Deccan Chronicle

Jio Institute yet to start but gets eminence tag

The selected institutes will get a grant of `1,000 crore in the next five years

- INDULEKHA ARAKKAL I DC with agency inputs

Institutio­ns from Hyderabad failed to make it to the list of ‘Institutio­ns of Eminence’ announced by the Centre on Monday.

The list of six institutes selected includes Jio Institute by Reliance Foundation, which has not yet started operations. The selection drew much criticism from academics.

The list includes Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, chosen because of its improvemen­t in world rankings and IITBombay and IIT-Delhi picked for their contributi­on to research and for meeting the goal of 14 per cent female student participat­ion.

Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani, and Manipal Academy of Higher Education were chosen from the private sector, apart from the Jio Institute.

These institutes will get a government grant of `1,000 crore in the next five years. The criterion for selection was that they should have the potential to find a place in the top 500 of any of the worldrenow­ned ranking frameworks in a decade.

Jio Institute was trending on Twitter with many users tagging the HRD minister, asking him about the institute’s location and credential­s.

The University Grants Commission defended the move saying the institutio­n was accorded the coveted tag under greenfield category for new or proposed institutio­ns that are yet to come into existence.

“It doesn’t have a campus, a website or any alumni and it has left behind prominent IITs as well as private players like Ashoka University and OP Jindal Global University. It is yet to be establishe­d but will already be marketed as a world class institutio­n by the government. Can’t we see the conflict of interest,” JNU professor Ayesha Kidwai said.

“What is Jio Institute? I thought only I didn’t know its eminence but looks like everyone knew of its existence only today,” a Twitter user said.

A professor from IIScBangal­ore, which was also accorded the “Institute of Eminence” (IoE) tag, tweeted, “How did @Prakash Javdekar evaluate this Jio Institute to decide it was better than IIT-M or IIT-KGP or so many other Institutio­ns? How can an Institutio­n that is in the process of being set up be declared Institutio­n of Eminence? What are we missing here?”

Jio Institute was trending on Twitter with many users tagging the HRD minister, asking him about the institute’s location and credential­s.

Institutio­ns from Hyderabad failed to make it to the list of ‘Institutio­ns of Eminence’ announced by the Centre on Monday.

HRD minister Prakash Javadekar, released the list, said that despite having 800 universiti­es, not a single one was in the top 100 or even 200 in the world rankings. Upgrading institutio­ns to institutes of eminence would help correct this. The institutes have been granted full autonomy, allowing them to make their own decisions.

As per the University Grants Commission Regulation­s, 2017, the ministry was to select 20 IoEs, 10 each in the private and 10 public sectors. The ministry narrowed down the list to six. A high-level committee was formed to shortlist the entries solicited from the institutes on the basis of their research calibre and other criteria.

These IoEs will be able to admit foreign students up to 30 per cent of the student strength, and recruit foreign faculty up to 25 per cent of the faculty strength and collaborat­e with foreign institutes without government approval.

While IISc was ranked first in the all-India NIRF (National Institutio­nal Ranking Framework) rankings of the government in 2018, IIT Bombay and Delhi were ranked third and fourth. Jio Institute did not feature in the NIRF rankings at all, and its inclusion has raised eyebrows.

However, a member of the selection committee clarified that Jio Institute under the Reliance Foundation was selected under the “greenfield category” — institutes that have no history. The proposal sent by the Jio Foundation was found fit for the tag as they had a plan in place along with funding and a place for a campus.

Prof. Laxmi Rao, an educationa­l expert, said, “The decision was based on the quality of research i.e. if it was useful to someone, if it was quoted and others. Similarly the number of vacant teaching positions were also checked. Quality of teaching is crucial and the ranking clearly states that faculty should be encouraged to publish in popular journals.”

Prof. Rao said these steps should be pushed in all institutio­ns. They should be stripped of their status if they fail to live up to expectatio­ns. “Hopefully, new institutio­ns will be given the same status as the Jio Institute under the greenfield category in the future,” Prof. Rao said.

IIT Madras, ranked second, IIT Kharagpur, ranked fifth, JNU, ranked sixth and IIT Kanpur, ranked seven in the NIFR rankings did not find a place. Manipal was ranked 18th in India.

The government had stated that they will create Institutes of Eminence in 2016, which will be termed as world class Institutes. The idea was to grant special powers to these institutes in order to catapult them in the world rankings.

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