Dear Friends,
A group of Union Public Service Commission Civil Services aspirants
have been protesting against the alleged bias against rural, humanities,
Hindi and regional language students in the Civil Services Aptitude
Test paper of the preliminary stage. The issue has led to protests
even in Parliament with the Centre forced to respond by recommending that marks of English comprehension in the 2014 CSAT preliminary exam will not be taken into account.
even in Parliament with the Centre forced to respond by recommending that marks of English comprehension in the 2014 CSAT preliminary exam will not be taken into account.
Trinamool Congress Rajya Sabha MP Derek O'Brien has outlined his
party's stand in a blog on his website. Derek called the Centre's
proposal a knee-jerk reaction and advocated for a better approach.
Below is the full text:
Wednesday saw a lively discussion in Parliament on the Civil Services
Examination conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC).
The issue is out on the streets, with candidates, particularly from
Hindi-speaking states, protesting about the format of the preliminary
examination. They want the removal of the English language comprehension
test and of the Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT), which tests soft
skills such as communication and problem solving.
In a knee-jerk reaction, the government has dropped the English
language comprehension component, but this hasn't solved the problem.
The controversy is a complex one, especially in a country of such
linguistic diversity and divergence in English language use. It follows
that the solution should be nuanced as well. A sledgehammer approach -
drop this paper, cut out that language - will not do.
Candidates who appear for the Civil Services Examination take two
general studies papers at the preliminary level. They can take these in
Hindi or English. These are multiple-choice tests of basic general
knowledge, the CSAT, and till 2013, the English comprehension section
("Where do you place a handkerchief? In (a) a shoe; (b) a pocket..." and
so on).
Those who qualify for the main examination, sit nine additional
papers. Of these two are qualifying papers - English and one modern
Indian language. The English paper is worth 300 marks. Even if the
candidates avoid the English test at the preliminary stage, they cannot
avoid it when it comes to the main examination.
The main examination also tests the candidates in four general
studies papers and two papers in any one specialised subject - it could
range from physics to economics. These subject papers can be taken in
not just English or Hindi but a variety of Indian languages.
Following this, those who qualify from the main examination are
interviewed. Successful candidates are then trained for about two years.
The shortest training period is for the Indian Revenue Service (18
months) and the longest for the Indian Foreign Service (three years,
including foreign language training).
What is Trinamool's solution? India's variety of languages and
the fact that many good, suitable civil service candidates may not come
from English-speaking families is a reality. On the other hand, the
ability to use English in working life, whether in government or the
private sector, is also a reality.
As such, we have four suggestions:
• Just like the optional subject papers in the main examination
can be answered in any one of many Indian languages listed in the Eighth
Schedule, there should be - from 2015 - provision for translation of
the preliminary examination papers as well. Candidates should be able to
appear for the two papers in their mother tongue or the language of
their choice, not just English or Hindi.
• CSAT should not be summarily rejected or blindly defended. It
has its uses in today's world and needs to be debated by all
stakeholders - candidates, academics, public administration specialists,
former civil servants, even human resource consultants from the private
sector.
• The English comprehension test at the preliminary stage should
be permanently dropped, as the government has already agreed to do for
this year. The 300-mark English paper at the main examination stage
should and must be retained.
• Successful candidates should have English language training,
particularly spoken English training, as part of their first-year
programme. They should be imparted 300 hours of spoken English training
over 12 months, with 100 hours coming in the first three months. This is
what language specialists recommend for non-native speakers.
In this regard, I would like to point out Mamata Banerjee, when
she was railway minister, made sure Indian Railway recruitment
examinations were conducted in all languages of the Eighth Schedule. As
West Bengal chief minister, she has adopted this inclusive policy when
it comes to the State Public Service Commission examinations. Even
OlChiki, the language of the Santhali tribal people, has been brought
into the examination process, to increase the social base of government
recruitment.
Language is a sensitive issue in our country. In some states,
there are apprehensions about English. In other states, there are
apprehensions about Hindi. As such, this matter needs to be tackled with
deft. However, it is also important for those in the upper echelons of
government, or any job, really, to be conversant with English. Rightly
or wrongly, it is the language much of the world uses.
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