India Today

FROM THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

- (Aroon Purie)

Our endeavour at the india today Best Colleges Survey, now in its 22nd year, has been to provide readers with all the inputs to make an informed choice from over 50,000 higher education institutes. With this goal in mind, we have made our methodolog­y more stringent this year and widened the net to include many more colleges. We have included new entrants among the top 20 colleges, across all streams, and segregated rankings of public sector and private sector engineerin­g colleges. Reflecting the increasing diversity of career choices, we have included architectu­re, dentistry and social work streams this year. Our new survey partner, Marketing & Developmen­t Research Associates (MDRA), surveyed 988 colleges nationwide and visited 115 colleges to verify ranking parameters.

It is of course difficult to talk about colleges without raising an alarm about the state of our higher education sector, and here I’d like to cite the NITI Aayog’s three-year action agenda released last year. India’s Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER), the number of students in a particular grade, has risen over the past five years to 25.2 per cent, but is still way below the global average of 44 per cent. A 2016 assessment of 150,000 engineerin­g graduates found only 18 per cent were employable in the software sector in a functional role, only 41 per cent in non-functional business process outsourcin­g and only 4 per cent in software engineerin­g start-ups. Large sections of India’s workforce have insufficie­nt job skills because only 2.3 per cent have undergone formal skill training as opposed to 52 per cent in the US and 96 per cent in South Korea.

Alarming facts when you consider Indians spend over Rs 12 lakh on college education, way above the per capita income of Rs 1.11 lakh. With this in mind, our Best Colleges Survey has introduced new features like a return on investment (RoI) ranking to highlight the quality of jobs (in terms of salary package) one could expect after passing out from a college and how it compares to course fees paid.

The survey, put together by Senior Associate Editor Kaushik Deka, has found interestin­g facts. The alarming slide in the engineerin­g stream continues unabated. Once the most sought-after stream, today over 50 per cent of engineerin­g seats are going empty with colleges approachin­g the AICTE to slash over 130,000 seats. There are also some worrying indicators—most colleges continue to be concentrat­ed in the north and south. The number of colleges in the east, including densely populated states like Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal, is abysmally low.

Although India aims to attain a GER of 30 per cent by 2020, it will still trail behind global powers like China (42 per cent). Higher government spending in education, with stricter focus on quality management, is the way forward. Just to give you an idea, the Rs 44,000 crore Indian students spent in 2016-17 to study in just one country, the US, outstrippe­d the Rs 30,000 crore the Centre allocated for higher education this year. The reasons for this exodus are not far to see. India seriously lags behind when it comes to higher education. Just three institutio­ns—IIT Delhi, IIT Bombay and IISc Bengaluru— feature in the list of top 200 universiti­es in the world. These are appalling figures for a country on the cusp of a demographi­c and economic revolution. India will become the world’s youngest country by 2020 with an average age of 29 years and the world’s third largest economy by 2028. Not reforming our moribund education system could squander this rare opportunit­y.

It’s worth rememberin­g that no country has become a developed country without a robust education system. Sadly, our primary education system is in a worse mess than higher education. It requires vision, commitment and dedication to reform our educationa­l institutio­ns. It should be our topmost priority as it would be the greatest gift we can give to future generation­s.

 ??  ?? Our May 22, 2017 cover
Our May 22, 2017 cover
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