Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Private bodies to rate educationa­l institutes

- Chetan Chauhan letters2hi­ndustantim­es.com

NEWDELHI: In a major reform, the government plans to outsource assessment and accreditat­ion of the higher education institutio­ns to private bodies and give full autonomy — academic, financial and administra­tive —to the top ranked institutio­ns, Niti Aayog vice-chairman Arvind Panagariya told HT.

This is part of the higher education reform package being finalised by the National Institutio­n for Transformi­ng India (Niti) Aayog and the HRD ministry. The Prime Minister’s Office in March had asked them to prepare a blueprint for higher education reform that breeds academic excellence in top institutio­ns of the country.

“The reform package is almost ready,” Panagariya said. “For this, we will have to amend or replace the University Grants Commission (UGC) law. The call will be taken by Parliament”.

Reforms in higher education sector had been under discussion for a long time but the government had failed to implement them because of resistance from within.

More than a decade ago, the National Knowledge Commisinst­itutions sion constitute­d by the UPA government had recommende­d slew of reforms including disbanding the two higher important higher education regulators the UGC and the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) and proposed an overarchin­g higher education regulator.

But, the recommenda­tions remained on paper because of opposition by the HRD and the two bodies.

Before introducin­g a higher education regulator, the National Democratic Alliance government has decided to set in motion the reforms by making third party mandatory accreditat­ion for all public and private higher education i nstitution­s to ensure transparen­cy

and quality.

“We want credible private agencies should assess institutio­ns in private agencies,” Panagariya said, adding that even sovereign rating in the United States is done by the private agencies.

“The accreditat­ion would be based on academic and research outcome”.

The National Accreditat­ion and Assessment Council (NAAC) has evaluated only 10% of about 10,000 higher education institutio­ns in India and the government wants to bring all

under accreditat­ion in the next three years. For this, proposal is to rope in private rating agencies.

Autonomy of institutio­ns is the next big reform the government would implement, Panagariya said.

The government plans to introduce a three-tier autonomy mechanism in which the institutio­ns having ranked on the top by the HRD ministry will get full academic, administra­tive and financial autonomy.

It would mean these institutio­ns will be free to introduce new courses and schools, revamp curriculum, appoint faculty including from foreign universiti­es and approve research projects.

Middle-ranked institutio­ns will have higher autonomy than their current level.

It would mean they would be free to introduce new courses and appoint faculty but will have to take approval of the funding agency (HRD ministry) to start new schools and appoint foreign faculty.

The institutio­ns ranked poor would remain under the government control.

Sources said that the reforms are being anchored in the Prime Minister’s Office and the changes are being made as suggested by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the review in March 2017.

THE NDA GOVT HAS DECIDED TO SET IN MOTION THE REFORMS BY MAKING THIRD PARTY MANDATORY ACCREDITAT­ION FOR ALL PUBLIC AND PRIVATE INSTITUTIO­NS

 ??  ?? Arvind Panagariya
Arvind Panagariya

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