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Reading rains

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  • Reading rains

    If the met department swings from hope to despair, sounding uncertain about the monsoons, it greatly inconveniences farmers and the rest of us. It leads to wrong or late decisions. Since most Indian farmers still depend on the rains for irrigation, late or scanty rainfall means adverse effects on agriculture and soaring prices. With the prospects of drought in the north and severe power shortages, the Union government should embark on more scientific and technology-equipped met forecasts and also similar advances in agricultural water management.

    — Bala Kiran

    Pune

    Energy bans

    To get some respite from long power cuts in Delhi and the rest of the country, the government should consider the following: a ban on electronic billboards and other energy-guzzling displays; zero-tolerance towards power pilferage; proscription of weddings and public programmes at night. India also needs to upgrade and order its power production and distribution structures under the Centre.

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    — Mahesh Kapasi

    New Delhi

    Curate’s egg?

    Pratap Bhanu Mehta rightly cautions us in ‘Who ate his homework?’ (IE, June 27). Doing away with Class 10 board examinations may prove to be a curate’s egg — good only in parts rather than a panacea for all ills in the education system. By retaining the Class 12 exams Kapil Sibal will only postpone and heighten the trauma for teens. A major systemic change in education that could affect a generation needs informed debate and must not be treated as part of a “100-day” programme. Admissions to Class 11 could meanwhile be determined by multiple assessments: internal assessment (say, 60 per cent weightage), board (30 per cent) and student evaluation by the admitting institution (10 per cent).

    — Y.G. Chouksey

    Pune

    Catch 22

    Kapil Sibal's rationale is that doing away with Class 10 board exams would relieve students of stress and anxiety. But here’s the catch — the anxiety associated with board exams is caused mostly by the limited number of seats available in our colleges and universities. Unless more opportunities are created thereof, student stress and anxiety will not be mitigated. On the other hand, some early introduction to public exams might actually be necessary to prepare youngsters for the competitive global economy.

    — Ashwani Sharma

    Ghaziabad

    Real ones

    Late as it may be, issuing multi-purpose national identity cards is welcome (‘The new way’, IE, June 26). However, is the method of identifying Indian nationals foolproof? India’s borders are porous and voter ID cards are easily issued to people who don’t qualify as citizens. On the other hand, genuine citizens often find it difficult to get their names on the list. One hopes that the capable team in charge will establish the right and thorough mechanisms for the same.

    — M.M.P. Kala

    DehraDun

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