Wednesday, October 31, 2012


Maha is 17 on edu index, behind Gujarat, Kerala

Sandeep Ashar TNN 


Mumbai: The state is steadily losing its ground on education. It has slipped four points to the 17th position in the Centre’s education development index. 
    The Union government carries out the annual ranking exercise based on various aspects influencing the quality, outreach, infrastructure and performance of students. The latest findings are based on surveys across the country in 2010-11. Maharashtra ranked 13th following a similar exercise in 2009-10.It witnessed a decline in ranking in both the primary (class I to IV), and upper primary (class V to VIII)categories. In the primary section, it dropped one rank from 14 in 2009-10 to 15 in 2010-11. The decline is starker in the upper primary section, where it slipped from 13(2009-10)to18(2010-11). 
    During a state cabinet meeting on Wednesday, the school education,higher and technical education departments were severely criticized by several ministers, following which chief minister Prithviraj Chavan ordered appointment of a core group comprising senior experts and education experts to oversee and chart an improve
ment in the state’s education standards.Chavan also directed both the school education and higher and technical education departments to give a presentation on the existing education standards to the cabinet. 
    Congress minister Narayan Rane raised the issue during a discussion on non-salary grants for schools, questioning the lack of quality of education in schools. The District Information System for Education report was then cited by the administration. 
    While Puducherry and Lakshwadeep retained the top two slots in the latest rankings, Punjab was third. Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka and Kerala were all ranked aheadof Maharashtra. 
Govt grants for primary schools Despite objections from the state finance department, the cabinet on Wednesday approved a proposal to provide non-salary grants to primary and upper primary schools from April 2013. It will benefit over 20,000 schools. The grants, discontinued in 2004, were for libraries, laboratories, toilets, etc and cost the state over Rs 330 crore annually. TNN



Various parameters like access to education, infrastructure, teacherpupil ratio and students’ performance, were used


Source:::: The Times of India, 01-11-2012, p.04. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Fair Use Victory for Librarians

By paufderheide
Created 2012-10-15 16:18
Posted by Patricia Aufderheide [1] on October 15, 2012

The latest judicial ruling on fair use validates librarians’ judgment in their Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Academic and Research Libraries, which the Center helped to produce.
In Authors Guild v. Hathitrust, associations of publishers sued libraries that had permitted Google to digitize their books. Once Google digitized the book, the libraries then made a digital archive of them (the Hathitrust Digital Library or HDL), used the text to allow searches for text, and made them available, where there was no commercial copy, to the disabled.
The judge ruled [2] that the libraries had the right to repurpose the text because their uses were transformative (the concept that also anchors the librarians’ and other communities’ codes of best practices in fair use). Judge Baer wrote, “The use to which the works in the HDL are put is transformative because the copies serve an entirely different purpose than the original works: the purpose is superior search capabilities rather than actual access to copyrighted material.” He pointed to the fact that academics are already doing new kinds of searches through “text mining,” and that the sight-impaired’s use of digital copy (which can be read out loud with the right software) is a transformative use as well.
Copyright scholars are giving this a thumbs up for both libraries and fair use. Scholar James Grimmelman called it a “near-complete victory” [3]  and the Association of Research Libraries’ blog post [4] noted:
Judge Baer’s opinion should sound delightfully familiar to anyone who’s read Principles 3, 5, and 7 of the Code, which describe the consensus of academic and research librarians around preservation, accessibility, and non-consumptive uses (like search and text mining). Like the librarians, Judge Baer recognizes that these activities are “transformative,” especially the search and accessibility aspects.
Judge Baer also made a rousing defense of copyright policy as a policy intended to promote the creation of culture in his closing comments (as copyright scholar Kevin Smith noted [5]):
I cannot imagine a definition of fair used that would not encompass the transformative uses made by the defendants and would require that I terminate this invaluable contribution to the progress of science and the cultivation of the arts that at the same time effectuates the ideals of the ADA.
Whew. Librarians can get back to work. 


