Monday, July 9, 2012


University academics of Sri Lanka launch website to collect signatures for a petition to win demands
Sun, Jul 8, 2012, 07:16 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
July 08, Colombo: University lecturers in Sri Lanka currently engaged in a strike have launched a website to collect signatures for a petition to seek support to their demands.
The Federation of University Teacher's Association (FUTA) has commenced the website to create awareness of the reasons for its trade union action.
FUTA Head, Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri has said that the trade union action of the university academics was not only to win a salary increase.
He has observed that the university lecturers were concerned about the issues faced by the education sector.
He has noted that the Z-score issue was just the tip of the iceberg and that there are far more serious issues faced by the country's higher education and the education sector as a whole.
Dr. Dewasiri reiterated that the government needs to address these issues immediately.
However, FUTA is to hold a discussion with Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga on the 12th of this month to try and resolve issues.
The FUTA website can be found at www.futa-sl.org.

IMPORTANCE OF UNIVERSITY TEACHERS’ STRUGGLE

 , the island

Opening a sports complex in Nawalapitiya on July 2nd, President Mahinda Rajapaksa said that his aim was to create a "healthy" generation that could win the world. Given the context of the speech, he was obviously referring to the enhancement of the physical health of the people, to be precise, the younger generation, the thaarunyaya, of the country. This expressed commitment to enhancing the physical health of the younger generation is no doubt a noble one. Nevertheless, in a context where the mental health of the same generation is virtually ignored and the concept of health is reduced to physical health, this commitment becomes rather problematic.

Universities in general and state universities in particular play a central role in defining the mental health of a society. They operate as the main sites of knowledge production and dissemination. One of their main aims is/should be to produce thinkers who are "more open than usual". However, the present situation in Sri Lanka with regard to the state universities of the country indicates that this noble role assigned to universities is increasingly being undermined and devalued. The alleged death threats to the faculty members who are leading the ongoing trade union action, the introduction of laws and regulations that have a critical impact on the country’s tertiary education sector without any consultation with the broader academic community, cheap comments made by the "patrons" of the university system with the aim of ridiculing the university lecturer’s role, the militarization of the university system through the so called leadership training given to the incoming students, and the increased political interventions that are taking place in the university system indicate the degree of this devaluation.

In a context where the pressing problems in the university sector in particular and the education sector in general are being totally and consistently ignored, the President’s statement reflects the dominant outlook that seems to value muscle power over intellectual power in today’s context.The readiness with which the government spends huge sums of public money on promoting sports, sometimes even with the help of Bollywood stars who are flown to and from the country at the public’s expense,points to the marked superiority that physicality enjoys over intellectuality in the current Sri Lankan society.

The demotion of intellectuality and promotion of physicality harmonize well with the militarization that is taking place in our society. The success of the militarization process largely depends on its ability to divert the younger generation, better known as the thaarunyaya in the present political rhetoric, from intellectual activities. The destabilization of the state university system is a necessary step towards achieving this goal. The blind-eye-and-iron-fist theory with which the current problems in the university system are being dealt with should be understood in this broader context.

In such a context, the current trade union action launched by university lecturers could be seen as an attempt to swim against the massive tide of militarization. It reminds both the rulers and the public that the primacy of intellectual power needs to be (re)established over muscle power. It sends a clear message to the rulers that the intellectuals do not approve of the ongoing militarization of society. It reminds society that producing sensitive human beings and thinkers who are "more open than usual" is more important than producing human machines that can only play roles that are already defined for them. Above all, it points to the crucial need for protecting the state university system as the oasis of intellectual freedom of the Sri Lankan academia.

Nandaka Maduranga

Kalugampitiya

Teachers oppose attempt to ‘militarise’ schools

 , the island

The Ceylon Teachers’ Service Union has called upon the general public to join it in urging the government to defeat a move to offer the rank of colonel to school principals.

In a media release’ signed by General Secretary of the CTSU Mahinda Jayasinghe, the union says that the government is preparing the ground to militarise the local school system by converting school principals into Colonels of the National Cadet Corps, coming under the purview of the Ministry of Defence.

"We condemn this move to militarise the schools. This would result in producing children being trained to follow orders from top without questioning them," Jayasinghe says in the release.Interviews had been held on July 04 and 05 at the National Cadet Corps headquarters in Kirulapone for principals and educational directors to select the first batch of colonels under the proposed scheme. Those selected would be directed to undergo one week’s training and on completion of it they would be commissioned in the rank of colonel of the NCC which has the powers of same rank in the Sri Lanka Army.

Jayasinghe says the main reason given for the government decision to promote principals and educational directors to the colonel rank is the deterioration of discipline in the school system. It is true that discipline within the school system has hit the rock bottom, but there are several reasons this situation, the teachers’ union says, condemning the government’s alleged move and requesting parents and the general public to exhort the government to abandon its plan to militarise the school system.

FUTA campaign website launched

Further talks with Lalith Weeratunga on Thursday

 

article_image
By Dasun Edirisinghe, the island

University teachers engaged in a campaign demanding a salary increase have launched a website to increase public awareness and to collect signatures for a petition to seek public support to win their demands.

President of the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations, Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri has said that the trade union action launched by the university teachers was not only for winning a pay hike but also to remedy the ills of the education sector.

The ongoing strike action would be continued until their demands were met. The representatives of the FUTA would hold a discussion with Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga on July 12 to try and resolve issues, FUTA sources said.