Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Study in India: Govt aims to attract 2 lakh foreign students

- Prashant K Nanda prashant.n@htlive.com

STUDY IN INDIA HRD minister Prakash Javadekar says India’s higher education sector often complains about restrictiv­e rules but now the govt is making a conscious effort to liberalize it

The government on Wednesday announced an ambitious plan to attract 200,000 foreign students to India, more than four times the current number.

The target is part of a “Study in India” scheme launched jointly by four ministries—human resource developmen­t, external affairs, home and commerce. From easing the visa process to giving a sizable fee waiver to foreign students from Asia and Africa, the scheme marks a concerted effort to make Indian campuses diverse, in terms of the number of internatio­nal students.

Union human resource devel- opment minister (HRD) Prakash Javadekar said Indian higher education sector often complains about restrictiv­e rules but now the government is making a conscious effort to liberalize it. “India can become a hub of affordable education for foreign students,” he said, adding that they are opening up top universiti­es to foreign students.

“Study in India will open the gates of prominent educationa­l institutio­ns of India for foreign students,” Javadekar said.

As part of the move, India will target students from countries in South, South-East and West Asia, Africa and Commonweal­th of Independen­t States that were part of the former Soviet Union.

“Initially, we are targeting 30 partner countries,” said R. Subrahmany­am, higher education secretary, adding that his ministry has shortliste­d 160 colleges and universiti­es to execute the plan initially. Authoritie­s said that in order to make the plan attractive, institutio­ns and government will offer fee waiver—partial or full —to over 53% of these foreign students. All admission will happen via a single window system: applicants from these 30 countries will apply on an online platform for selection to 160 institutio­ns.

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj said that though her ministry attracts foreign students through two dedicated institutio­ns—Nalanda University and the South Asian University—the new move has limitless possibilit­ies in terms of attracting foreign students and tying up with other countries.

“Study in India is an invitation to foreign students,” she said. “The move will bring multicultu­ralism and diversity to Indian universiti­es,” said Satyapal Singh, minister of state for HRD. The lack of diversity on Indian campuses is affecting institutio­ns’ internatio­nal rankings.

Besides, it is expected to bring in revenue over time.

NEW DELHI:

 ?? FILE/HT ?? The move will bring diversity to Indian universiti­es
FILE/HT The move will bring diversity to Indian universiti­es

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