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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, July 16, 2001 |
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25 years of service to women's education
By Our Staff Reporter
BANGALORE, JULY 15. The Maharani's Arts College for Women, the
only institution in the City to provide undergraduate education
for women in Kannada medium, has turned 25. The government
college, which made a difference to scores of girls over the
years, has turned a new chapter. The jubilee celebrations begin
next month.
With a strength of 2,600 students, the college has proved the
government and academicians wrong on the latter's assessment of
the popularity of general education and higher education in the
Humanities. This academic year, the college admitted 520 students
for its Bachelor of Arts programmes, 125 students for B.Com, 50
for Bachelor of Business Management (BBM) and 20 students for its
M.A. (Economics) course.
On the threshold of a landmark, the college principal, Prof.
N.G.Subhavani, drew attention to the institution's growing
student strength, a sort of reversal of the general trend
elsewhere: ``The strength is increasing every year and each year
at least 200 students fail to get admission in our college.''
Incidentally, every year about 200 students from the rural areas
of Bangalore, Kolar, Tumkur, Hassan and Chitradurga are admitted
to the college.
Government schools and colleges elsewhere have always been known
for the wrong reasons: Inadequate infrastructure, teaching
faculty which do not meet standards and students who cannot match
up to the competitive world outside. Perhaps, the Government has
some lessons to learn from Maharani's College. As the college
principal puts it, ``Mere IT education cannot solve our
educational problems. We need teachers who are trained in Social
Sciences and Humanities. The present day neglect of Humanities is
only going to worsen the situation. It is imperative that the
government give priority to the strengthening of at least the
well established colleges.''
Though Maharani's Arts College for Women found its separate
identity in 1974, it has an unbroken history of over 70 years. In
1974, the erstwhile Maharani's College was bifurcated as two
entities, the Science and Arts colleges.
The history of the college, as Prof. Subhavani puts it, began in
1881 when the royal family of the then Mysore State opened a high
school for girls in Mysore which became the nucleus for
Maharani's College. ``The then King of Mysore had a liberal and
modern attitude and was an advocate of education for women. That
high school became the first one in the country to provide modern
education for women.''
Thereafter, the Government of Mysore took charge of the school,
made it into a college and affiliated the institution to the
University of Mysore. The college was shifted to Bangalore in
1939 and it began functioning in a small bungalow on Palace Road.
During the 1950s, the Maharani's College was one of the six
colleges in the country selected for international study exchange
programmes. The college commenced classes in Humanities subjects
only in the 1960s. And in 1975, when the number of B.A. students
increased in thousands, the Maharani's Arts College found its
independent existence. Today, the college offers 15 combinations
and languages including Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, Hindi, Sanskrit,
Urdu and English.
In its silver jubilee year, the college proposes to inaugurate an
Old Students' Association and with its help take up development
works of the college. Among the old students who once gave life
to the college campus are the Minister for Women and Child
Welfare, Ms. Motamma; former MP, Ms. Taradevi Siddhartha; Ms.
Shyamala Bhave, Ms. Nagavalli Nagaraj, Ms. M.S.Sheela, Ms.
B.R.Manjula, Ms. Sumithra, Ms. Ramamani, noted artistes, scholars
and writers such as Ms. Sunadara Shri, Ms. Padma Shri, Ms.
L.V.Sharada, Ms. Bharathi, Ms. Uma Shivakumar, Ms. Vimala
Rangachar, Ms. Anusuya Kulakarni, Ms. Maya Rao, Ms. Nirmala Devi
and Ms. T.Sunandamma.
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