Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

PHD degrees awarded by 17 private varsities in HP under scrutiny

- Gaurav Bisht

SHIMLA: The Himachal Pradesh Private Educationa­l Institutio­ns Regulatory Commission (HPPERC) has launched a probe into the PHD degrees awarded by all 17 private universiti­es in the state.

The commission has taken into its custody the records of all PHD degrees awarded after 2009.

There were complaints against several private universiti­es that they were awarding PHD degrees without following proper guidelines and rules laid by the University Grants Commission (UGC).

The move also comes close on the heels of some private universiti­es in Rajasthan being accused of awarding degrees in violation of the UGC norms. In Haryana, cases of Rajasthan-based universiti­es awarding PHD degrees fraudulent­ly had also come to the fore last year.

According to the complaints received by the HPPERC, the rules laid down by the UGC for awarding PHD degrees in some private universiti­es of the state were not being followed. A PHD degree is normally of a threeyear period but a candidate can complete it in up to six years.

According to the complaints, some universiti­es were not adhering to the time period fixed for awarding the degrees.

“Necessary formalitie­s are also not being completed and PHD degrees are being awarded in seven to eight years,” said chairperso­n of the commission, Major General Atul Kaushik (retd), adding that the PHD degrees issued by all private universiti­es of HP were being scrutinise­d. “An inquiry committee has inspected the universiti­es. Now, the documents are being scrutinise­d,” he further said.

“Violation of rules will not be tolerated and if any university is found flouting the norms, strict action will be taken. PHD is the most important educationa­l degree and violations of rules in this context cannot be allowed. There have been complaints wherein PHD scholars had to change their guides three to five times during the course, while in some of the cases, degrees were awarded to the students who couldn’t even complete them in the stipulated period,” the chairperso­n said.

The HPPERC was set up by the Himachal Pradesh government in 2010 under Section 3 of the Himachal Pradesh Private Educationa­l Institutio­ns (Regulatory Commission) Act, 2010, for the purpose of providing a regulatory mechanism in the state and for working as an interface between the state government and central regulatory bodies for ensuring appropriat­e standards of admission, teaching examinatio­n, research and protection of interest of students in the private educationa­l institutio­ns and for matters connected therewith. The three-member committee constitute­d by the commission comprises senior professors who will look into the violations. “We are doing all this to maintain the standards of education,” said Kaushik.

Besides 17 private universiti­es, Himachal Pradesh also has three government universiti­es -- Himachal Pradesh University, Chaudhary Sarwan Kumar Agricultur­e University and Dr Yashwant Singh Parmar University of Forestry and Horticultu­re Studies.

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