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West Bengal: Unredeemed promise

EducationWorld July 18 | EducationWorld
Since under her leadership, the unfancied Trinamool Congress (TMC) party famously routed the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM)-led Left Front government, which ruled West Bengal uninterruptedly for 34 years (1977-2011), in the historic assembly election of 2011, chief minister Mamata Banerjee has come a long way. But, even though TMC was re-elected in 2016, and Banerjee has established herself as a national leader after modestly reviving industry and agriculture growth in West Bengal, she hasn’t succeeded in redeeming her promise to radically reform the state’s education system and restore West Bengal’s top-ranked schools, colleges and universities — ruined by the mass infiltration of under-qualified CPM cadres into higher education institutions — to their pre-communist era glory. Instead, during the past seven years of TMC rule, there’s been frequent campus violence and student protests over petty issues, mass copying, and scandals over school and college admission procedures. Therefore, not a few independent academics contend that Banerjee’s inept management of several political issues has made the messy education situation she inherited from the Communists, worse.   For instance, the TMC government’s out-of-the-blue announcement on May 16 last year (2017) making Bengali a compulsory subject in classes I-X of all 92,000 government and over 8,000 private schools — regardless of exam board affiliation — aroused the ire of the already disgruntled Nepali-speaking Gorkha majority in the hill areas of the state where the writ of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM), a political party which dominates the semi-autonomous Gorkhaland Territorial Administration, runs large. The imposition of Bengali as a compulsory language for all schools prompted GJM to call a general strike which lasted a record 105 days and shut down all 48 schools in the hills, disrupting the studies of thousands of children from across India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Thailand, and Bhutan enrolled in legacy boarding schools of the hills.  “More than 35 percent of students left the boarding schools of the hills districts during the prolonged Gorkhaland statehood agitation of 2013, never to return and it took almost five years to stabilise the situation. The second agitation last year which shut down the hill schools for 105 days further damaged the image of our schools,” says Robindra Subba, promoter-director of the Himali Boarding School, Kurseong (HBS, estb.1978), and ranked West Bengal’s #1 co-ed boarding school in the EducationWorld India School Rankings 2017-18. Clearly, exasperated by repeated strikes, bandhs and civil unrest in the Darjeeling district, on May 25, HBS inaugurated its second campus in Siliguri (pop. 513,264), a town 35 km from Kurseong. “HBS, Siliguri, will offer the tried-and-tested education typical of the Darjeeling hills. We want Siliguri to experience it,” says Subba putting a brave face on the situation. In higher education as well, TMC’s record of the past seven years is unimpressive. Calcutta and Jadavpur universities have been poorly rated under the parameter of ‘regional diversity’ i.e, capability to attract students from outside the state or other countries, in the Union HRD ministry’s National Institutional Rankings Framework (NIRF) published in April. Calcutta
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