Links:
[1] http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/blog/paufderheide
[2] http://www.tc.umn.edu/~nasims/HathivAG10_10_12.pdf
[3] http://laboratorium.net/archive/2012/10/10/hathitrust_wins
[4] http://policynotes.arl.org/
[5] http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2012/10/11/a-big-win-for-fair-use-and-libraries/
[6] http://twitter.com/share

Monday, October 15, 2012

UGC norms for selection of state univ VCs relaxed

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Chennai: The University Grants Commission (UGC) has decided to relax norms for selection of vice-chancellors (VCs) in state universities. On Sunday, UGC chairman Ved Prakash said the move followed requests from several state governments to easethestandards. 
    There has been speculation for morethan a month now thatselection normswouldbe relaxed. Prakash said that from now, selection norms prescribed by the UGC will not be mandatory for the state-run universities. Speaking at the 75th convocation of Dakshina Bharat Hindi Prachar Sabha Madras in Chennai, he said it was the responsibility of the state to maintain quality and transparency in the VC-selection process. 
    The present UGC norms insist that a VC candidate should have a minimum of 10 years experience as professor in a university or 10 years of experience in an equivalent position in a reputed research and/or academic administrative organization. With the recent move,these normswould nolonger be mandatory. 
    Refusing to comment on allegations that political interference plays a major role in the appointment of VCs, Prakashsaidthedecision was taken because several states had sought freedom in carrying out appointmentof university heads.He,however, refused to say if there was a requestfrom theTN government. 
    Senior professors and academicians in the state say the move will only facilitate more corruption. Tamil Nadu, for instance, has a dubious re
cord in VC selection over the last decade. Recently, a VC seeking favours fell at the feet of a politician. Another was suspended on corruption charges and, in a third instance, a VC’s residence was raided by anti-corruption sleuths. 
    A Narayanan, an academician who has filed several petitions seeking transparency in the appointments of VCs and registrarsin thestate universities said the reason for relaxing norms remains unknown. 
    “We have VCs who knew how to find their way to the top post overnight. They are either relatives of politicians or someone from a dominant caste. When money, caste and political power decides VCs and registrar posts in state universities, UGC relaxation will further decay the system,” hesaid. 
    Ved Prakash also refuted reports of cancelling the autonomy of the Madras Christian College. “MCC has submitted all the documents we sought for verification and the autonomywas puton hold only till we complete the verification process,” hesaid.


Source:::: The Times of India, 15-10-2012, p.14. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&AW=1350288044348

ON A DIGITIZATION MISSION TO RESCUE RARE BOOKS

Two academicians have been collecting rare journals, census reports, gazettes & books on South Asian history for the last 8 years to digitize them for easy access

