On the first day of your college, if you see a muscular
man (usually with a stick or a piece of rubber or plastic pipe in his hand) standing
at the college gate, don’t be confused. He is your discipline In-charge (DI).
He is the person who will monitor your activities and discipline you during
your stay in the college.
Most of the colleges in Kathmandu have DI’s, who are
hired for maintaining the discipline of students. These DI’s are often muscular
men who frighten students with their physique. Some are bouncers who, at night,
work in restaurants, dance bars and nightclubs, helping to stop drinking brawls
and other unwanted tensions. Barring some few cases, most of these people are
illiterate or semiliterate, and are rarely friendly to students.
Early in the morning they stand at the college gate
screening every individual student about whether or not he/she is in proper
college uniform, with fingernails properly manicured, hair trimmed short(for
boys) and many other things. If not up to the mark, you are not going to be
spared. If your hair is a few millimeters longer than they want it to be, they
have got scissors in their hands. No matter what you say and how you try to
plead to them that you will manage to have it cut the next day, they are not
going to listen to you. They cut your hair. You may be regular and punctual on
the other days but if you happen to come late just one day, they don’t spare
you. You may have a genuine reason for your coming late, but it does not work.
You have to face the punishment, which is often harsh and humiliating.
They are rarely polite to students. Many of them don’t
even use decent language. It seems as if they have no soft corner in their
heart. They often address students in disrespectful ways. Some are heard using
abusive and derogatory words, which modern day students are not exposed to even
at home and in their surroundings. They
never counsel students positively to improve their behavior. Instead, they
provoke students by being harsh and indecent to them.
In fact, we don’t
need DI’s in colleges if we view discipline with a new perspective. We can build
a well functioning system, which automatically trains an individual to behave
in the way we want. There are many colleges which have been doing well without DI’s.
We never hear anything about the misbehaviors of students in these colleges.
Durga
Gautam
Buddhanagar,
Kathmandu
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