Higher Education, India: 1

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Revision as of 10:31, 30 January 2018

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Contents

Admission of students to colleges

University can deny admission if all documents not produced: HC

Original documents a must for admission, says HC, Oct 11 2016 : The Times of India


Even if a candidate secures a rank in an entrance exam, the university can deny admission if all required documents are not produced, the Delhi high court has said.

HC dismissed a petition filed by a student, Bhim Shankar, seeking a direction to Delhi University (DU) to accept his degree certificate and grant him admission in the LLB course for 2016-2017 session.

Shankar had appeared for the LLB entrance examina tion and had secured a rank under the OBC category . Accordingly , he was called for counselling on August 22 but he could not submit the original graduation degree as required, DU later told court in response to Shankar's plea.

In his petition, the candidate told court he had graduated in 2012 but failed to collect his degree from the university .Once DU administration refused him admission due to nonsubmission of original documents, he collected his original degree on September 8, 2016 . When he approached DU with his original degree certificate after the counselling was over, the varsity did not agree to admit him, prompting him to approach HC. f counselling.

HC, however, reiterated that “a degree not collected cannot be equated with adegree not issued.“

It also held that it was mandatory for candidates to report with the documents in original at the specified date and time for counselling, failing which they would forfeit their claim for admission.

Court judgements

Second attempts and gold medals

HC: Varsity can’t deny gold for 2nd exam attempt, January 29, 2018: The Times of India


It’s a big relief for many students who fail to write an exam owing to illness and fear that their second attempt could deprive them of a gold medal.

The Delhi high court has held that sitting for an exam by a student in the successive academic year owing to illness or other such circumstances in the first year will still be considered the “first attempt”, and that this is no ground for denying any recognition to the student. Justice Indermeet Kaur observed that the university could not deprive the student of the award for achieving the highest score in the batch on the ground that he took the examination in respect of two papers in the following year.

The petitioner, through his advocate Amit George, informed the high court that he was enrolled in the five-year course of BA LLB in 2010 at Amity Law School. For his 6th semester, out of five papers he could not appear in two — Code of Civil Procedure and the paper of Code of Criminal Procedure. These two examinations were scheduled for May, 2013.

The petitioner could not appear in the examinations as he was suffering from chicken pox.

The petitioner wrote his examination in the two papers in 2014 and passed with flying colours. He graduated from the university with the highest score/ cumulative performance index (CPI) for his course i.e. 80.56. In February, 2016, the petitioner was shocked to learn that he was not being considered for the award of Gold Medal in spite of him having achieved the highest score in his course.

Deemed universities

Cannot use the word 'university' in their names

UGC asks 123 deemed-to-be varsities to drop ‘university’ from names, November 13, 2017: The Times of India


HIGHLIGHTS

UGC secretary has directed the heads of these institutes that they should “restrain from using the word ‘university'.

Instead, the institution may mention the word ‘deemed to be university’ within parenthesis.

Failure to do so will invite necessary action against the deemed to be university in accordance with the UGC Regulations, 2016.


As many as 123 institutions of higher education which are deemed to be universities have been directed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) to refrain from using the word 'university' in their names. In a circular issued on November 10, a copy of which is with TOI, UGC secretary PK Thakur citing a Supreme Court order dated November 3, has directed the heads of these institutes that they should "restrain from using the word 'university' within one month from today." "Instead, the institution may mention the word 'deemed to be university' within parenthesis.

Failure to do so will invite necessary action against the deemed to be university in accordance with the UGC (lnstitutions Deemed to be Universities) Regulations, 2016," the circular says. Among the list of institutions which have been sent the directive are the Delhi-based Indian Agricultural Research Institute (Pusa), Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences and Jamia Hamdard.

Other institutions on the list include the National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal, Forest Research Institute, Dehradun, BIT Mesra (Ranchi), Christ University, Bengaluru, Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies, Mumbai, Symbiosis International University, Pune, BITS Pilani, Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izzatnagar (UP), Graphic Era University, Dehradun and Gurukul Kangri Vishwavidyalaya, Haridwar among others.

Through the circular, the institutions have also been told that "in those cases where the government's notification is with the word 'university', the deemed to be university may submit a proposal with an alternative name (without using the word 'university') to the UGC/ministry of HRD so that necessary amendment can be made by MHRD." The institutions have been asked to ensure compliance "within 15 days from receipt of the letter."

Reacting to the circular, the representatives of most of the institutions approached by TOI claimed that they were already using "deemed to be university" in their names.

R K Singh, director of Indian Veterinary Research Institute (IVRI) situated in Izatnagar, Bareilly, said, "UGC's order will have no impact on IVRI as we do not use the word 'university' in our name since the beginning because our research institute is more important than the varsity.

For academic-related work, we mention IVRI and use the phrase 'deemed to be university' in brackets.

Dropout and enrolment

1991-2010: Rates of dropout and enrolment rise

More opt for higher education, but even more drop out

Highest Rates Of Increase In Decades

Subodh Varma TIMES INSIGHT GROUP

The Times of India 2013/08/31

Higher education.jpg

1991-2010: Rate of attendance rises

Higher education continues to be a mixed bag in India. A countrywide education survey has found that the rate of attendance in the 20-24 age group (corresponding to graduation and above) has recorded the highest rates of growth in several decades. However, the good news is ofset by the fact that the dropout rate has also kept pace.

The survey, which was carried out by the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) in 2009-10, was released this month. Compared to the 1991-2000 period, the past decade (2001-10) saw attendance rates for the higher age group increase by 71% for boys and 110% for girls in villages. In urban areas, the growth was 40% for boys and 45% for girls.