Shreya Roy Chowdhury | TNN 



    For the last eight years, a group of academics have been on a rescue mission. Finding procuring material for research a Herculean task during their own fieldwork, two research fellows started gathering rare books and documents on South Asian history with the intention of digitizing them for easy access to researchers. They collected books from waterlogged homes, dusty government shelves, even bathrooms and on November 7, the South Asian Research Foundation will launch the digital archive containing completely searchable digitized versions of five million pages. 
    The first batch of two-lakh pages was purchased from the stalls of halfa-dozen rare-book dealers at the 2005 Kolkata Book Fair. Boria Majumdar and Sharmistha Gooptu were collecting material “randomly” till they formed the foundation in 2008 and got more organized. These included many 19th century Bangla journals, government censuses from the British era and gazettes. The online library will include early editions of William Jones’ works and of the Asiatic Review (from 1780’s), full sets of law reports (from 1870s), film ephemera (film 
pamphlets with synopses of films and songs from the 1930s and ’40s), about 200 journals, census reports, medical histories and government reports. “The colonial government was in the habit of producing reports,” says Gooptu. There are reports on increasing the number of “pubic latrines” in Bombay, on sale of rotten fish in Kolkata, statistics of cholera epidemics and problems of urbanization and housing in Bombay — all from the early 20th century. They’ve been painstakingly gathered from government offices, private collectors and rarebooks-dealers. About 15% of the documents are in Bangla — more languages may be added later — and series of documents will come with an introductory note from the editors. 
    And because bibliophiles don’t really know where to stop, the duo have found documents being stored in unlikely places – the most extreme case being that of a Hatibagan (Kolkata) collector who’d stacked on a platform of bricks, a lot he couldn’t accommodate in the rooms, in the damp bathroom. The foundation’s project manager spent an entire day in the bathroom sifting through the material and found in it, records of proceedings of the Governor General in council and Lieutenant Governor General in council, starting from the 1910s. In 2008, Majumdar had discovered journals of the Botanical Society in a private 
residence in Dumdum. “It was monsoon, there was waterlogging inside the house and there, in knee-deep water, I found the soaked copies of the journals,” he says. 
    Once rescued, the foundation does what it can to preserve the documents. The original hardcopies are housed in a rented a three-floor property on Diamond Harbour Road, near Taratala, Kolkata. Before a digitized version can be created, books are treated to deal with the pinholes and the yellowing. Pest control treatments twice every month keep the worms at bay. 
    “The archive building is not airconditioned and the cost of maintenance is high. We will donate the entire archive to the government, and the HRD ministry has been very cooperative and has agreed to set up a library and call it South Asia Archive,” says Majumdar. United Kingdombased publisher, Routledge, is funding the digitization process and will also take care of marketing to educational institutions outside India. Within the country, the team has received support from the University Grants Commission. Majumdar assures that the material will be available at a reasonable price to institutions and individuals. The couple’s paying for the purchase and preservation themselves. 
    On their collection drives, they have encountered dealers for whom rare books is purely a business proposition and genuine collectors who’ve dedicated a lifetime of work — and large sections of their homes — to them. “They don’t possess degrees and are humble backgrounds but have a great appreciation and respect for learning. If they make Rs.1,000 in a month, they’ll spend Rs. 2,000 on pestcontrol. That’s the typical profile,” says Gooptu. They found one of the earliest English commentaries on the Upanishads from such a collector, in Bardhaman. 
    “His books had taken up an entire room in a small house,” says Gooptu, “His wife was happy to see them go.”

NEW LIFE: The page of a rare journal before and after it was processed for digitization




Source:::: The Times of India, 15-10-2012, p.14. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&AW=1350288044348


Thursday, October 4, 2012

Small towns fuel online education boom
Market set to double in five years
Priyanka Golikeri l Bangalore
A growing demand for education from smaller towns is giving a big impetus to the domestic online education market.
With access to computers increasing day by day, people from smaller towns such Ranaghat, Sardar Sahar, Tonk and Talipramba that have populations from some thousands to a few lakh are looking for online tools to update themselves and get access to certificate courses and degrees.
This is set to double India’s online education market to $40 billion by 2017 from the present $20 billion, according to industry estimates.
Take an example of Manju, a 22-year-old history graduate from Gulbarga, Karnataka, who is a history graduate is currently undergoing an online course in retail management and would even take her exams online.
A dearth of institutes offering diverse courses in her region has prompted her to take up the e-course, which will fetch her a certificate from the Retailers Association of India. Her school-going sister, too, regularly uses online tools to understand concepts in physics and math.
Experts say like the metros, the demand for online education is galloping each day in places such as Chiplun (Maharashtra), Hissar (Haryana), Kannur (Kerala) and Churu (Rajasthan).
The proliferation of computers is also fuelling the trend.
The sale of personal computers rose 16% in financial year 2011-12, compared to the previous year, as per data by the Manufacturers Association for Information Technology (MAIT). About 10.8 million units of desktop computers, notebooks and netbooks were sold during April 2011-March 2012.
Pavan Chauhan, MD of online education firm Meritnation, said the demand comes not just for higher education, but also from school students.
“Students from kindergarten to class 12 (K-12) express a need for assessment modules and animation videos to understand concepts in various subjects. They see online education as something which supplements formal education,” said Chauhan.
Meritnation has about 33-34 lakh students registered from ICSE and CBSE boards in the K-12 domain, with nearly half hailing from small towns.
Edukart, which operates in the higher education space of e-learning, has tapped about 7,000 people since its inception November last year.
“There is a strong demand from working professionals, housewives and people who could not attend formal institutes,” said Ishan Gupta, CEO of Edukart.
Edukart currently offers courses in retail, computers, etc, through its tie-ups with the RAI and Computer Society of India. Gupta said the firm would branch out into areas such as hospitality, telecom and energy soon.
“We are looking at tapping 30,000-40,000 people in the next two years,” said Gupta.
While Meritnation would restrict its focus to K-12 in the near future, Chauhan said Edukart aims to reach out to one crore school children in the next few years.


