Academics have broadly welcomed a pledge by India鈥檚 ruling party to increase student numbers by 50聽per cent in selected institutions, but expressed doubts about implementation and safeguarding the quality of education.
The Bharatiya Janata Party鈥檚 , released in the run-up to the national election scheduled to be held in seven phases until 19聽May, includes a promise to increase the number of seats in 鈥渃entral law, engineering, science and management institutions鈥 by at least 50聽per cent in the next five years.
The right-wing party, which has led India since 2014, also pledged to create 50 鈥渋nstitutions of eminence鈥 by 2024. Last year, the government had planned to assign 20 universities with the status 鈥 which comes with additional funding and greater autonomy 鈥 but ultimately just six institutions were selected.
The centre-left Indian National Congress, the country鈥檚 other major political party, made no specific pledges on higher education in its manifesto but did promise to double the education budget to 6聽per cent of gross domestic product by 2023-24.
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Antara Sengupta, research fellow at the Observer Research Foundation in Mumbai, said that the BJP policy to increase student numbers would be 鈥渁聽positive step towards propagating excellence in education, given the high student population and proportionately [low number of places] in elite central institutes鈥.
She added that this would likely cover the 19 Indian Institutes of Management, the 54 Indian Institutes of Technology and National Institutes of Technology and the 27 Indian Institutes of Science and Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research.
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However, she warned that 鈥渢he government should not dilute the quality and terms of entry into these institutes鈥 in the process, 鈥渁s that would defeat the purpose of these elite institutions鈥.
The BJP has also pledged to create an arts, culture and music university, a hospitality and tourism university and a police university.
Ms Sengupta said that these new institutions would 鈥渇urther compartmentalise higher education in the country鈥 when 鈥渢he need of the hour is multidisciplinary universities鈥.
鈥淩ather than putting funds in new single-disciplinary universities, the government should improve the already existing ones,鈥 she said.
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Ms Sengupta said that she had her 鈥渇air share of doubts鈥 that the policies would be fulfilled given that 鈥渕any such promises made in past campaigns still haven鈥檛 seen the light of day鈥, including a pledge by the BJP four years ago to launch a new national education policy. The last version dates back to 1992.
鈥淚n the absence of such a policy, there has been no definitive direction and objective of education in the country, furthered by fragmented, directionless policies announced by the government time and again,鈥 she said.
Pushkar, director of the International Centre Goa, which describes itself as a non-profit autonomous society that brings together academics and creative people from India and around the world, said that increasing student numbers was 鈥渘o聽longer a big issue鈥 given the 鈥渕assive growth in the private sector鈥. The main problem now, he continued, was that most institutions 鈥渙ffer poor quality education鈥.
鈥淧ublic institutions are starved of funding; private institutions are driven almost entirely by profits. Overall, there are too few half-decent public and private institutions, and this is something that needs attention,鈥 he said.
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ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com
Academics and university leaders will discuss how universities can encourage innovative teaching and learning practices at 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Teaching Excellence Summit, which is taking place at Western University, in London, Ontario, Canada, from 4-6 June.
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