Colleges hold the key to
improving quality in higher education
Modern higher education in India had its genesis in colleges as they
predated universities at least by half a century. They also outnumbered
universities since their inception, but post-Independence they have grown
rather too rapidly to become dominant players in the higher education. As per
MHRD’s All India Survey of Higher Education (AISHE) data, while the number of
universities in the country increased from 27 in 1950 to 903 in 2017-18,
recording a growth of 32 times, the number of colleges during the corresponding
period soared 67 times from 578 to 39,050. Critically, over 78 per cent of the
total number of teachers in higher education are employed in the collegiate
sector.
Ubiquitously, improving the overall quality of higher education shall
remain a distant dream unless the initiatives and measures in this regard pay
focussed attention on colleges. The fact that over 60 per cent of the colleges
in the country are located in rural areas, catering mostly to the deprived and
marginalised sections of the society, makes it imperative for policy planners
to focus their attention on colleges. Since an overwhelming number of the
colleges are affiliated to public-funded state universities, the onus of
reforms for improving quality and promoting excellence in colleges fall in the
domain of the state governments. However, the Union government, which is
constitutionally charged with the responsibility of coordination and
maintenance of standards in higher education, has to play a critical role
through policy intervention and regulation.
Fortunately for the policy planners and regulators, the MHRD’s AISHE has
been providing data on the number, size and growth of colleges consistently
since 2006-07 and the same are also timely released. So, the summary data for
2017-18 is already available in public domain. A quick diagnostic run of the
available data as obtained for the years 2007-08 to 2017-18 throws up major
deficiencies in the collegiate system of higher education in the country,
crying for structural reforms in the sector.
The problem of large numbers of colleges affiliated to a single university
seems to have been gradually addressed; 161 of the 285 universities affiliating
colleges now have less than 100 colleges affiliated to them and the same has
been achieved by establishing new universities and also by bifurcating or
trifurcating existing universities. There are now only 15 universities that
have more than 500 colleges affiliated to them and it seems that most states
are now proactively working to lessen their affiliating burden.
Quite a few major problems, however, still continue to persist, thus
calling for urgent action. The first is the problem of single-discipline
colleges which constitute over a third of the total number of colleges in the
country. For these colleges, curricular reforms like Choice-Based Credit System
(CBCS), which is being prescribed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) as
a necessary measure to improve quality in higher education is a near
impossibility.
Secondly, the collegiate system of higher education in the country is
characterised by a very large number of small-sized institutions. Data reveals
that nearly a fifth of the colleges have less than a hundred students on their
roll and only less than 4 per cent of them have over 3,000 students.
Small-sized colleges suffer from the same deficiencies as those pointed out in
case of single-discipline colleges. Additionally, they also lack adequate and
suitable infrastructure and suffer from the lack of academic viability and
economies of scale.
Thirdly, the student-teacher ratio in the colleges at over 30 is way too
high. Technological advancements in teaching-learning notwithstanding, teachers
play a critical role in imparting quality higher education. It is also proven
that institutions catering to largely first-generation learners drawn from the
poorer and marginalised sections of society need to invest more in teachers and
teaching-learning resources as these students require far more focussed
attention to overcome what their families are unable to provide for.
Finally, the number of colleges in the country have been rising too
rapidly. The expansion is largely driven by private initiatives and the number
of government and government-aided colleges have been declining in proportion.
Even though there have been some consolidation lately, leading to closure and
winding up of colleges, we are still seeing on an average 3 to 4 colleges being
established every day. Such a growth is neither desirable nor viable
academically and economically. While new colleges are still needed to mitigate
regional disparities and widen equitable access, the time has come to focus on
qualitative expansion and consolidation.
The writer is the Secretary General, Association of Indian Universities.
Views are personal.
WRITTEN BY : Furqan Qamar : Aug 23, 2018, 07:15 AM IST
Source : https://www.dnaindia.com/analysis/column-colleges-hold-the-key-to-improving-quality-in-higher-education-2653364
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