JNTUH Launches Surprise Inspections Amid Fake Faculty Hiring Allegations
In a bold move to uphold academic standards, Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University Hyderabad (JNTUH) has initiated surprise inspections at its affiliated engineering colleges. This crackdown follows widespread complaints about private institutions hiring temporary or proxy faculty solely to pass mandatory affiliation checks, only to dismiss them shortly after. The university's registrar, Dr. K Venkateswara Rao, emphasized the severity of these issues, stating that unannounced visits will verify ongoing compliance with faculty norms.
These developments come hot on the heels of routine Fact-Finding Committee (FFC) inspections conducted between April 10 and 20, 2026, aimed at granting affiliations for the 2026-27 academic year. Reports indicate that as many as 130 out of approximately 175 engineering colleges under JNTUH's umbrella have let go of 30% to 40% of their teaching and non-teaching staff post-inspections. In one stark example, a single college terminated 105 teaching faculty members just days after the review team left.
This practice not only undermines regulatory requirements set by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) but also raises serious questions about the sustainability of engineering education in Telangana.
The Affiliation Inspection Process Explained
Every year, JNTUH deploys FFC teams to assess affiliated colleges' infrastructure, faculty strength, and lab facilities before approving affiliations. These checks ensure colleges meet AICTE guidelines, including a faculty-to-student ratio of 1:20 and a cadre ratio of 1:2:6 (professors: associate professors: assistant professors). Failure to comply can result in denied affiliations, reduced intake, or closure.
However, colleges have allegedly gamed the system by onboarding stopgap faculty—often from computer science and allied branches—right before inspections. These individuals mark attendance and pose as permanent staff, but vanish once the affiliation is secured. JNTUH affiliates over 137 engineering colleges across 33 districts in Telangana, making enforcement a massive challenge.
Scale of Staff Layoffs and College Involvement
The extent of the problem is alarming. Faculty unions report that nearly 80% of JNTUH-affiliated engineering colleges are implicated. Layoffs span all pay scales, from entry-level assistants earning Rs 30,000 monthly to seniors above Rs 1 lakh. Non-core branches like chemical engineering have been hit hardest, exacerbated by a decade-long hiring freeze in those areas.
- 175 engineering colleges under review.
- 130 colleges (80%) reported mass layoffs.
- 30-50% staff reduction per college on average.
- Over 1,500 faculty potentially affected statewide.
College managements attribute this to the academic year's end in May and delayed government fee reimbursements, claiming they will rehire if admissions pick up. Yet, experts warn this cycle perpetuates instability.
Faculty Unions Demand Transparency and Accountability
The Telangana State Technical Colleges Employees Association (TSTCEA), led by president A Santosh Kumar, has been vocal. They urge JNTUH to scrutinize faculty salaries via Form 16 and Form 26AS tax documents during inspections. "Reviewing these will reveal the truth about ghost faculty," Kumar asserted. The union welcomes surprise checks but calls for public lists of non-compliant principals and strict penalties.
One sacked mathematics faculty shared, "I was let go two days post-inspection—too convenient." Similar stories from electronics and communication branches highlight the human cost, with families facing sudden income loss.
A History of Fake Faculty Scandals at JNTUH
This isn't new. In 2016, JNTUH blacklisted 903 faculty for using fake IDs across multiple colleges. Another 400 were barred for fraudulent registrations. Fake PhD certificates plagued the system, leading to verification drives. By 2019, the university tightened noose with biometric attendance mandates, though implementation lagged.
Recent FFC findings also uncovered non-functioning lab software and unratified faculty, echoing past lapses. For detailed historical context, refer to this Times of India report.
Root Causes: Enrollment Slump and Branch Closures
Telangana's engineering sector faces a perfect storm. TG EAPCET 2026 registrations dropped by 17,000 to 2.89 lakh. Over 30% seats remain vacant, with core branches slashed 70% since 2020 due to low demand. Professors, once earning Rs 1.5 lakh monthly, now deliver food for Rs 500 daily.
| Year | Engineering Seats Filled (%) | Core Branches Cut (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 93% | Baseline |
| 2025 | 70% | 70% |
| 2026 | ~65% | >70% |
This oversupply of seats amid declining interest in traditional engineering fuels cost-cutting, including fake hiring.
Consequences for Student Learning and Employability
Without stable faculty, students suffer. Labs gather dust, curricula stagnate, and hands-on skills in cybersecurity or cloud computing go undeveloped. Nikhil Teja Gurram notes, "Students won't be industry-ready without expert guidance." Low employability perpetuates the cycle, as graduates shun engineering.
Broader impacts include eroded trust in Telangana's 200+ private colleges, pushing aspirants to IITs or abroad. See analysis in Telangana Today.
Regulatory Norms and Enforcement Challenges
AICTE mandates 1:20 faculty-student ratio for UG engineering, with relaxed 1:15 desirable. Cadre balance ensures mentorship. JNTUH monitors post-inspection for a month, but evasion persists via proxies.
- Step 1: Online affiliation application with fees.
- Step 2: FFC physical verification.
- Step 3: Compliance report review.
- Step 4: Provisional/permanent affiliation.
Enforcement gaps, like absent biometric systems, enable fraud.
Stakeholder Views and Path Forward
JNTUH vows corrective action, potentially revoking affiliations. Colleges plead financial woes; unions demand reinstatement. Government via Telangana Council of Higher Education (TGCHE) could intervene with reimbursements.
Solutions include:
- Mandatory biometric attendance.
- Real-time faculty database integration with PF/ESIC.
- Incentives for core branch revival.
- Skill-focused curricula to boost enrollment.
Job Market Ramifications for Higher Education Professionals
This exposes instability in faculty roles. Qualified educators seek stable positions amid layoffs. Platforms like AcademicJobs.com list verified openings in Indian universities, aiding transitions.
Outlook: Reforms for Sustainable Engineering Education
JNTUH's crackdown signals a turning point. With surprise checks ongoing, non-compliant colleges risk sanctions. Long-term, aligning seats with demand, enhancing quality, and attracting talent via better pay could revive the sector. For aspiring faculty, upskilling in AI/ML remains key amid shifts.