Source:::: DNA, 04-10-2012, p.14. http://epaper.dnaindia.com/epapermain.aspx?pgNo=14&edcode=820009&eddate=2012-10-04

Wednesday, September 26, 2012


The deafening truth about mobiles

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Mumbai: When 21-year-old Hiten, a Dadar resident, started complaining of a whistling sound in his right ear, he thought it was an infection. But ENT specialist Divya Prabhat shocked the youngster with his diagnosis: hearing loss. 
    “An audiogram revealed that he had significant hearing loss in his right ear, the one he favoured while talking on his phone,” said the doctor. While the jury is still out on the connection between shiny new phones, personal listening devices and hearing loss, Dr Prabhat said he found no other reason for Hiten’s galloping hearing loss. 
    During World Deafness Week, which this year has ironically coincided with Mumbai’s favourite but noisy festival, Ganeshotsav, doctors and activists feel it is time to draw a connection between lifestyle and hearing loss. “Previously, I would get patients with complaints of tinnitus (ringing sound in the ears) in their 60s, but now I have patients in their twenties,” said Dr Prabhat. 
    Overusing mobile phones, say doctors, is also associated with rising incidence of vestibular schwannoma (also referred to as acoustic neuroma or benign tumour growing on the nerve). “It is felt that the incidence of vestibular schwannoma would be 50% higher in mobile users than nonusers,” said Dr Prabhat. 

A loud warning for youth 
Long hours on phone, listening to loud music affects hearing, say docs Today, youngsters hit by ear ailments for long associated with those in their 60s Listening to sounds over 80 decibels for four hours will damage ear, warns WHO Activists say noise pollution must be considered a health problem and awareness created.

We may turn into a nation of deaf people: Activist 
    Doctors say hearing problems affecting youngsters these days are due to their favourite habit—hanging on to their phones and music players at loud volumes for several hours a day. “Hearing loss depends on two factors—the decibel of sound and the duration for which one is exposed to it,” said Prof Hetal Marfatia from KEM Hospital, Parel. “If one is listening to sounds over 80db for four hours, there will definitely be hearing loss.” The World Health Organization has said that noise above 85db is damaging to human ears and a 3db rise above this reduces by half the time needed to cause damage. 
    But another doctor, Nishit Shah, said rapid hearing loss is only caused by viral i n f e c t i o n s . “Hearing loss o c c u r s o ve r years,” he said, adding that the only exception would be instances of terror victims turning deaf on exposure to loud sound. 
    But Dr Marfatia said an angiogram would be a definite way of understanding if hearing loss is caused by noise pollution, be it exposure to sound in the environment or personal music players. 
    A study from Tel Aviv University has shown that youngsters who listened to over four hours of music on their MP3 players or iPods could be damaging their hearing. Dr Prabhat remembers a 38-year-old businessman from Surat who suffered complete hearing 
    loss in one of his ears due to mobile use. “He confessed he was on the phone from morning to evening. It definitely had a result,” he said. 
    Sumaira Abdulali of Awaaz Foundation, which works on creating awareness about noise pollution, said, “The levels of noise we are exposed to could turn us into a nation of deaf people. It’s high time noise pollution was considered a health problem and solutions worked out accordingly.” 

