No decision yet on exempting IITs from reservation in teachers’ recruitment: Centre
R. Radhika | July 19, 2021 | 02:58 PM IST | 2 mins read
In December, a government panel led by IIT Delhi director had recommended exempting the IITs from reservation in faculty appointments.
A complete guide to IITs: Learn about the admission process, required cutoffs, fees, top branches, campus details, and updated placement statistics—all in one place.
Download NowNEW DELHI : The Union Government has not yet taken any decision on a government panel's recommendation to exempt Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) from reservations in teachers’ appointments, the education minister Dharmendra Pradhan informed Parliament on Monday.
Must See: IITs Comprehensive Guide
The education ministry had constituted a committee under the chairpersonship of the IIT Delhi director V Ramgopal Rao, in April last year. The committee had submitted a detailed report which was later referred to a standing committee of IIT Council for its recommendations. “No decision has been taken on the recommendations of the Committee yet,” Dharmendra Pradhan informed the lower house.
The committee had suggested exempting the IITs from quotas in the central scheme of reservation and including them in the Schedule of the Central Educational Institutions (Reservation in Teachers’ Cadre) Act 2019 . This law governs the institutions of excellence (IoEs), research institutions, and institutions of national and strategic importance and exempts them from granting caste-based reservation in faculty hiring.
The faculty recruitments in IITs are made through rolling advertisement, which is open to all eligible candidates throughout the year. The recruitment to non-teaching cadre is regulated by the guidelines of the department of personnel and training.
This committee had also recommended that reservation should only be given at the level of the assistant professor while associate professors and professors should be exempted.
The IITs have been frequently attracting critical attention for caste-based discriminations recently. In July, an assistant professor at IIT Madras’ humanities and social science department had resigned alleging caste discrimination by senior teacher and the administration. Earlier in April, IIT Kharagpur teacher Seema Singh was suspended from her position after extensive public criticism for hurling abuses at students belonging to historically marginalised communities.
The education minister further informed that “IITs were advised to follow the Government guidelines issued from time to time in the matter of reservation in admission of students and recruitment of staff. IITs have been carrying out a special recruitment drive for filling up of vacancies belonging to OBCs category, both in teaching and non-teaching cadre.”
As per the government data , till December 2018, the IITs had 149 Scheduled Caste and 21 Scheduled Tribes representation in total faculty strength of 8,856 in 23 IITs.
Write to us at news@careers360.com
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- What is the Rohith Act? Provisions, origin, politics of a draft law to combat caste discrimination on campus
- Minority Scholarships: Rs 3,400 crore unspent, panel says revive scheme in states ‘with no irregularities’
- Post-Matric Scholarship: Government plans to impose fee cap, raise income limit to Rs 4.5 lakh next year
- NMC to medical colleges: File monthly reports on student suicides, ragging cases, faculty vacancies
- Primary school teachers in Karnataka must serve 12 years before promotion, say new recruitment rules
- Jadavpur University civil engineer’s work on vernacular architecture and climate resilience wins plaudits
- Education Loan: PM-USP scholarships up 31.6% nationally, but J-K and Ladakh see 10.9% drop in 5 years
- Experts propose 7 spots for university townships in education ministry’s post-budget webinar
- Operation Kayakalp: ‘Jarjar’ schools in UP a blind spot – with crumbling buildings and children left behind
- Protest as ‘law and order issue’: Students note pattern of universities filing FIRs to tackle ‘disagreements’