Sreemoy Talukdar - CBSE paper leak: Incompetent board and a bumbling minister
Mathematics (Class X)
and economics (Class XII) are crucial papers that shape a million futures.
Students are reportedly apprehensive that the revised papers might be tougher
than the ones they have cleared. This possibility cannot be dismissed, as the
fear that a tougher paper might adversely affect the students' prospects.
The CBSE failed at
multiple points. It failed to ensure the sanctity of a system on which rests
the future of our children. It failed again when the issue of a leaked
mathematics paper was brought to the notice of CBSE chief Anita Karwal the
night before the exam through an email to her official ID.
Like a true
bureaucrat, the Gujarat-cadre IAS officer ostensibly ignored the mail. A prompt
notice of the exam's postponement till a later date could have saved the day.
The inconvenience of appearing for a cancelled exam is considerably lower than
having to clear it twice.
The board was guilty
twice of dereliction of duty and it failed the third time when it issued a
casual notification asking the students to reappear for the exams while chief
Karwal went incommunicado, ostensibly to take advantage of a long weekend. She
eventually surfaced when the situation has spun out of control to declare that: “We have taken the decision in favour
of the students and in utmost fairness. Very soon we will announce the dates
(for re-test). Students don't have to worry about anything. We are with them.”
In case the CBSE
chairperson needs reminding, forcing the students to suffer for board's
incompetence isn't synonymous with "favour". Mere words that "we
are with you" when actions tell otherwise are of no help. Karwal's
reaction reveals the mindset of an official who has grown accustomed to wielding
power sans accountability — in short an incompetent bureaucrat among many such
who wheel the system and hinder, not help, India's progress. Her approach to a
crisis speaks of irresponsibility, callousness and insensitivity. If the
students have now broken into a protest, refused to be penalized for the
Board's crime and demanded justice, their outrage is justified.
If the CBSE failed its
students, so did the Union HRD ministry. Prakash Javadekar's failure lies not
only in ensuring a fool-proof system for exam, he also failed miserably to
mitigate the crisis. He had little to offer in news conferences beyond an
assurance that such leaks won't happen again. Few take a politician's promise
seriously. Javadekar appeared clueless and short of ideas beyond placatory
noises when affected students and their families wanted to see some
accountability.
However, the
minister's bigger failure lies in his inability to crack the whip and showing
Karwal the door. Surely some amount of accountability needed for a systemic
failure on this scale? Justice, in this case, not only should be done but also
seen to be done. The sum of all the chaos that we have witnessed so far is this
— over 28 lakh students must appear for a retest while the CBSE refuses to show
any contrition or tender apology for its recklessness, and the minister fails
to hold even one individual within the system that he runs, as responsible. The final
responsibility for this real and perceived injury lies with the prime minister,
as does the burden of his Cabinet colleague's inability to deal with a crisis.
Modi's outreach to the young and proactive efforts to make them a part of the
'New India' story now lies in tatters...
http://www.firstpost.com/politics/cbse-paper-leak-incompetent-board-and-a-bumbling-minister-may-have-queered-narendra-modis-pitch-in-2019-exam-4412503.html