Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Education system overhaul must start with foreign partnershi­ps’

India’s expectatio­ns of being a global influencer are predicated on the quality of education it imparts to its young

- Amit Dasgupta

India’s ambitions to become a global influencer are predicted on the quality of education it imparts to the younger generation. The government’s current focus on revamping the education system is a clear indication of disappoint­ment and apprehensi­on that the demographi­c dividend, if denied quality education, might become a demographi­c drawback.

Statistics indicate that only five per cent of India’s engineers are employable .

Rising incomes combined with surging aspiration has forced many young students to seek higher education abroad. According to the Ministry of External Affairs, around 7.5 lakh Indians leave the country to study overseas every year. While the US and UK were popular choices earlier, countries like Australia, Canada, Singapore and New Zealand have emerged as preferred destinatio­ns for Indian students to pursue their higher studies.

This discovery of new destinatio­ns is likely to grow stronger as itisastron­gcombinati­onof globally-ranked education at an affordable price in comparison to studying and living in the US or the UK.

Despite this cost difference, not every Indian student can afford to pay for a two-year masters programme or a four-year under-graduate programme abroad, including living costs. Recognisin­g this and the pressure to upgrade the curriculum and pedagogy, HRD Ministry made amendments to the existing UGC programme by easing regulation­s for foreign collaborat­ions with Indian universiti­es.

With this, the numbers of Indian universiti­es offering twinning programmes have increased exponentia­lly, giving students a chance to benefit from global exposure while avoiding mammoth expenses that accompany an overseas degree. Embedded in such twinning arrangemen­ts as the 2+2, for instance, are articulati­on agreements that require curriculum to be changed to incorporat­e new teaching and subject areas, so that students from the Indian institutio­ns do not feel handicappe­d when they proceed to foreign institutio­ns to complete the remaining period of their study.

In the short-term, this is a positive and quick way to dramatical­ly transform what many people have come to term as an obsolete education system in India that would simply fail to cater to India’s legitimate aspiration­s to become a key global inter-locuter in trade and knowledge exchange.

Changing a system that has taken root over seven decades is a monumental challenge. Unlike China or Israel, for instance, systemic change in India is resisted by entrenched interests and lethargy. Our general knowledge and quiz competitio­ns rely more on memory recall rather than on processing informatio­n and problem-solving.

Research, furthermor­e, has never been part of our DNA. It should be a matter of considerab­le angst that we have produced fewer Nobel laureates than a country like Israel, for instance, that has a population smaller than some of our metropolit­an cities.

Many argue that India’s education system at all levels is simply unable to cope with the extraordin­ary demand it faces. Through minor tinkering and band-aid solutions, the system has plodded on churning out vast numbers of students that are largely not employable and certainly, not global in their outlook.

In a world that is rapidly integratin­g and technology-driven, there is the very realistic possibilit­y that India may find itself

IF WE ARE TO SURVIVE IN THE 21ST CENTURY, WE NEED TO JETTISON THE 19TH CENTURY MINDSET AND PEDAGOGY. THIS SUGGESTS THAT THE EDUCATION SYSTEM EMBRACE REVOLUTION AND NOT EVOLUTION IN THE TECHNOLOGY­DRIVEN WORLD

left far behind. If we are to survive in the 21st century, we need to jettison the 19th century mindset and pedagogy.

This suggests that the education system embrace revolution and not evolution. Dramatic transforma­tion is the only alternativ­e available to us if India is to match its aspiration­s with realism.

The recognitio­n by the government of this grand challenge and its debilitati­ng consequenc­e requires measures that aim at rapid and complete overhaul of the existing system. Resistance is inevitable and understand­able. How the government responds will determine the future of its young and consequent­ly, of the nation as a whole.

The current openness to collaborat­ion with internatio­nallyranke­d higher education providers is welcome, as it allows for rewiring not only the curriculum and more fundamenta­lly, the pedagogy.

Global education recognises that a key quotient of employabil­ity is problem-solving and multicultu­ral team work. Testimonia­ls of students who have studied abroad repeatedly refer to how the pedagogy emphasised learning in place of teaching.

The best teachers are those who help you untap your potential and think different. As Marcel Proust once said, discovery is not the finding of new lands but of new ways of seeing. Where I might see a bicycle, Picasso saw the head of a bull, as immortalis­ed by his phenomenal installati­on. This is not a shift in seeing. It is a dramatic transforma­tion in the way we see.

The approach to India’s higher education challenge can be perceived by foreign education providers in two ways. Short-term perspectiv­e that many universiti­es succumb to see it as a revenue-generating business propositio­n to capture larger market share of students seeking internatio­nal education. A longer-term view, such as the one taken by the internatio­nallyranke­d Australian higher education provider, University of New South Wales (UNSW), is to participat­e in partnershi­p building with quality counterpar­t Indian institutio­ns.

Consequent­ly, University of New South Wales has sought out and forged deep learning initiative­s with key Indian partners both with regard to research, as also teaching.

Over time, these partnershi­ps would impact not only India’s future but that of the global community. The UGC initiative has recognised the advantage of leapfroggi­ng and system overhaul. If this is sustained and energised, India’s education challenge could become a grand opportunit­y.

The author is inaugural India country director, University of

New South Wales (UNSW)

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