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

Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Kota Collector's letter to parents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kota Collector's letter to parents. Show all posts

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Kota Collector Pens Emotional Letter to Parents of IIT Aspirants - The Quint

INDIA | 3 min read
Kota Collector Pens Emotional Letter to Parents of IIT Aspirants

The Quint

May 4, 2016, 7:33 pm

Worried about the disturbing rise in suicide rates in Kota, a concerned district collector has written a heartfelt letter to parents who send their children to the city for coaching.
Over the past years, the small Rajasthani city of Kota has earned a name for itself as the prime coaching location for the lakhs of aspirants who set their sights on a seat in the country’s best medical and engineering colleges.
However, in the past years, Kota has repeatedly found itself in the news for its high suicide rates among unhappy students.
District Collector Dr Ravikumar Surpur asked parents to allow their children to be free and encourage them to consider alternative career options to explore their full potential.

The Harsh Reality Behind Kota Suicides
Surpur says that he considers himself unfortunate to have read so many suicide notes from youngsters.
In their suicide notes, students have begged their parents not to force their younger siblings onto the same path. While others have apologised to their parents for not living up to their expectations. Others simply stated that learning science was not what they wanted.
Surpur explains that the students felt that death was a more peaceful, effortless escape from what their parents were forcing on them.
He implores parents to really listen to their children and not force them into careers that they don’t like. Furthermore, he stresses the importance of spending ample time with children without complaining.
Are we interested in making the child realise “Your Dreams” at any cost or should it be like creating such situations that the child realises “His/Her” Dreams, asks Surpur in his letter.

1.5 lakh students flock from other states to Kota’s multiple coaching centres to prepare for hyper-competitive exams like the IIT-JEE, AIPMT and AIEEE. (Photo : iStockphoto)
High Burnout Rates and Extreme Pressure Forces Students Over the Edge
According to a Times of India report, over 1.5 lakh students flock from other states to Kota’s multiple coaching centres to prepare for hyper-competitive exams like the IIT-JEE, AIPMT and AIEEE.
However, most of the students who come for coaching are unprepared for the mental strain that such intensive studying can have. With 18-hour study schedules and dismal living conditions, the students are faced with a high burnout rate which results in physical, mental and emotional exhaustion.
A report from NDTV claims that nineteen students killed themselves in 2015 why five have killed themselves this year.
According to psychologists, mental breakdowns, suicidal tendencies, headaches and other mental ailments have been commonplace amongst the students who are under constant pressure from their families, peers and teachers.

In January 2016, The Indian Express reported that Collector Surpur had written a letter to the students of the city urging them to really enjoy life and play games. The district administration also directed coaching institutes to have a “fun, no studies” day to relax.

Read the complete letter here.


Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Do not burden your children, Kota DC tells parents after yet another suicide - Indian Express


The five-page letter by Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur has been dispatched to the coaching institutes in the city and will be forwarded to the parents after translation into Hindi and other regional languages.


By: PTI | Kota | Updated: May 2, 2016 3:48 pm


Students moving towards their coaching centers in Kota. Photo for representational purposes only. Express Photo by Praveen Khanna.

Moved by the tragic case of a 17-year- old IIT aspirant who committed suicide a day after clearing her exam, the Kota district collector has written an emotional letter to parents of over 1.50 lakh students in coaching institutes, asking them not to force their expectations on the children.
The five-page letter by Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur has been dispatched to the coaching institutes in the city and will be forwarded to the parents after translation into Hindi and other regional languages.

Referring to suicides by young students, the district collector wrote that for all of them death was a much peaceful and effortless action than going through the dilemma of artificially doing what their parents wanted them to do.
“Your solacing words of comfort, asking them to give their best and forget the results could have been the blade of grass” that would have saved precious lives, he wrote, adding, instead, what they got were threats to perform even better.

“Should parents go the children’s immature way? Not necessarily.” Surpur has made an emotional appeal in the letter, asking parents “not to force their expectations and dreams on their children” and “let them do what they want and are able to do”. Besides, the district administration has also decided to seek feedback on stress level of students in various institutes to check for signs of anxiety among them. The initiative came after the recent suicide by IIT-JEE aspirant Kriti who took the extreme step on April 28 despite having cleared IIT-JEE mains in the result declared a day before her suicide. At least 19 aspirants ended their lives in 2015 while five students have taken the extreme step in 2016. Surpur also mentioned a recent suicide letter by a young girl, written in perfect grammar and in beautiful running handwriting, where she thanked her mother for giving up her career for raising the children. In another suicide note, a girl requested her parents to allow her younger sister to do what she likes. The district collector also asked the parents and children to look beyond engineering and medicine for their career. Surpur had also written a letter to students and parents in January this year telling them that life is beautiful and clearing an exam is not everything. Meanwhile, the district administration held a meeting with the officials of coaching institutes and hostel owners on Saturday regarding the implementation of its guidelines issued a few months ago for checking stress among the coaching students. 

- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/after-yet-another-suicide-kota-dc-writes-to-parents-not-to-burden-the-children-2780563/#sthash.LYoePcky.dpuf

Kota District Collector's Letter To IIT Aspirants' Parents - NDTV


All India | NDTV.com | Updated: May 02, 2016 15:16 IST

After another IIT aspirant killed herself in Kota, a Collector writes to parents saying they should not force their dreams on their children. (File Photo)
KOTA:  After IIT aspirant's suicide, a senior administration official, Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur, has sent an emotional Letter to the parents of 1.5 lakh students who are enrolled for coaching in Kota, urging them "not to force their expectations and dreams on their children". He advises, "Let them do what they want and are able to do".


From Kota, IIT's Biggest Outpost, An Emotional Appeal To Parents - NDTV

From Kota, IIT's Biggest Outpost, An Emotional Appeal To Parents

All India | Reported by Harsha Kumari Singh, Edited by Surabhi Malik (With agency inputs) | Updated: May 03, 2016 09:10 IST

After another IIT aspirant killed herself in Kota, Collector writes to parents saying they should not force their dreams on their children.

KOTA: 
HIGHLIGHTS
  1. Five students have killed themselves at Kota this year
  2. 'Don’t force dreams upon students,' Kota officer writes to parents
  3. Letter sent to parents of 1.5 lakh students taking coaching classes

Over the past many years, Kota in Rajasthan has become a crucial stopover for students who want to be among the nearly 10,000 that IITs accept every year.  The small desert town, nearly 250 km from Jaipur, accommodates a range of coaching institutes to prep students for the IIT entrance exam.

The pressure is relentless.  Last week, a 17-year-old student killed herself even though she cleared the exam because she felt she should have scored higher. Now, a senior administration official, Collector Ravi Kumar Surpur, has sent a letter to the parents of the 1.5 lakh students who are enrolled for coaching in Kota, urging them "not to force their expectations and dreams on their children". He advises, "Let them do what they want and are able to do".

In his letter, Mr Surpur refers to the suicide note by the student who has urged her parents to let her younger sister opt for the subject and career of her choice, rather than one enforced upon her.

The Collector's five-page letter has been sent to all coaching institutes with instructions for it to be translated and dispatched to all parents.  

Last year, 19 students in Kota killed themselves while so far this year, five students have committed suicide.

The district administration has also decided to ask students to share feedback on the main causes of their stress, and how they usually cope with it. Officials have also met with those running coaching institutes for discussions on how to ensure the mental and emotional equilibrium of students.

Read Kota Collector's letter to parents here: