29 May 2012

Rest in peace JEE...you will be missed!


Yesterday marked the day when JEE was killed. I am extremely distressed at the disconnect politicians and bureaucrats have from the masses. I have done well as an IITian but had the system been so in my times, I would never have been an IITian.


A comment from Chairman of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), Vineet Jain, - "This will bring about a big change in the teaching-learning in the classroom" makes me wonder how this will happen. Will the quality of our secondary school teachers change over the next 10 years Mr. Jain? Have you even met tier 2/3 school class 12 teacher in the last few years Mr. Jain or are you only meeting the principals and directors of public schools in Delhi? Do you seriously believe a typical tier 3 city student has a chance of competing with a tier 1 city student in class 12. The only way the playing field can be leveled is if the poor tier 3 city kid spends a large amount of money to stay in hostel in a tier 1 city himself to study at the same quality place. Where a kid used to do so for only 1 year of JEE preparation so far, he would perhaps do so for 2 years of inter college too now.


This will just make small town students miserable. Even pandering to the wishes of unethical teachers who want to teach only at private tuition at home wouldn't help poor kids score in board exams because most of these small town school teachers anyways don't have their fundamentals in place. And if kids don't pander to their wishes, they are screwed in even bigger ways. My geography teacher in 10th didn't tell me in school that board exam has a 10 mark question on maps. He told so to his students at his private tuition classes and asked them to be quiet about it at school. I figured this only a day before the final board exam, tried desperately to understand maps at the last minute but ultimately lost on all 10 marks. Result - I scored just 63 marks in Geography, substandard looking at my larger academic record.


And why just go to a small town. I shifted to a mini metro city in 12th late in July, when 1st term exams were almost there. I scored 94 in those exams, thanks to a phenomenal tutor I had in my previous town. I used to study the legendary R.S. Agarwal book till that time in my own style. However, soon I figured that this maths teacher promoted a maths guide by a different author to the extent that he would beat us up physically if we were not showing hand-written solutions to the problems in that book. Now with my limited time, I had to give up my favourite R.S. Agarwal and switch to a different book just because this teacher was promoting it. It added one more adjustment to my already disturbed schedule (Remember, I had just joined this new school). Moreover, my freedom of solving the problems my way was lost. To me writing every line of solution in a notebook wasn't important but I had to do so to prove to this teacher that I was studying his 'favorite' book. All of this resulted in significant loss of time for me and I had 72 marks in my 2nd term.


Now, Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain, I still made it to IIT because class 10 and class 12 DID NOT matter in my entry to IITs. Though my substandard knowledge from school education did put me a bit behind my metro public school counterparts but I made up for it through my hard work in the 1 year local JEE coaching. If you sit for an hour in a school's class 12 room and in a JEE coaching institute Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain, you would figure out the difference in quality of education yourself. What we need Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain is therefore not a change in entrance criteria for any exam but a change in the quality of our teachers. I am waiting for any such working plan from you Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain.


Please forgive my language in this post Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain but this is coming from the first hand experience of a person who seriously doesn't believe in your 12 year education system. Times change, systems change, why can you guys not be comfortable with the shift of importance from class 12 to engineering entrance? Has telecommunication not made India post irrelevant today, then why does our poor old class 12 have to remain relevant? Why can it not give in to evolution?!

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