Facebook Pixel Needed: A Bold Vision | India Today - news - Les denne historien på Magzter.com

Prøve GULL - Gratis

Needed: A Bold Vision

India Today

|

August 05, 2024

AS SOMEONE KEEN TO SEE THE WORLD of academe in India elevated to worthy heights I am often reminded of the lament-from the 1980s of one of India's most distinguished academics and a former vice-chancellor of Allahabad University. His anguish stemmed from the fact that somewhere along the way independent India had been unable to steer our universities in the right direction. By way of illustration, I can provide many insightful instances but perhaps none would be as telling as that which has Srinivas Ramanujan at its centre and which transpired more than a hundred years ago.

- PROF. DINESH SINGH

Needed: A Bold Vision

As most of us know, Ramanujan's name had been struck off the rolls of Madras University after he failed to clear his English language examination. But by then he had already produced some profound work in mathematics and it was evident to many senior contemporaries that he was no ordinary student. Yet, Madras University had no hesitation in stripping him of his scholarship and disqualifying him as a student. Soon after that shameful episode, G.H. Hardy that outstanding mathematician and humanist at Cambridge University-received a letter from Ramanujan. In no time he got Cambridge University to offer Ramanujan a handsome salary and a formal position. In addition, they awarded him their version of a proper doctoral degree, on the basis of the work he had produced in India. Remember, Ramanujan then had failed to clear the equivalent of the Grade 12 exam at Madras University. Did Cambridge care much about such formal niceties? Not when they understood that having Ramanujan in their midst would greatly enhance research at their institution.

Let us contrast that with the situation that prevails now, all these hundred and more years since Ramanujan's time in India. Had Ramanujan come to me at the University of Delhi when I served as its vice-chancellor (2010-15), I would not have been able to enrol him as a student at Delhi University nor would I have been allowed to award him a PhD degree. Of course, I would have hailed him as a mathematician with divine gifts, but the regulations-not of my choosing or making-imposed upon the university and others by weighty institutions that have charted the course of higher education in independent India would have prevented me from doing what Cambridge University could do for Ramanujan more than a hundred years earlier. To my mind, this more than aptly sums up what ails India's universities.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA India Today

India Today

Playing Ball

JOSÉ ANTONIO CACHAZA TALKS ABOUT HIS NEW BOOK, BREAKING INTO CRICKETLAND, ON THE CHALLENGES OF SELLING FOOTBALL TO INDIANS

time to read

1 min

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

CATCH ME IF YOU CAN

Sawan Barwal has broken a 48-year-old record to become India's fastest marathoner

time to read

1 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

The Retelling

NALINI MALANI'S LATEST WORK IS BEING SHOWCASED AT THE VENICE BIENNALE BY THE KIRAN NADAR MUSEUM OF ART

time to read

1 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

Full of Promise

KRISHNA JAYASANKAR MENON, with her venerable family heritage in sport, is looking to represent India in both shot put and discus throw at upcoming international games

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

A Missionary and His Maledictor

BJP seeks to atone in Goa after platforming an extreme YouTuber, angering Catholics

time to read

4 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

NOW, NARA SHAKTI

The new TDP working president has a lot on his plate: making Andhra Pradesh an investment magnet, possibly taking over the chief minister's chair, and priming for the 2029 assembly poll

time to read

6 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE BIG DAIRY PUSH

CM Mohan Yadav bets on breed improvement, technology and cooperatives to double milk output, but caste calculus appears to shape the push

time to read

4 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE RAPE OF A RIVER

Illegal sand mining is serially destroying the Chambal, one of India's most pristine river systems. Even Supreme Court admonitions fail against entrenched interests

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

URBAN JUNGLE

Conservation biologist Neha Sinha's Wild Capital is a passionate love letter to Delhi's natural environs

time to read

1 mins

May 11, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE EV ULTIMATUM

Delhi's draft EV Policy 2.0 proposes a hard shift from petrol two-wheelers alongside wider electrification mandates. But poor charging infrastructure comes in the way of its good intentions

time to read

5 mins

May 11, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size