They say experience is the best teacher. And two experiences then are
better teachers, I guess. So here are two such experiences that gave
me two entirely different perspectives, yet zeroing down to perhaps
just one conclusion. The Staff Selection Commission conducts
examinations for graduates and post graduates for various government
posts, apart from UPSC and DSSSB. Examinations for the posts that can
be taken up by Visually Impaired Students have the provision of
Scribes to make the examination smooth and accessible to the students.
Keeping aside the whole debatable concept of "posts that can be taken
up by the Visually Impaired", here I am going to discuss two such
instances when I became a Scribe for a few Visually Impaired persons
appearing for the SSC Examinations.



During my first attempt at writing the paper for a visually impaired
person, I went through three hours of emotional blackmailing by the
candidate trying to cajole me into filling up the answers for him
through my knowledge. I was caught in an ugly position where in the
name of philanthropy I was actually cheating with the consent of the
system! There are mathematical questions that a student with visual
impairment has to answer which perhaps cannot be solved without using
aids such as an Abacus or a Calculator. Having been accustomed to
using the Abacus, two of the candidates I wrote the exam for found it
difficult to calculate on their fingertips.

Further, repeating the questions thrice and asking them to repeat
their choice of answers umpteen times leads to wasteful use of time.
In that sense, even the provision of extra time of 20-40 minutes for
the visually impaired students is sometimes not enough and sometimes
not legitimate. If the scribe is honestly not doing the candidate's
paper then the former applies and if the scribe is "helping" the
candidate with his answers then the latter.

To err is human. And having to bear the brunt of someone else's
mistake in something that perhaps decides your mode of earning a
livelihood is exploitative. The visually impaired student places a lot
of trust in the scribe who is marking his/her answers and is perhaps
never going to be able to find out what went wrong if his scribes just
could not answer the same way the candidate wants him/her to. Who is
to blame?

The second experience pointed to the inefficiency of the examination
system further. The scribes are paid a remuneration of Rs. 500 by the
Government for being present at the examination centre during all the
shifts in which the exams are conducted on a single day. Whether a
scribe actually writes an exam for a candidate or not is not the
concern. So technically, you can just plan a get together with your
friends one pleasant Sunday afternoon, decide to mark your attendance
as a scribe during the morning and afternoon sessions and get paid for
just two signatures and catching up with your friends. And that is
exactly what I saw a group of people doing there who were selected as
scribes without any preliminary screening apart from meeting the
minimum requirement of being a class 12 graduate.

What happens on rainy days when the candidates do not appear for the
examination but the scribes do? The government pays a handsome amount
to people for no work done by them. One such rainy day was the second
time I decided to write the examination for a visually impaired, when
most candidates missed their exam owing to the rain.

There is no denying that the government spends money in trying to make
the exams more accessible to candidates with special needs. How much
of this expenditure actually benefits them is the question. It would
perhaps do some good if the government spent the same amount of money
in providing the candidates with computers that would read out the
question papers to the candidates who can then mark the answers with
their own hand. Various countries like Spain actually use such an
approach towards examinations.

Providing reservations to candidates with special needs is not the
solution. Giving them equal opportunity to perform to the best of
their capability is what is needed. In the words of an invigilator at
the SSC examination, "Getting jobs through the 3% reservation for
people with disabilities might succeed at giving them a livelihood,
but they are sometimes more a liability to the government offices than
assets".

There is no denying that every person has the capability to perform
like any other. All that we need is an equal opportunity to do that,
which the current examination structure does not succeed in providing.
Directing the expenditure towards the development of better
infrastructure would perhaps be a more intelligent choice than just
spending it because you believe you have so much of it!

Source:
http://www.youthkiawaaz.com/2011/08/two-better-than-one-being-a-scribe-for-a-visually-impaired-in-an-exam/
-- 
"It doesn't matter what we have, but it really matters what we do with
what we have."

With Sincere Regards

Balanagendran. D
IAS Aspirant
Skype: balanagendran
Twitter:
http://twitter.com/balanagendran89



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