The much-coveted Civil Services
Examination (CSE) conducted by the Union Public Service Commission
(UPSC) is mired in controversies, this time with regard to the English
component of CSAT.
The debate is not
just triggered by anti-English rhetoric; it pertains to sociological
equity and balance, upward social mobility, and constitutional
propriety.
Conducted in three stages, –
preliminary, main, and interview – the CSE is the exam through which
candidates for the prestigious IAS, IFS, IPS and the like are selected.
The imbroglio is related to the preliminary stage, which was introduced in a new format in 2011.
This
format called
CSAT is said to have been
designed to favour English
speakers at the cost of Hindi or other regional language speaking
students belonging to small towns who studied in government schools
The CSAT, introduced in 2011, English language comprehension skill (the
7th component of the 2nd paper 'Aptitude' of CSAT), was inserted through
the back door. Curiously nowhere there is any reference to the English
language comprehension component in the Alagh committee report, which
was submitted after thorough and insightful research
The point is not the difficulty level of these questions, but the inclusion of marks obtained in these questions to the total
According to data from 2005 to 2010, the
number of candidates passing through Hindi medium in Preliminary exam
was not much less in comparison to English medium candidates.
But
introduction of the English language comprehension component in the
Preliminary stage, saw a fall in the number of students passing through
Hindi medium in comparison to English medium candidates.
In
2011, when CSAT with the English language component was started, 9,324
candidates appeared in the Main exam in the English medium after passing
the preliminary exam whereas the number of the candidates appearing in
the Hindi medium in the Main exam clearing the preliminary was reduced
to only 1,700.
Students protest against the ntroduction of CSAT in Civil service exams outside the UPSC in New Delhi on Monday
July 28,2014
Civil service aspirants reject Govt's proposal not to count English marks Monday Aug 04,2014
Civil service aspirants on Monday rejected the government's proposal to not include English marks for gradation.
The protesting Union Public Service Commission Civil Service (UPSC)
aspirants said they were not satisfied with these changes and termed
them "too superficial".
Many
among them have said they will continue their fight for complete
scrapping of the CSAT paper and announced that they would protest at
Jantar Mantar from Tuesday Aug 05,2014
"We have been protesting for two months
now but our demands are different from what has been 'redressed' by the
honourable minister. We are not against English language per se but we
want the CSAT to be scrapped because of the nature of the CSAT paper II
which puts Hindi and Humanities students at a disadvantage," said
Laxman, a UPSC aspirant.
The
protests had intensified recently after applicants were issued admit
cards. Last week, a section of the protesters had burnt their admit
cards as a mark of defiance.
"We
demand complete scrapping of CSAT. We have decided to continue our
fight from Jantar Mantar," Pawan, a UPSC aspirant who has been leading
the protest, said.
Minister
of State for Personnel Jitendra Singh on Monday Aug 04,2014 announced in Parliament
that English marks of CSAT-II will not be included for gradation or
merit, and candidates of 2011, when CSAT was first introduced, may get
another chance to appear for the test next year.
Pawan said this was not what the protesters have been demanding.
"We never asked for modification of CSAT pattern. Instead, our demand
is to abolish this test for the welfare of lakhs of students who have
studied in Hindi medium," he said.
Another issue raised by students is the English to Hindi translation.
"The question papers have weird translations of English words which do
not make any sense. For example the word steel plant was translated into
'Lohe Ka Paudha' in one of the papers. How are we to give exams in such
a condition?" said a student, who did not wish to be named.
The
earlier format has a paper on general studies and one on an optional
subject, which has now been replaced by CSAT-I and CSAT-II.
The
CSAT-II carries 80 questions of 200 marks in all, of which 8-9
questions are based on English comprehension. These 8-9 questions, which
carry around 22 marks, will now no longer be counted in the overall
tally for gradation.
The CSAT comprises questions based on
communication skill, logical reasoning and analytical ability, basic
numeracy, data interpretation and English comprehension.
Opposition Protests Over 'Language Bias' Stall Rajya Sabha
In the
Rajya Sabha, opposition members from the Congress, Samajwadi Party (SP),
Bahujan Samaj Party, Communist Party of India–Marxist, CPI, Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
(AIADMK) staged a strong protest over the issue during Question Hour and
demanded the scrapping of the Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT).
They also wanted question papers for the preliminary examination in all regional languages.
Nine
opposition parties gave a notice to Chairman Hamid Ansari for
suspending Question Hour in Rajya Sabha so that a discussion could be
held on the issue
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