Hindustan Times (Patiala)

More autonomy for 60 institutes

POSITIVE STEP JNU, BHU, AMU to benefit from UGC’s decision

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : The Jawaharlal Nehru University, University of Hyderabad and Jadavpur University are among some of the top varsities that have been granted greater autonomy to start new courses, plan their own syllabi and collaborat­e with foreign institutio­ns, Union human resource developmen­t minister Prakash Javadekar announced on Tuesday.

Javadekar said 52 varsities – five central universiti­es, 21 state universiti­es, 24 deemed universiti­es and two private universiti­es – figure among the 60 higher educationa­l institutio­ns that will benefit from the government’s initiative. “Although these universiti­es will remain within the UGC’s ambit, they will have the freedom to launch new courses, off-campus centres, skill developmen­t courses, research parks and new academic programmes. They will also have the freedom to hire foreign faculty members, enroll foreign students, give incentiveb­ased emoluments to faculty members, enter into academic collaborat­ions and run open distance learning programmes,” he said.

It was learnt that the Delhi University was unable to apply for this scheme as their NAAC (National Assessment and Accreditat­ion Council) grading was incomplete.

While the government has liberalise­d regulation­s to provide greater autonomy to top institutio­ns, it’s also taking steps against deemed-to-be universiti­es that aren’t high on performanc­e. Javadekar said a show cause notice will be given to the Institute of Advance Studies in Education in Rajasthan; Vinayaka Missions Research Foundation in Salem (Tamil Nadu); and the Meenakshi Academy of Higher Education and Research in Chennai, which are reportedly lacking in quality. The Supreme Court had earlier cancelled engineerin­g degrees given by these institutes.

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