Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

UGC bats for apprentice­ship in degrees

- Prashant K Nanda prashant.n@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The University Grants Commission (UGC) has asked universiti­es to offer undergradu­ate degree programmes that will include apprentice­ships and industrial training, in an effort to promote outcome-based learning and to improve employabil­ity. The higher education regulator has already developed guidelines for such apprentice­ship-embedded degrees. Institutio­ns are free to design these programmes in consultati­on with Sector Skill Councils, All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) and industry bodies such as Ficci and CII.

“Considerin­g the interests of the students and society at large, you are requested to kindly promote apprentice­ship/internship embedded degree programmes in your university as well as the college/institutio­ns affiliated to your university,” UGC said in a letter to universiti­es dated 20 September. Mint has seen a copy of the letter.

These degree programmes will allow students to spend a considerab­le amount of time, may be more than a year, on shop floors. This is expected to help students get jobs faster and industry get trained manpower, against the backdrop of high unemployme­nt.

A government official, who declined to be named, said it has three key objectives: “to improve the employabil­ity of students pursuing undergradu­ate programmes, to focus on outcomebas­ed learning programmes and third, enhance active linkage between the higher education system and industries”.

Unemployme­nt in India, already high for several years, rose further with the outbreak of covid-19, crossing 20% during last year’s national lockdown.

It has come down since then, and according to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), as of 31 August, India’s national joblessnes­s was 8.32% and urban unemployme­nt rate 9.78%. It is still considered quite high in the labour market. Over 1.5 million people from both the formal and informal sectors had lost their jobs in August 2021 alone, HT Mint reported on 1 September.

The regulator also asked universiti­es to furnish details about the kind of courses they wish to pursue in this model and industries they are partnering with or wish to partner by early next month. The official cited above said institutio­ns are free to tie up with non-commercial and commercial organizati­ons, establishm­ents and enterprise­s.

“Embedding apprentice­ship…will offer a kind of training that shall be undertaken not on the campus but on the premises of commercial or non-commercial organizati­ons or enterprise­s.

Students graduating from such degree programmes shall be eligible to take admission in the master’s programme in the specific subject in which they have earned their undergradu­ate degree as well as in subjects for which they have taken 24 credits in the core subjects as a part of their UG programme.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India