University of Hyderabad notifies 76 reserved teaching posts after NCBC warning
Atul Krishna | May 17, 2023 | 02:38 PM IST | 2 mins read
Hyderabad University has faced criticism and National Commission enquiries over teacher appointment in OBC quota. It is now recruiting.
NEW DELHI : The University of Hyderabad has called for applications for 76 reserved teaching posts following a direction by the National Commission for Backward Classes (NCBC). The university vacancy notification, released on May 5, came after repeated protests from students and faculty, and letters from the NCBC which found that the university was not following the reservation policy.
The NCBC had earlier noted that the university did not fill the reservation roster for non-teaching staff and had even filled the posts with unreserved candidates. It also had noted that the university had swapped earmarked teaching posts and thereby kept no clear data on the number of reserved candidates and their seniority.
The University of Hyderabad has come under repeated scrutiny over the past few years for not following the reservation policy. It is now recruiting for posts reserved for posts reserved for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes (SC, ST, OBC).
OBC Quota Appointments: Protests, hearings
Members of the All India OBC Students Association (AIOBCSA), in 2020, had organised protests against the vice-chancellor, accusing him of “committing fraud against OBCs” by allegedly denying and violating reservation policy and “personally targeting students, non-teaching staff, and teaching faculty”.
In November 2020, NCBC had conducted a public hearing with students, teachers and non-teaching faculty as they received several complaints about discrimination in admissions, reserved posts going vacant, violation of reservation policies in the University of Hyderabad.
The NCBC even sent a letter to the university on December 12, 2020, asking for it to upload the reservation roster on the website within 15 days. However, according to the minutes of the meeting of the NCBC, the university did not heed this directive.
In September 2021, the NCBC again wrote to the UoH VC asking him to follow the directives of the commission. In January 2022, AIOBCSA again wrote a letter to the NCBC asking it to conduct an enquiry into why the directives were not followed.
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
]Oxford University college launches Savitribai Phule Scholarship for Dalit, Bahujan, Adivasi students
Oxford University: Oxford India Centre’s new study abroad scholarship is the only fully-funded UK scholarship to support historically-marginalised SC, ST, OBC students pursuing MSc programmes.
R. Radhika | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- Before NEET, CMC Vellore’s unique MBBS admissions tested aptitude along with merit; paper-leak restarts debate
- Jamia Millia Islamia student’s project can help Delhi’s unauthorised colonies ride out a heat wave
- Jadavpur University pro-VC: Faculty, new curriculum keep its BTech ‘globally relevant’ despite fund crunch
- St. Stephen’s College former principal back as English prof; against rules, say teachers, DU officials
- CBSE makes third language compulsory for Class 9 from July, with Class 6 books and shared teachers
- IIT Ropar’s ANNAM.AI is ‘green intelligence in action’ and future of agriculture technology: Project director
- Delhi HC halts recruitment at DU’s St. Stephen’s College after ad hoc teachers allege irregularities
- IIT Kharagpur tackling mental health crisis with ‘mothers’, mentors and an app: First student wellbeing dean
- NEET was far from fair even before paper-leak controversies
- Same Exam, Old Nightmare: NEET 2026 cancelled, paper-leak probe, NTA reform, re-neet – the story so far