Students of Osmania University prefer Telangana government jobs over UPSC

Blame quality of education at EOC for poor UPSC result

By :  v. nilesh
Update: 2015-11-02 06:51 GMT
Osmania University
HyderabadStudents of Osmania University (OU) are leaving no stone unturned to secure  a job in Telangana government, and await release of various job  notifications by the state government. While attendance in regular classes in OU is usually thin, the classes  conducted by the Equal Opportunities Cell (EOC) of the university are  witnessing thick attendance. This year, 4,600 students have enrolled  into various classes conducted by the cell to provide coaching in  subjects listed in syllabus for Group I and II by the Telangana State  Public Service Commission. For this, 87 teachers have been inducted.  Classes are also conducted for exams the state government conducts to  fill vacancies in departments like police, Panchayati Raj and legal  services.
 
Since the cell’s establishment in 2012, more than 300 students  attending these classes got placed for positions like sub-inspectors,  assistant public prosecutors, child development project officers and  village revenue officers.  However, students from OU are yet to make a  mark in the All India Services (AIS). Since 2012, just two students who took  coaching in EOC classes cracked the UPSC tests.
 
University officials say that students from OU  are not showing much  interest in central services due to lack of English skills. Manavata  Roy, a student activist from OU says, “Very few students from OU show  interest in central services and focus all their energies on state  services. The university may intensify its efforts to encourage them try for central services which have more openings every year.  
 
Moreover, getting UPSC coaching from private institutes costs  thousands of rupees, which many students from Osmania University cannot afford, as  they come from economically weak backgrounds.”  However, efforts of EOC might be hit by poor funding. Of the Rs 1.25crore allotted to the cell, just about Rs 30lakh has been released  in the last three years. This makes it impossible for the cell to give  study material or provide additional resources for learning. 
Students  rely completely on running notes. The honorarium given to faculty is also lower than that is given to those in private coaching institutes.
 
Manuu fails to make AIS officers:
 
Four batches of students have come out of the Civil Services  Examination Residential Coaching Academy in Maulana Azad National Urdu  University (Manuu) so far, but not even one  could  pass the exam. 
In the first three batches,  two students made it till the interview level. In the fourth batch,  seven students cleared the preliminary exam.
The academy was set up in 2009 by the ministry of human resource development for improving the intake of people belonging to religious  minorities and women in the All India Services.  
 
However, the academy  is not able to make a mark. 
By contrast, as many as 19 students got into the Civil Services from the Jamia Milia Islamia for the 2014 batch and 11 the previous year.  There too, a similar residential  academy is functional.  Lack of quality teaching staff is cited as a major problem with  Manuu.  Students of the previous batches also cite the lack of a conducive environment for infusing zeal and competitiveness among  students. 
 
A former student said, “Initial days of coaching were  spent on “motivating” students. This turned out to be quite boring.  For motivation, we need interactive sessions with young as well as  retired civil servants. Unfortunately, such interactions were rare.” Another student said, “There is the need for an atmosphere of  competitiveness. The academy, however, functions like any other  department. Students have to follow bureaucratic procedures to get  even a book. The library in the academy shuts down by 6 pm.” 
 
“Leaving aside one or two, most of the  faculty who used to teach us did not possess knowledge or required  skills to guide students preparing for a high-stakes exam like that of  the UPSC,” a student said. This year, students who cleared the prelims are being sent to  well-known coaching centers in Ashok Nagar. However, students demand that some arrangement be made to bring  in high quality teachers at the stage of preliminary coaching too. 

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