Skip to main content

Posts

When a Story Finds Its Readers...

Yesterday, I shared a blog post titled "UGC Salaries and the Great Public Heartbreak." To my surprise—and perhaps also as a reflection of a collective frustration—it recorded 555 reads in a single day, one of the highest viewership figures for any post on my blog. My sincere thanks to everyone who took the time to read, respond, and share it across social media. Of course, I do not assume that all 555 readers belonged to the Higher Education sector. Yet the response itself is significant. It suggests that the concerns raised in the blog resonate with the lives of many college teachers and touch larger questions about work, public perception, policy delays, and professional dignity. I was certain that the blog captured a reality that many teachers in Kerala's Arts and Science colleges know all too well.  Even within our own families, the countless hours spent reading, preparing for classes, evaluating, mentoring students, conducting research, writing papers, handling accre...

UGC Salaries and the Great Public Heartbreak

The moment you say you are an Assistant Professor in a government or aided college, people immediately calculate your salary with the emotional intensity of chartered accountants conducting a corruption inquiry. Most seem convinced that college teachers — especially in the Humanities — work for three hours a day and spend the rest of the time peacefully drinking tea under trees because apparently Shakespeare stopped evolving in 1616. A small reflection on invisible academic labour, endless reading, public misconceptions, and why teaching is one of the most misunderstood professions. The Myth of the “Overpaid” College Teacher The moment you tell someone that you work as an Assistant Professor in an aided or government college, there is usually a brief silence. Then comes the expression. A mixture of admiration, disbelief, and deep emotional suffering caused by your salary. If the conversation continues long enough, you can almost hear the unspoken thought: “This person earns that much ...

Not Everyone Deserves the 'Revolving' Chair

Every institution has them: the administrator who treats power as ornament, the one paralysed by fear and indecision, the political survivor who switches sides with changing equations, the manipulator who sees capable people as threats, the silent worker who never (visibly) desired authority but strengthens the institution when entrusted with it, the accidental administrator who never desired authority but quietly becomes the institution’s strongest pillar when responsibility arrives, and the invisible yet competent leader whom power structures often keep away from decision-making roles. A few reflections on power, insecurity, manipulation, and institutional culture in academia. The Revolving Chair What should be the qualities of a good administrator? This is perhaps one of the most important questions anyone aspiring for power—however small or symbolic—should ask themselves before occupying a chair in any institution. Not because authority is inherently dangerous, but because institut...

When Did Teachers Start Walking on Eggshells?

I belong to a generation that survived teachers who threw chalk pieces with sniper-level accuracy, locked classroom doors exactly one second after the bell, and predicted our future unemployment with terrifying confidence. Today, as a teacher, I carefully frame every sentence like a UN peace negotiation so that no student feels emotionally attacked by words such as “deadline,” “effort,” or “poor preparation.” Somewhere between “Stand outside the class!” and “Thank you so much for attending despite waking up at noon,” higher education has dramatically evolved. A humorous — and slightly worried — reflection on teaching in the age of emotional fragility. The Student-Friendly University and Its Silent Crisis I often find myself wondering whether I have unknowingly time-travelled into an educational world radically different from the one in which I was raised. I have a few doubts about the social expectations surrounding teachers in higher education today. Can a teacher scold a student for ...