Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

IISER hikes fee by 10% for freshers

- Neelam Pandey n neelam.pandey@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) decided to increase their fees by 10% each year till 2019. But these colleges will still remain far less expensive than private institutes or universiti­es abroad offering similar degrees.

The hike will be only for students taking admission this year. These freshers will have to pay ₹27,500 for each of the two semesters in the session beginning 2017.

The latest change is a back-toback move after fees at the seven IISERs were hiked from about ₹15,000 a semester to ₹25,000 last year. The move reflects the past two years’ trend at top government-funded engineerin­g and science colleges such as the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) and the National Institute of Technology (NIT). The hike ranged from 60% to 120%, but with safeguards for poor students and those within the government’s reservatio­n policy.

A May 26 meeting of the NIT and Science Education and Research (NITSER) council, chaired by human resource developmen­t minister Prakash Javadekar, decided the 10% hike in IISER fees for three consecutiv­e years.

“It was noted that the fees in IISERs are very low at present and there was need to progressiv­ely increase the fees,” reads the minutes of the meeting.

Abhilash Swant, a student of IISER Pune who graduated in May, agreed that the institute has to change its fee structure as it

provides modern laboratori­es and quality faculty.

“Even after the hike, the fee will still be manageable. Though an increase of 10% every year might be an issue,” he said.

The NITs, which charge ₹1.25 lakh a year, proposed a fee hike this year. But the council put the

proposal for review.

IITs increased their tuition fee last year from ₹9,000 to ₹2 lakh. But the government gave full exemption to students with disabiliti­es, from scheduled castes and tribes, and those from families that earn below ₹1 lakh a year.

Education experts said a fee hike can augment resources as institutes need money to build and maintain infrastruc­ture.

According to Pradipta Banerji, professor at IIT Bombay, a small percentage of students will pay the full fee because of the slew of exemptions. “So, technicall­y, the revenue is not really going up.”

Dheeraj Sanghi, dean of academic affairs and external relations at the New Delhi-based Indraprast­ha Institute of Informatio­n Technology, said a fee hike remains a healthy practice so long as there is a mechanism to protect poor students.

“Also, a number of IITs had raised the issue that more students were opting for IISERs as they were charging much less … so they were losing meritoriou­s students,” he said.

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