Institutional responsibility towards reserved category students doesnt end with seats
The suicide of a first-year reserved category student at AIIMS serves as a tragic reminder that reservations do not equal affirmative action. The death of Anil Kumar Meena,who was bright enough to get into one of the most selective educational institutions in the country but was allegedly unable to cope with the transition from learning in Hindi to English,should be a wake-up call for AIIMS and other institutes.
While the AIIMS sub dean has asserted that the institute does hold English lessons,these are optional,which is clearly not good enough. The IITs,for instance,mandate a language skills course in the first semester for all their students,with a mechanism to provide special instruction to students with poor English skills. Reservations may have been successful in creating equal opportunities for students coming from backward communities. But without true affirmative action that is cognisant of the myriad issues faced by these students after they have entered top institutions,the project remains incomplete.