Khaleej Times

Put students at the heart of Indian education reform

- Frank F islam

India has the third-largest higher educationa­l system in the world. In 2016, there were 799 universiti­es and 39,071 colleges spread across the country. These numbers are staggering. The growth of higher education in India over a little more than half a century has been even more staggering. Between 1950 and 2014, the number of universiti­es in India increased by 34 times. And, between 1950 and 2013, colleges increased by 74 times. This quantitati­ve explosion in higher education institutio­ns has not been matched by the quality of the education they provide. In fact, the gap between quantity and quality is so large that it stands as one of the major obstacles in the way of India being a world leader. To become such a leader, India needs to develop a world class higher education system. Two years ago, the Narendra Modi administra­tion attempted to put some focus on quality in higher education with its introducti­on of draft regulation­s for a new initiative called the “UGC Guidelines, 2016.” By 2018, when the first six institutio­ns were named under this initiative, they were designated as “Institutio­ns of Eminence” as opposed to “world class institutio­ns”. Although the label has been changed, the intent remains the same. That is to give considerab­le discretion to and elevate the status of these institutio­ns. This is not necessaril­y a bad thing. But, it will do little to address the underlying problems of higher education in India.

This is true because the focus is completely wrong. These universiti­es are the tip of the higher educationa­l iceberg. Enhancing the capacity of a few institutio­ns, thus possibly enabling them to be rated a little higher in the world rankings of higher education institutio­ns, does nothing for the many.

That’s not to say that India does not need world class institutio­ns of higher education. It is to say that more, importantl­y

India, needs a world class higher education system.

A world class higher education system is one that is student-or customer-centered rather than institutio­n-centered. It comprises certified and caring institutio­ns that have the resources required and the core mission of ensuring that students acquire the knowledge/skills/abilities and dispositio­ns that they need to achieve their individual goals and to maximise their contributi­on to society.

India’s current system has been almost exactly the opposite of that. The emphasis has been primarily on a select group of institutio­ns and individual­s rather than embracing and addressing the needs of the whole.

There are many steps that must be taken to change this and to make the Indian higher education system world class. They include:

Increase public financing. The federal and state government­s currently provide limited funding for higher education. As a result, over 70 per cent of the higher education institutio­ns are operated by the private sector. These institutio­ns are not well regulated and are of highly variable quality. Public sector financing could be used to support existing public institutio­ns and to establish new ones in regions in which there are limited higher educationa­l opportunit­ies.

Enhance the infrastruc­ture: Colleges and universiti­es throughout India have inadequate physical settings, lack equipment, and suffer from a shortage of competent teachers. Ensuring that each higher educationa­l institutio­n is infrastruc­turally sound, establishe­s the proper environmen­t for learning and growth.

Expand access to and participat­ion in higher education: The enrollment in higher education is approximat­ely 15 per cent of the eligible population. This percentage needs to be much higher for India to be considered and to become a developed or developing country. It also needs to be representa­tive of the entire population, including females, those from the weaker sectors, and rural areas.

Place an emphasis on vocational education: The higher education system must meet the needs of potential employers and prospectiv­e employees. Currently, there is a mismatch. There are many other steps that must be taken, such as addressing politician­s controllin­g many educationa­l institutio­ns, to make India’s higher education system world class. But there must be only one mindset. That mindset must be that the country’s higher education system must be restructur­ed, redesigned, and renewed in a way that benefits all of India and all Indians. —IANS

Frank F Islam is an entreprene­ur, civic and thought leader based in Washington DC

The gap between quantity and quality is so large that it stands as one of the major obstacles in the way of India being a world leader

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