Surprised, shocked or disappointed that judges were cheating in LLM exam?

De Facto

Sep 02, 2010

De Facto

All leading national newspapers, including Bar & Bench recently reported on suspension of five Andhra judges for cheating in LLM exam. The judges were caught on camera copying from books, smuggled notes, and each other. If they had passed the LLM examinations, they would have been eligible for promotions and increments. This is a clear case of usage of unlawful means for pecuniary benefits by a public servant. The unethical action of the judges will be subject to investigation and hopefully severe punishments. Are you surprised, shocked or disappointed that those who have the demigod status, engaged in such unethical acts? I am not going to beat the drums on how unethical or how wrong their actions are. Reason being that our culture does not condone or look down upon acts of cheating – it may make the headlines of leading newspapers, but does not touch our personal ethical chords. To say the least, we have blockbuster Hindi movies where acts of cheating are hailed as an accomplishment. Many boast about how they engaged in acts of cheating and were not caught. If we were to conduct a world ethics ranking study, I don’t believe India would be very high on the list. We all are aware that India has been ranked time and again high (as corrupt) on corruption reports, just one indicator of ethics.

 

I am not going to focus on what happened with the Andhra judges since Indian media is all over it. Rather, my focus is on the larger debate on the value of ethics in Indian education system and specifically in law schools, colleges and soon with the to be held All India Bar Examination. We are well aware that cheating in exams is a common practice in India. Many believe that cutting corners is an acceptable part of the culture. Law schools and colleges have regular complaints about students cheating in exams and engaging in plagiarism. If professors find students cheating or copying works of others, they usually provide low marks or grades and let the issue pass. It is the culture that we are fighting with here on plagiarism, not one off incident like the Andhra judges case. We have heard time and again about how examination invigilators are bought by students, who allow them to engage in rampant acts of cheating from notebooks, cheat sheets, neighbors, etc. History has been the best teacher of how difficult it is for any society to change its culture, specially a culture that has been simply accepted for decades. It is just like spitting paan on the walls of Government offices and buildings. It is time we think of ways to tackle this problem sooner than later.

 

In many western countries, cheating and plagiarism is looked down upon by society as a shocking act. Even peeking at someone else’s paper is considered an unacceptable behavior. It is not to say that plagiarism in western society does not take place, it does, but they are faced with severe consequences.

 

Since we are fighting with the culture cheating and not just few incidents, it makes sense for us to be more creative in our examination system. I think allowing students to take any books, notes, statutes, rules, materials during examinations should be permitted – let students use any and all resources that are available to them and test them on their knowledge beyond what can be simply found in books. Questions should be prepared to test original ideas based on their readings and not just the ability to reproduce memorized information.  Several professors in law schools and colleges in India have adopted this method, but still we have a long way to go since majority professors continue to rely on the old school technique of rewarding students for their ability to memorize and reproduce information.

 

Pages    1 | 2    Show Full Article
Add to My Clips Print this Story Email this Story

 

Facebook LinkedIn MySpace Digg Del.icio.us twitter

Comments(4)
  • 1. "You raise a very important question.. not sure if this can be changed in the near future...India follows whatever one succeeds in...NLS did great- so 14 others followed. I heard Jindal Global has a slightly different model but they are competing with the market - so can't expect any different. the problem with law schools in India is they are not focused on research, but rather simply producing lawyers. law schools need money and people who can make law schools research focused...One suggestion is that we start with less number of exams and papers in law schools. ". Ajay, Delhi
  • 2. "Bar council should consider the issues and think about legal education models seriously.". George, Dubai
  • 3. "There is nothing new into this, we know a big portion of judiciary is corrupt". Govind, Mumbai
  • 4. "Its really a shame, they should be tried like ordinary criminals and made to stand for their trial alongwith all other criminals, that would be a befitting punishment to them,but before that they should be stripped off their jobs...". Faiyaz Khan, Hubli
Post Your Comment

Name* :

Location :

Email Id :

Comment * :

Notify me when there is a comment


 

Thank you. Comments are subject to moderation.