    WARNING SOUNDS 
A STUDY BY TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY HAS SHOWN THAT ONE IN FOUR TEENAGERS IS AT RISK OF EARLY HEARING LOSS AS A DIRECT RESULT OF LISTENING TO MUSIC ON PERSONAL LISTENING DEVICES (PLDS) LIKE MP3 PLAYERS AND IPODS 

DAMAGING DEVICES 
PLDs permit users to listen to crystalclear tunes at high volume for hours on end The study found that 21% of the participants were using PLDs from one to four hours and 8% for at least four hours Experts feel that the extent of slow hearing loss will only be felt in 10 or 20 years, by when it may be too late for an entire generation to do something about their hearing 
DECIBEL ALERT 
Worldwide, 16% of disabling hearing loss in adults is attributed to occupational noise, ranging from 7 to 21% in various sub-regions. Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is the second most common form of acquired hearing loss after age-related loss. NIHL is generally used to denote the cumulative, permanent loss of hearing that develops gradually after months or years of exposure to high levels of noise. It has long been recognized as a problem in occupations associated with prominent noise. Studies have shown that people who are exposed to noise levels higher than 85 db suffer from NIH



Thursday, September 20, 2012

US Univs. to Open Centre in city to clear pupils’ doubts

Shreya Bhandary TNN 


Mumbai: Over 200 US universities have got together to start a centre in Mumbai to redress queries of students. The centre will be inaugurated at Jamnabai Narsee school, JVPD on Friday. 
    The increasing number of complaints by students and parents about touts seems to have prompted the move. Narsee Monjee Educational Trust (NMET) has joined hands with the City of Philadelphia and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to set up Narsee Monjee Centre for Excellence (NMCE). “The aim behind setting up the centre was to eliminate the role of agents who dupe people and misguide about 
universities and other procedures,” said Kanika Choudhary, honorary ambassador of Philadelphia to India. The NMCE will function from an office set up at Jamnabai Narsee school. 
    Apart from information about various courses offered by over 200 universities in the state of Penn 
sylvania, students will also get a chance to interact with the head’s of institutes to clear their doubts. 
    “We have hired a counsellor who will help students at our centre. Students can apply for an appointment and all their queries will be addressed,” said Sujay Jairaj, NMET trustee. 
    “The centre has been set up on a no-profit-no-loss basis and students will get all the information for a minimum fee. Agents have their own vested interests but we have no such bias,” he added. 
    Soon, certificate courses for interested applicants will commence. “We will also look at various programmes to improve the education system,” he said. 


Education Matters 
 

T he centre will offer students information about hostels,apartments, rentals and transportation. “Students can also check the best location to stay, while completing their education,” said Kanika Choudhary, ambassador of Philadelphia. Log on www.nmce.ac.in for details.


Source:::: The Times of India, 19-09-2012,  p.11.  http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Sunday, September 2, 2012

MORE TIE-UPS WITH ISRAEL ON CARDS

Varsity plans paper on Holocaust literature

Yogita Rao TNN 


Mumbai: University of Mumbai is planning to introduce a paper on Holocaust literature in the humanities stream. The university will also be signing a memorandum of understanding with institutes in Israel for several educational programmes. 
    Even as a batch of 20 students from the university’s Garware Institute of Career and Development have just returned from their internship programme last week, another batch is all set to visit the country in this academic session. “A five-member delegation will be visiting Israel, including vice-chancellor Rajan Welukar, in October,” said Rambhau Badode, in-charge director of Garware Institute. 

