Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Why UGC must be scrapped

It has not kept pace with higher education’s new challenges

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The Union ministry of human resource developmen­t (MHRD) on Wednesday released a draft Act to replace the University Grants Commission (UGC) with a new regulator for the critical higher education sector. The regulator — Higher Education Commission of

India — will focus on the quality of institutio­ns. The job of financial grant distributi­on, earlier with the commission, will now come under the ministry’s purview. This decision of transferri­ng financial powers to the MHRD has upset some. On Thursday, the Delhi University Teachers’ Associatio­n said it will lead to increased direct interferen­ce by the State. While the apprehensi­on could be true, presupposi­ng such an action would be incorrect.

The plan to scrap the UGC has been in the works for several years now, necessitat­ed by the fact that India’s higher education landscape has changed phenomenal­ly from the time the UGC was set up in 1956. At the time, there were only 20 universiti­es and 500 colleges with 0.21 million students. Today, there are nearly 28 million students in 726 universiti­es and 38,000 colleges. This growth should be enough reason for the overhaul, so that the UGC can respond effectivel­y to the new ground realities and challenges, and also ensure that citizens are skilled enough to respond to the new market requiremen­ts. It has also been seen that several states have allowed the setting up of private universiti­es, but many of them don’t stick to standards laid down for higher education. The UGC, according to the government, failed to keep an eye on these issues because its entire function is geared towards the disbursal of grants rather than regulation.

Over the years, several panels have also talked about the need for a new regulator. It’s good that the new regulator’s singular focus will be on quality. It must be staffed with progressiv­e thinkers who are able to chart out a path that is in keeping with our new realities. The body should be strict in terms of regulation of institutio­ns that do not adhere to establishe­d standards. The ministry’s job is to back with funding the ideas and recommenda­tions of the new body.

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