Indian education system. Respect for this one, Netflix.

Friday, April 16, 2021

Mental Health Startup - Your Story,

STARTUP [Startup Bharat] 


By Aparajita Saxena|
16th Apr 2021 

Tharun’s Hyderabad-based mental health startup "FindHope" aims to become a platform where struggling young adults can get help for free. 


Trigger warning for content
Story discusses suicide and suicide ideation.)

 Aspiring engineer Tharun Sai E dreamt of the same thing others in his boat often dream of — cracking the IIT-JEE examination and getting into a good IIT school. Like thousands of others like him, Tharun put in over 10 hours a day studying. He joined a coaching class when he was in the ninth grade, signing away his life for the next four years to endless assignments, hours-long study sessions, and recurring mock tests. 

However, the universe had other plans for him. He did not clear his IIT-JEE examination — his only dream — which left him shattered. Around the same time, he met with an accident that left him bedridden, just as he was getting out of a relationship with his partner — the straw that finally broke the camel’s back. 

“All these life events led me to depression. The worst part was I never accepted that I was dealing with depression because of the stigma attached to it. I couldn't share my feelings with anyone because I didn't want to trouble my parents and was afraid of being judged in front of friends,” 

Tharun tells YourStory. 

Eventually, those feelings led him to decide to take his own life, and he decided to jump off a building. But just as he was about to, he saw someone else jump off it, right in front of his eyes. When shock and bewilderment abated, Tharun realised something that not only saved him but also gave his life a renewed sense of purpose — he was not alone in feeling the way he was, and that others around him were suffering in silence too. Sign up for our exclusive newsletters. Subscribe to check out our popular newsletters. “All that inner turmoil turned into the desire to build a solution for all who are suffering alone,” Tharun says. 

Six months later, after putting in heaps of research and talking to professionals, psychology students, and suicide survivors, the now 20-year old founded FindHope — a Hyderabad-based mental health startup. 

Tharun, CEO and Founder of FindHope ALSO READ [App Fridays] Deal with stress and anxiety with this made in India mental health buddy A win-win situation for all Having personally dealt with depression, and hence understanding what it entails, Tharun decided that FindHope’s biggest value proposition would be “free and continuous support for weeks or months.” Any professional support, talk-based therapy, and mental exercises need to be consistent to be able to ameliorate any psychological struggles. However, he realised that quality was another issue in India, where mental health, still in its nascent stage, is often viewed through a negative lens, especially in lower-tier towns. 

In India, having depression, panic attacks, anxiety, and other mental illnesses, such as bipolar personality disorder, are often tied to the religious sphere. Pseudo-sciences play a big and harmful role in treating such ailments, and people with zero qualifications in human psychology often masquerade as qualified professionals to remedy such problems, including homosexuality, with ritualistic practices. Having quality therapists and professionals to serve young adults was extremely important. To enable that, Tharun came up with the concept of peer support, where final year psychology students, in conjunction with professionals, would provide support to young people dealing with mild to moderate levels of mental health struggles. “This was a win-win situation because psychology students get the experience and mentorship, while the youth gets quality free support,” he says. Besides offering therapy as part of its peer support service, the Hyderabad-based startup also offers an “emotional fitness gym” — a smartphone-enabled game people can use to build their mental resilience and learn various skills for dealing with real-life challenges. Since its launch in May 2020, FindHope has provided support to over 3,000 young adults, with an average of four hours, across three weeks, spent on a user. It counts over 50 peer counsellors as part of its team. “Our mission is to leverage technology to make mental health services accessible to youth, thereby reducing the treatment gap from 83 percent to 50 percent. We envision an India, free of mental health struggles, as people are equipped with technology to get the right support,” Tharun says. Making mental health accessible In a bid to make mental health tools and resources more accessible to people, FindHope uses a freemium model to operate, where one-on-one counsellor-services are offered for free. Users are given the option to subscribe to its “emotional first-aid” online programme for Rs 199 that teaches them skills they can use to provide emotional first-aid to themselves or a friend in distress. Psychology majors who wish to offer services on the platform, and accrue on-field experience, pay a small fee to the startup to enlist. Tharun says his startup has managed to convert about 10 percent of its users into paying customers. The “emotional fitness gym” game — still in the works — offers a free trial for 21 days, post which it charges a nominal fee of Rs 99 per month. The game helps users connect with psychologists, and FindHope gets a cut of the fee paid to the therapist. To date, the bootstrapped startup has made Rs 2 lakh in revenue and claims positive unit economics. The single-founder venture — which is growing 1.5X month on month — is actively looking for seed funds to scale. Users can sign up for the startup’s services by just filling out a form containing details such as name and phone number. Post that, FindHope’s team reaches out to the user and asks them to take a few self-assessment tests. Based on the results, the team either connects the user to a peer counsellor or recommends a professional therapist in case of severe issues. “We want to make our platform a place to find hope when things fall apart, and we do that with technology that mixes engaging games with peer support,” Tharun says. FindHope’s competitors include a host of mental health platforms, including Wysa, 7 Cups, MindPeers, etc. — also based on a freemium model. ALSO READ World Mental Health Day: how corporates are ensuring the mental wellbeing of their employees As per an ASSOCHAM report, India has the highest rate of suicides in the 15-29 age category, with at least 42.5 percent of people working in the private sector battling depression or anxiety. About 60 percent of Indians facing mental health issues don’t seek help because of the stigma associated with mental illnesses. At present, there are merely three psychiatrists per 10 lakh Indians, making it one of the most underserved healthcare verticals in the world. The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDAI) only recently made it mandatory for health insurance companies to add mental illnesses as part of their coverage, the way they do for physical illness treatments. Edited by Suman Singh

