Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

JNU can become a ‘world class’ institutio­n

The UGC’s onesizefit­sall regulation­s must not be allowed to destroy the university’s potential to become one

- Gulshan Sachdeva is Jean Monnet chair and professor at the School of Internatio­nal Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University The views expressed are personal

For some time, the Narendra Modi government has been talking about facilitati­ng 20 ‘world class’ academic institutio­ns in India. Last year, the University Grant Commission came out with draft guidelines on World Class Institutio­n. Recently the University Grant Commission has approved these guidelines with changes (including renaming them as institutes of eminence) for cabinet approval.

Draft guidelines and various reports have indicated that the core difference between the so-called World Class Institutio­n and normal universiti­es in India will be that these 20 institutio­ns will enjoy much more autonomy than existing universiti­es and academic institutio­ns. They will be free to fix their own fees for foreign students (which could be up to 30% of the total strength), salary of foreign faculty as well as freedom to choose admission procedure, course structure, course duration etc. Any public university seeking this tag also must be among the top 25 in the National Institutio­n Ranking Framework (NIRF).

As per draft guidelines, the potential World Class Institutio­n will have to be a multidisci­plinary institutio­n, focusing on teaching and research; a good proportion of foreign or foreign-educated faculty; focusing on developmen­t concerns, merit based admissions, faculty-student ration of 1:10, good infrastruc­ture and large owned campus, internatio­nal collaborat­ions, good publicatio­n record etc.

The basic philosophy behind this move has been that the existing regulatory structure from the institutio­ns likes the University Grant Commission, All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), etc. do not allow fully autonomous environmen­t for many Indian universiti­es to become ‘world class’.

With the highest National Assessment and Accreditat­ion Council (NAAC) score, best central university award by the President, and number three ranking in the NIRF, the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) definitely has the potential to become ‘world class’. But even with the government’s own philosophy, this will only happen if institutio­ns like Jawaharlal Nehru University are given greater autonomy in their admission and other procedures.

The government is correctly planning to create World Class Institutio­n with minimal State institutio­nal interferen­ce. This broadly fits within the Modi government’s philosophy of ‘minimum government and maximum governance’.

However, existing institutio­ns like the University Grant Commission , whose own future is uncertain, are keep issuing one-size-fits-all regulation­s. The current M.Phil/PhD admission guidelines have practicall­y stopped all new research admissions in Jawaharlal Nehru University for the next few years, particular­ly in social sciences, internatio­nal studies, languages (including Sanskrit), law and governance, biotechnol­ogy etc.

In Jawaharlal Nehru University, with the existing faculty strength of 565 and about 5,000 research scholars, this means each faculty on an average is guiding close to nine researcher­s. For a mainly research-oriented university, this is not a terribly bad situation.

There may be some professors with more than average numbers, which can be taken care of with the existing 300 vacancies. But we must understand that research supervisor­s are allocated on the basis of specialisa­tion rather than academic hierarchie­s as the University Grant Commission guidelines dictate.

As per the University Grant Commission , a young assistant professor can only guide half the number of students than a professor even if she/he has a specialisa­tion in an exciting new research area.

These are the regulation­s, which the government must do away with, if there is any plan to make Indian academic institutio­ns ‘world class’.

 ?? VIPIN KUMAR/HT PHOTO ?? The JNU students’ union holds a referendum on the university administra­tion’s plan to make interviews the main ‘test’ for selecting research students and reduce the number of scholars a teacher can supervise
VIPIN KUMAR/HT PHOTO The JNU students’ union holds a referendum on the university administra­tion’s plan to make interviews the main ‘test’ for selecting research students and reduce the number of scholars a teacher can supervise

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