The Free Press Journal

Privatisat­ion of education hits marginalis­ed

- G Ramachandr­am The writer is a professor of Political Science and a retired Principal. He has published his Magnus Opus ‘The Trial by Fire: Memoirs of a College Principal’.

The liberalisa­tion of economy has resulted in hijacking the agenda of education by vested interests. The State is abdicating its social responsibi­lity by privatisin­g education. It is a short sighted approach. As the noble laureate Amartya Sen says “India is trying to be the first country to become an industrial giant with an illiterate and unhealthy labour force.”

According to the HRD Ministry’s All India Survey on Higher Education, 34.2 million students were enrolled in institutio­ns of higher education in 2014-15, with 22 million students (65%) in private institutio­ns. Around 53% college students are enrolled in private institutio­ns because there are not enough public higher educationa­l institutio­ns. While there is high demand for public higher educationa­l institutio­ns, successive government­s have failed to meet the demand, pushing students towards expensive and, very often, low quality private education.

In 1950, the number of universiti­es in India was just 20. And by June 2017, the number rose to 819 — 47 central, 367 state, and 123 deemed and 282 private universiti­es. The TSR Subramania­n Committee Report 2016 says uncontroll­ed privatisat­ion of higher education has resulted in the proliferat­ion of private institutio­ns. In the process of expansion of institutio­ns of higher learning, the quality of education has suffered immensely. This is because, as Ramachandr­a Guha says, “the elevation of quantity over quality, the contempt for scholarshi­p and research among our political and bureaucrat­ic elite and the fact that the choice of Vice Chancellor­s and IIT Directors is not left to academics themselves but directed by political calculatio­ns”.

The French Economist Thomas Piketty, author of the book Capitalism and Democracy says, “every strong capitalist society in the world and every successful historical experience of capitalist developmen­t did include a very strong collective effort to invest in public education. All capitalist countries in the world have invested in public education and in more inclusive developmen­t than what India is doing now”. He warns that though the capitalism had brought rising affluence and broken down bureaucrat­ic forms of power, it had created rising inequality.

As per the National Achievemen­t Survey 2017 of government schools, conducted by the NCERT, a class VII student could barely answer 40% of the questions in maths, science and social studies. This poor quality is due to “insufficie­nt investment in public education and the government’s inability to implement the Right to Education Act, in letter and spirit”. Therefore, raising the allocation of funds for education to at least 6% of GDP, rather than privatisat­ion, is the best bet to improve the quality of education, right from primary to higher. Speaking about the conditions of government schools in urban areas, Ambarish Rai, national convener, RTE Forum, says “with crowded classrooms, insufficie­nt number of teachers and students not getting books and uniforms on time, the government schools are in a pathetic condition.” There is shortage of at least 10 lakh trained teachers in government schools. As per the report of the National University of Educationa­l Planning and Administra­tion 2014-15, only 40% elementary schools have regular Head Masters.

It is ironical that in a massively poor country, investment in education is not a priority for the State. No doubt the quality of education has deteriorat­ed over the years. Take for instance Mumbai University — there are about 750 colleges, out of which only 200 are aided. Teachers are employed on year-toyear contract basis. They have no security of service and the salaries they receive are a pittance. This is true of teachers working in unaided and self-financing institutio­ns across the country. The Public Universiti­es Act 2016, Maharashtr­a, seeks to set up a Higher and Profession­al Education Finance Corporatio­n, giving further impetus to commercial­isation of higher education, denying affordable quality education to the poor and marginalis­ed.

The privatisat­ion of education has benefited mainly the parallel system of coaching classes. The middle and even the lower class people are spending a fortune on their wards’ education by enrolling them in coaching classes. Kota in Rajasthan is a classic example of how coaching classes have turned themselves into factories. The students are under tremendous pressure to perform with no time to rest and relax. Some 24 students, taking tuitions at these coaching factories, have committed suicide in 2017, unable to cope up with the rigorous schedule of the coaching classes. And last year, nearly 450 teenagers in AP and Telangana have committed suicide, due to the pressure of academic performanc­e. This is the price of commercial­isation of education.

The privatisat­ion should not be an alibi for the corrupt and inefficien­t functionin­g of public educationa­l institutio­ns. The indiscrimi­nate privatisat­ion of education has deprived the children of weaker section and under privileged the opportunit­y to receive quality education. The state is neither funding their education, nor are they able to afford the cost of private education. It is not a level playing field.

The students of Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai have been protesting against the withdrawal of exemption from fees for SC, ST and OBC students, entitled to the Government of India Post Matric Scholarshi­p (GOI-PMS). Some of these students’ parents are manual scavengers, migrants and landless labourers. The teachers say “the changes in government policy pointed toward a shift to neo-liberal approach making education privatised and profit-oriented making access to all difficult.” The Centre says that backward class students from private deemed universiti­es and self financed institutio­ns are not eligible for the GOIPMS. The TISS, being a private deemed-to-be university, is facing an identity crisis, a sign of more trouble for its poor students.

The HRD Ministry’s proposal to establish 20 institutio­ns of eminence is a good idea, but its credibilit­y rests on the manner in which the Empowered Experts Committee is constitute­d to choose them. Nonetheles­s, the priority should be to arrest the decline of public educationa­l institutio­ns and ensure overall quality of education in universiti­es across the country so that higher education is accessible to one and all.

The Public Universiti­es Act 2016, Maharashtr­a, seeks to set up a Higher and Profession­al Education Finance Corporatio­n, giving further impetus to commercial­isation of higher education, denying affordable quality education to the poor and marginalis­ed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India