MENTAL HEALTH HYDERABAD STARTUP MENTAL HEALTH STARTUPS STARTUP BHARAT STARTUP

Monday, April 12, 2021

From watchman to IIM professor, Ranjith pursued his dream with will and grit

From watchman to IIM professor, Ranjith pursued his dream with will and grit


All his life Ranjith R (28) lived in a leaky hut at Panathur in Kasaragod; his parents had studied only till Class 5

Published: 11th April 2021 05:28 AM | Last 


Ranjith's house

By George Poikayil
Express News Service

KASARGOD: “I was born in this house. I grew up in this house. I live in this house. With lots of happiness, let me tell you an assistant professor of the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) took birth here. I want to share my journey from this house to IIM-Ranchi. And I will consider it my success if this fuels at least one person’s dreams.”

Ranjith R, 28, who has a doctorate in Economics from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras, took over the Malayalam internet space a day ago after posting his incredible life journey on Facebook.

What especially tore at netizens’ heartstrings was the photograph of Ranjith’s house of 23 years -- an unplastered doorless two-room shed and a leaky tiled roof wrapped with black tarpaulin. 

Sharing the post, Finance Minister T M Thomas Isaac applauded the “extraordinary will power” displayed by Ranjith, whose journey to overcome social and financial backwardness to learn and grow reminded him of former Indian president K R Narayanan.

Ranjith

“He (Ranjith) is our inspiration and motivation. I am following in his footsteps,” said Ranjith’s younger sister Ranjitha K R, 24, who has a PG in Economics and a BEd. “He is the most qualified person in our family. I will be next,” she said. 

Ranjith was born to Ramachandran Naik, who worked as a neighbourhood tailor, and Baby R, who was a daily wage labourer under the rural job guarantee scheme, at Kelapankayam in Panathur.

The couple, who belong to the Marathi Scheduled Tribe community, had only studied till Class 5. However, they knew the importance of education, and admitted Ranjith to the government-run Model Residential School (MRS) for boys from tribal communities at Vellachal in Pilicode panchayat. 

“I was at MRS till Class 10. The government footed all my expenses. So I did not know much about the financial situation at home,” he told TNIE. 

For higher secondary education, Ranjith joined a government school at Balanthode, where he got interested in economics as a subject.

'Worked as watchman for Rs 3,500 per month'

After schooling, he joined St Pius X College in Rajapuram to pursue BA in Economics. This was the time he realised that the going was tough at home. Even as he was considering dropping out to help the family, he saw a job advertisement calling for a night watchman at the BSNL telephone exchange in Panathur. He applied, and ‘luckily’, got the job. “I worked as a watchman there for five years — all through my degree and post-graduation days,” he said. Though his salary was Rs 3,500 per month initially, it went up to Rs 8,000 per month in the fifth year. “I studied during the day and worked at night," he said. Ranjith topped his college that year.

After completing his post-graduation at the Central University of Kerala in Kasaragod, Ranjith joined the elite IIT-Madras for his PhD. At IIT, however, Ranjith felt like he was alone in the middle of a crowd. “I was even afraid to speak. Before coming to Chennai, I was used to speaking only in Malayalam.”

After a year, he decided to give up on his PhD because he felt “academically inadequate”. But his guide Dr Subash Sasidharan, an associate professor in the department, would have none of it. 

He took me out for lunch for a week and convinced me to fight once before accepting defeat, he said. “From then, I got this strong will to succeed. Many of Subash’s sir students were working in premier institutes. I also wanted to get there,” he said.

Ranjith went on to complete his PhD with three publications in four years and three months, and IIT gave him a fellowship for pre-doctoral research for the remaining nine months. “It was an incentive for completing my PhD early,” he said.

Last October, Ranjith applied for the post of assistant professor at IIM-Ranchi. By December, Bengaluru-based Christ University offered him a job at the Department of Economics. “The first thing I did was apply for a loan to build a home for my parents and siblings,” he said. Before the loan was sanctioned, however, he got the appointment letter from IIM. “A lot of dreams have wilted before they could bloom in thousands of huts like mine. They should be replaced by stories of realising those dreams,” he said. “That’s why I told my story.”