Thursday, December 17, 2009
Retest: a fair decision
Monday, December 14, 2009
Z-category Security for CAT data?
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Friday, December 11, 2009
Future Tense?
- The students.
- Their families.
- The institutes (including the IIMs) who will admit these students.
- And corporates will eventually recruit these students.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
CATty Kids?
Bheegi-billi ki tarah aate hain yeh bachchein CAT dene. Phir kareinge MA, MBA, PhD aur na jaane kya. Uske baad, office jaayenge aur kutton ki tarah ladenge... shayad iss liye CAT bolte hain issko.
A Testing Time for Test Centres
Now, if you ask me, this is a bit like Mr Bean shooting himself in the foot ;-)
Now, the coaching centres will fret and fume because the digitisation of the exam means that they need to reinvent and reinvest in their very profitable business. It's a bit like the politicians who raved and ranted when the Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) were introduced. Incidentally, as a piece of trivia, it's useful to know that the world's largest democracy introduced EVMs in Kerala in 1982 but it was only in 2004 that the entire election went electronic (source: The Hindu).
You get the general drift, don't you?
Test centres prefer paper tests because that's what they're used to. So, they'll create enough noise and fury - forgetting about Copenhagen and global warming - but clearly don't have a pulse of their own students. Here's Arun, a student who thinks online is the way to go:
But, are the test-centres listening?
Hyped-up Problems
Easy to Bell the CAT
More important, she says she faced no problems.
Do you know anyone with a similar experience? I'll be happy to interview them and carry their stories as well.
Is a part of the Media Playing to the Gallery?
The more I read, the more disgusted I feel. Why do so many of our newspapers and TV channels go out and capture mediocrity. Is it because that's what is popular and sells more. Of course it's true that bad news makes better headlines but surely that doesn't mean one sacrifices a sense of balance and fair play.
Or, does it?
If I were a reporter standing outside a college and spoke to a dozen kids emerging after the CAT tests, what do you think I would capture as verbatims? Would all of them have negative things to say or would there be some who would give the other side of the picture? Common sense tells us it'll be the latter. But the papers would like us to believe it's the former: the world of the CAT 2009 test-taker, according to them, is all black.
I read something that had appeared in the online edition of The Times of India a few days ago in which the Education Minister had asked the IIMs for an explanation. Now we all know that the IIMs are a national treasure but must everything become a political issue? Anyway, that's not the point here... if you read the article, you could be forgiven for thinking that this was a national disaster akin to an earthquake or a tsunami. But, hats off to The Times of India for being the leader they are! I mean how many journalists would publish feedback from their readers even if it contradicts what their own journos say? If you go deeper and read the comments that TOI readers have posted, the real picture emerges: sure, things were bad but not as bad as the reporter made it out to be. Unfortunately, the comments don't seem to have been factored into the main story but the beauty of the digital medium is that it allows readers to express themselves and say their piece - unedited, uncensored. Way to go TOI!
And, great going IBN Live as well: look at their readers' comments as well. They could have edited out the ones that congratulate the IIMs and remained one-sided but, no, they carried both sides of readers' feedback. That's maturity for you. I'd like to buy the editor a paapri-chaat :-)
Listen to Jai here: Do you hear him saying that "there may be glitches" and that he didn't face any? Do you also hear him saying that very few of the practice tests happened online by one of the institutes he studied with?
Or listen to these two people who gave the test the same day at another centre in Gurgaon. Yeah, yeah, I can't be in two places so I got a couple of friends to do their bit and that's how we got some more vox populi captured.
Now, that's something to think about, isn't it? Clearly, they didn't face any problems but will we ever see them in the 'breaking news' sections of all our TV channels?
What's your take on this, folks?
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Has the CAT really gone to the dogs?
And, as if this were not enough, even test-centres youth-oriented websites been putting up polls and forum and videos about how bad the whole online experience has been.
Frankly, I'm sick of reading the same stuff repackaged in different media.
So, I decided to set out on my cousin's trusted Bullet and shoot some candid footage for myself. Basically, get a real idea of what's going on. I landed up at a college in Dwarka in Delhi (yes, I live in Mumbai but am currently parked here 'coz my babe's got a temp job).
The college where the Prometric chaps were conducting the test is called Apeejay School of Management:
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And, this is the first guy I spoke to:
Now, having heard him, what do you think?
Paapri Chaat 2.0
Okay folks, the Paapri Chaat as you know it, has just reinvented itself.
And, why not? With everything else going though a new, improved relaunch, why shouldn't this see a version 2 as well?
It's time to take a fresh look at life as we know it, as driven by the media and by people with vested interests. And come back to the basics of a good old streetside view of things. Without the hype but with all the asli masala.
Don't get taken in by what you read and hear and see in official media and in blogs pushed by companies. Remember, God gave you two ears and two eyes: so, use them well to listen and to look before you make up your mind on anything.
Over the next few posts, I'm going to focus on issues that affect us all but are overhyped in only one direction.
To start with, the spotlight's on this year's CAT entrance tests...
As they say, aagey aagey dekho hota hai kya :-)
Ah but who am I, you may ask?
As the Big B once famously said, "Rishtey mein toh hum tumhare baap lagtey hain, par naam hai Budhi Raja."