    He added, “There are topics covered in Jewish literature in the existing curriculum. However, the university is planning to incorporate a full-fledged paper on Holocaust literature. The topics can be included in history or sociology too.” Tie-ups with Israeli education institutes in various sectors, including micro-irrigation studies and internet security courses are on the cards. Joint studies and research will also be conducted simultaneously in universities in Mumbai and Israel. 
    Twenty students from the institute’s postgraduate diploma in agri-business management have returned from the Middle East after completing their internship. The students have earned Rs 3 lakh each for their project. 
    “The technical skills acquired will be shared with others and also will be used by these students in their career,” said Badode. The students worked in harvest operations, food processing units, and agriculture-related industries for five days a week .



Source:::: The Times of India, 03-09-2012, p.04. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Assembly line for creating Teachers in tatters, says panel

‘Of 291 Institutes In State, Only 34 Fit To Continue’

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


New Delhi: The Supreme Court appointed committee headed by former Chief Justice of India J S Verma has found that the assembly line for creating teachers was in tatters and needed heavy investment – both financially and qualitatively. 
    “Around 90% of pre-service teacher education institutions are in the non-government sector, and most of the states of the eastern and north-eastern region of the country are facing acute shortage of institutional capacity of teacher preparation in relation to the demand,” the Verma committee said in its report. 

    The committee’s recommendations included some of the suggestions given by the Kothari Commission in 1966. But it appears that successive governments have not acted on it for half a century. 
    The panel said it inspected 291 institutes, which prepared teachers in Maharashtra and found only 34 fit to continue. “There is a need 
for enhanced investment in promotion of research in education in general, and in teacher education in particular in the universities; creation of an inter-university centre in teacher education could play a significant role in this regard,” it said. “Teacher education should be part of the higher education system. The duration of programme of teacher education needs to be enhanced. Every pre-service teacher education institution needs to have a dedicated school attached to it as a laboratory, where student teachers get opportunities to experiment with new ideas and hone their capacities and skills to become reflective practitioners.” 
    The panel said the government needed to appoint an expert group to develop a policy framework for in-service teacher education in consultation with national and state level institutions, including institutions of higher studies.
The Verma Committee has suggested heavy investment in education in general, and in teacher education in particular in the universities.
 

Sibal, univ V-C bat for Unmukt

Manash Pratim Gohain TNN 


New Delhi: Help has arrived from the highest quarters for Unmukt Chand, captain of India’s World Cup-winning Under-19 cricket team who has failed in his second semester exam because of inadequate attendance. His college, St Stephen’s, had refused to allow Chand to appear for his first year BA exams as he did not have the minimum of 33.33% attendance mandatory for students under sports quota. 
    But Delhi University vice
chancellor Dinesh Singh, who got a call from Union HRD minister Kapil Sibal, on Thursday said the matter would be resolved on priority. He said Chand would not be failed because of the issue. “I have asked St Stephen’s to immediately send his file. The varsity will take action to help him,” Singh said. As first reported in TOI’s Delhi edition, Chand, denied an admit card to take his exams, had moved the Delhi high court.  

Time wasted in Unmukt’s case, says Delhi Univ V-C 

New Delhi: Although Indian U-19 skipper Unmukt Chand had moved the Delhi high court over the denial of an admit card by St. Stephen’s College to take his exams, by the time the court directed the college to allow him to appear for the tests, Chand had already missed two of them. Also, since he did get internal assessment marks, he failed the exam. 
    While promising to speedily resolve the issue, the university administration pointed out that the decision to refuse Chand an admit card had been taken at college level. The V-C, Dinesh Singh, told TOI that had the matter be
en referred to the university at that time, things would not have come to such a pass. He added that the university would be revisiting policies related to attendance while introducing the four-year degree programme from2013-14. 
    “I have been away from Delhi, but after my return, I called up the college and spoke to the principal as well,” Singh said, adding, “A sportsperson who has achieved so much should not be made to suffer. The university will do everything to help him.” 
    Union HRD minister Kapil Sibal also called up St Stephen’s principal. When he was told that nothing much could be done, the minister called the V-C in the evening.


