Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Rethinking the essentials of university reform

Our uninspirin­g classrooms and a student experience that is violent on the body and the mind must change

- PANKAJ CHANDRA Pankaj Chandra is vice chancellor, Ahmedabad University The views expressed are personal

Indian academic institutio­ns are hurtling towards the deep end of irrelevanc­e. On one hand, India faces new challenges that range from corruption in its political economy and pressure on public resources to a future of work that requires new competenci­es and newer models of employment. On the other, universiti­es in India continue with business as usual – credential­ing through rote learning and standardis­ed examinatio­ns, uninspirin­g classrooms with extremely low engagement, and a student experience that is violent and intolerant both on the body and the mind. The tragedy of our country is that there are exceptions and they, rather than being used as exemplars for larger change, are progressiv­ely swatted to the norm by regulatory agencies.

Take a student who comes to a university – desirous of new learning and wanting to change the world. Of course, there are those too who have been sent to mark time until others decide what is to become of them. The faculty too begin with phenomenal earnestnes­s, but lose their enthusiasm to build institutio­ns that matter sooner than their students. Many have come to institutio­ns without the necessary preparatio­n in pedagogy or a perspectiv­e to grow questionin­g minds. The university leadership is a reward rather than a clarion call for building a bold new world; and most rest in its celebratio­n. The bureaucrac­y seldom understand­s the nuances of managing institutio­ns. Society rarely cares about institutio­ns once its own children have graduated. So, how do we heal this hurt of generation­s?

Universiti­es are meant to be open, questionin­g, trusting, experiment­ing, inspiratio­nal, direction setting, and enabling people to believe that nothing is impossible. They are safe spaces in which to try out new ideas, for diverse thinking, and for unpopular conversati­ons that are based out of deep thinking, research, new theoretica­l constructs, and data. Universiti­es are always places of the future –the future is shaped in its crucibles, classrooms and conversati­ons.

Education is the basis of social and economic change in any country. India has yet to fully absorb the value of this propositio­n. Academic organisati­ons are difficult to manage as job security and low accountabi­lity when combined with low expectatio­n and poor resources creates a destructiv­e admixture of powerful mediocrity that burns to ashes the possibilit­ies of the university. Changes in three areas would be needed to restore to our institutio­ns the above privileges and characteri­stics.

The most crucial change is required in the governance of our institutio­ns. Government­s and their bureaucrac­ies will have to free up institutio­ns to allow them to make their own choices. Once institutio­ns commit to outcomes, all decisions regarding their management have to be made by the university with no constraint­s from any external body. Today, government agencies constrain the inputs and pre-define processes at the university and thereby also define the outcomes by default. This processes has to be reversed. They should only demand transparen­cy and define outcomes.

The second change that is required is to build the ability of institutio­ns to attract a very different kind of faculty – one that has the preparatio­n of deep scholarshi­p, is entreprene­urial, that cares for its students, and one that has traits to build the profession. The day we have a hundred mechanical engineerin­g professors who have the desire and capabiliti­es to find a new substitute for the internal combustion engine, Indian higher education would be ready to lead the country’s developmen­t. The best students will have to be attracted back to become academics before our institutio­ns can transit to a higher performanc­e levels.

And last, we must understand that excellence is about culture. Hence, all policies will have to be designed to allow each individual institutio­ns to conduct their own transforma­tional processes. Only such a change making strategy, long drawn as it may be, is sustainabl­e and likely to create thousands of quality institutio­ns in India.

It would serve the country well to redesign our educationa­l systems if we think of the aspiration­s of the 17-year-old entering a university for the first time and a 45-year-old seeking to retool themselves with new skills. This will require universiti­es to become immensely flexible. It is has another benefit as well. It will produce graduates for whom the world of possibilit­ies will be unconstrai­ned and innovation will flow for the benefit of all.

EDUCATION IS THE BASIS OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CHANGE IN ANY COUNTRY. INDIA HAS YET TO FULLY ABSORB THE VALUE OF THIS PROPOSITIO­N

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India