Late last week NUJS Kolkata faculty and elected student representatives submitted letters to the college administration running to dozens of pages of grievances, including declining faculty standards and opaque, apparently arbitrary decision-making from the top, reported the Times of India earlier today.
Following an academic council (AC) meeting yesterday (21 July), vice chancellor (VC) Professor Ishwara Bhatt agreed to several changes in respect of future recruitment and staffing processes at the college.
Noojie SJA: Taking up the cause
The Student Juridical Association (SJA) wrote, a letter to the registrar, academic council and executive council members on behalf of the NUJS student body on 19 July 2013.
The letter closed with the students urging the recipients โto treat this matter with the utmost urgency and act upon it in a way that can restore NUJS to its former glory of boasting the best faculty in the countryโ.
In particular, students complained about the recent departure of well-respected and qualified faculty members and the administrationโs slow progress in filling the vacancies, especially in terms of permanent faculty:
โNot only is it becoming curiously difficult for a prestigious institution like ours to retain its best faculty, but its inability to find suitable replacements is even more tragic. A natural consequence of this problem has been that many a time, teachers are compelled to double up for courses that are not their area of specialization or are overburdened with too many courses.โ
Furthermore, new candidates were neither being screened as rigorously as before nor were the positions advertised properly, alleged the SJA, resulting in one teacher who had not yet obtained his LLM degree, teaching a compulsory subject such as banking law.
Bhatt told Legally India that all future society, committee and hiring positions would be placed before faculty members to take into account their inclinations and preferences.
He added that they would aim to recruit for all the vacant positions at the college โ two associate professors, and four assistant professors, according to Bhatt โ within around โthree months or soโ.
On top of that, the SJA pointed out perceived issues in transparency, relating to exam grading, unfair allocation of elective courses on a first-emailed-first-served basis and anti-plagiarism measures.