Source:::: The Times of India, 31-08-2012, p.1. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW

Thursday, August 23, 2012

ग्रंथपालांच्या निवृत्तीचे वय ६२ वर्षे


कॉलेजांतील शिक्षक आणि विद्यार्थ्यांपेक्षाही अधिक प्रमाणात ग्रंथांच्या सहवासात राहणाऱ्या ग्रंथपालांचा ग्रंथसहवास आता अधिक वाढणार आहे. कॉलेजांतील ग्रंथपालांच्या सेवानिवृत्तीची वयोमर्यादा ६० वरून ६२ वर्षे करण्याचा निर्णय राज्य सरकारने घेतला आहे. फेब्रुवारी २०११ पासून सेवानिवृत्त झालेल्या ग्रंथपालांना हा निर्णय लागू राहणार आहे. 

राज्यातील अकृषी विद्यापीठे आणि संलग्नित अनुदानित खासगी कॉलेजांसाठी हा निर्णय घेण्यात आला आहे. त्यामुळे कॉलेजांमधील प्राचार्य , प्राध्यापक आणि शारीरिक शिक्षण संचालकांबरोबरच ग्रंथपालांच्या सेवानिवृत्ती वयोमर्यादेतही वाढ झाली आहे. केवळ ग्रंथपालच नाही ; तर उपग्रंथपाल आणि सहाय्यक ग्रंथपालही या निर्णयामुळे ६२व्या वर्षी निवृत्त होणार आहेत. परंतु ही वाढ विद्यापीठ अनुदान आयोगाच्या विहीत अर्हतेनुसार नियुक्त केलेल्या ग्रंथपालांनाच मिळणार आहे. ही निवृत्ती वयोमर्यादा वाढ मिळविण्यासाठी ग्रंथपालांना कॉलेजच्या प्राचार्यांकडे आपल्या कामकाजाचा अहवाल आठ प्रतींमध्ये सादर करावा लागेल. प्राचार्यांकडून हा अहवाल विद्यापीठाकडे जमा केला जाणार असून , विद्यापीठामार्फत तपासणी झाल्यानंतर यासाठी उच्च शिक्षण संचालकांकडे शिफारस केली जाणार आहे. त्यानंतर हा अहवाल मंत्रालयाकडे मंजुरीसाठी पाठवला जाणार आहे. सेवानिवृत्ती वयोमर्यादा वाढविण्याच्या शिफारसीला मंजुरी देताना ग्रंथपालांच्या कामकाजाचा आढावा घेतला जाणार आहे. लायब्ररीचे व्यवस्थापन , लायब्ररीतील पुस्तकांचे बारकोडिंग तसेच कम्प्युटरायझेशन , इ-लायब्ररीची उपलब्धता ,ग्रंथप्रदर्शनांचे आणि प्रशिक्षण कार्यक्रमांचे आयोजन , ग्रंथालय विकास चळवळीतील सहभाग अशा विविध बाबींचा विचार हा आढावा घेताना केला जाणार आहे. राज्य सरकारच्या मंजुरीनंतर ज्या दिवशी हे ग्रंथपाल पुन्हा कॉलेजमध्ये रुजू होतील त्या दिवसापासूनचा पगार त्यांना दिला जाईल. निवृत्तीनंतर पुन्हा रुजू होण्यापर्यंतच्या दिवसांचा पगार त्यांना मिळणार नाही. परंतु हा कालावधी पेन्शनसाठी वेतनार्ह सेवा म्हणून ग्राह्य धरला जाईल.

Source ::: Maharashtra Times, 24-08-2012, p.09. http://maharashtratimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/15625556.cms