Though the rise in percentage terms is a marked improvement over previous decades, the data shows that the picture remains dismal at the ground level. In 2009-10, the attendance rates were just 19% for boys and 8% for girls in rural areas; in urban areas, the corresponding figures were 33% and 24%, respectively. This state of higher education compares badly with those in the 5-14 age group, where 87% of boys and 84% of girls were attending school in rural areas, and 91% of all boys and girls in urban areas.

Various measures like mid-day meals, new curricula and better facilities have drawn children to schools, said eminent scientist Yashpal, former chairperson of the UGC. However, in higher education, complex socio-economic conditions skew the growth rate in favour of female students.

While economic pressures force young men to opt out of education at the earliest possible level in order to start earning, young women are increasingly pursuing higher education as it boosts marriage prospects and future employment. An earlier NSSO study had shown that women, despite pursuing higher education, were still not part of the workforce.

“At the higher education level, we need to do away with rigidity, allow more freedom and innovation, and link the courses to life. Resources need to be pumped in on priority basis,” asserted professor Yashpal.

Govt yet to act on panel’s report on higher education

Prof Yashpal had headed a high-level committee on ‘renovation and rejuvenation’ of higher education which submitted a detailed report in 2009. Its battery of suggestions included increased funding for higher education and stricter regulation of private entities. The government is yet to act on the report.

While current attendance rates indicate a positive trend for the future, existing educational levels of people 15 years old and above continue to be dismal. The traditional picture of educational levels-—like a pyramid with a very wide base (of illiterates) tapering to a sharp point (of graduates)—is changing at the bottom but not much at the top. The proportion of those who are illiterate or have studied just up to primary levels is going down but beyond that the pyramid continues to be sharply pointed.

In urban areas, about 15% of males and 11% of females are graduates or above. This is much higher than the rural areas where only 3.7% of males and a mere 1.6% of females have gone up to graduation or beyond. This is despite an explosion of private higher education institutions including universities in recent years.

What is even more alarming is that in 10 years between 1999-2000 and 2009-10, the graduate and above segment of the urban population declined by 5% among males although it increased by 10% among females. In the rural areas, the pent-up demand for education is still driving educational levels higher. The proportion of graduates and above went up by 78% among females but only 12% in males.

Education loans

2013-15: Tamil Nadu tops

The Times of India, Sep 06 2016

TN accounts for 45% of growth in education loans

Mayur Shetty


Tamil Nadu has generated 45% of all incre mental education loans between FY13 and FY15. Of the total loan growth of Rs 6,597 crore in 2013-15, loans in Tamil Nadu have grown by Rs 2,969 crore.

The data gains significance in light of the state's chief minister J Jayalalithaa's AIADMK election manifesto promise to waive off student loans and farm loans. The manifesto coincided with the rise in defaults which had compel led State Bank of Travanco re to sell some of its defaul ting education loans to asset reconstruction companies.

A large part of the educa tion loans in the state are ad vanced by the troubled Indi an Overseas Bank and Indi an Bank. The numbers were pro vided in reply to a query in the Lok Sabha by minister of state for finance, Santosh Gangwar, on July 22. In his reply, the minister said that banks were not allowed to seek collateral for loans up to Rs 4 lakh and the government has launched a Credit Guarantee Fund Scheme wherein no collateral or third party guarantee were required for loans up to Rs 7.5 lakh.

Expenditure on higher education

The state-wise expenditure (2011 data)

Per capita expenditure on higher education, average annual of households, share of per capita HE expenditure in total household expenditure, rural and urban, area-wise in Delhi; Hemali Chhapia, S India spends most on higher education, The Times of India, June 13, 2017


Study: It's 43% Of Family Income In Villages, 38% In Cities. National Avg Is 15% & 18%

Education may be priceless, but the promise of a degree has seen parents across India foot large bills.Those from the rural and urban pockets of southern states spend the most, largely sign up at a private university and finance their children's dream of a technical education.

On average, higher education accounts for 15.3% of the total household expenditure in rural and 18.4% in urban areas. In the south, the corresponding figures are 43% and 38%.

The data is part of a recent study titled `Household Expenditure on Higher Education in India: What do we know and what does recent data have to say'. In absolute terms, families from urban parts of south India spend an average of Rs 49,690 a year on higher education, closely followed by the western states, where it is Rs 45,436. In rural areas, the southern states have an average per-student expenditure of Rs 36,063, which makes up a whopping 43% of their annual household expenditure. This is followed by the northern states, whe re the annual average expense is Rs 25,143.

“For the average citizen, higher education does not come cheap. Most families spend a third of their consumption expenditure, expecting a better return on their investment,“ said S Chandrasekhar, professor, Indira Gandhi Institute of Develop ment Research, Mumbai, and one of the authors of the study. The other co-authors of the study are P Geetha Rani of Central University of Tamil Nadu, Thiruvarur, and Soham Sahoo of University of Goettingen, Germany .

The spend is the lowest -23% of the household expenditure, or Rs 29,249 -in urban parts of North-east India. Among rural areas, the expenditure is lowest, 16% or Rs 11,873, in central India.“When there is uncertainty in the employment prospect, the opportunity cost of pursuing higher education is larger for poorer households, which potentially explains the disparity in demand for higher education across wealth levels,“ stated the paper.

The National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) survey of consumption expenditure, typically conducted on ce in five years, provides estimates of expenditure for the household as a whole and not for each member who is pursuing higher education.

First, the average income in rural India is not sufficient to finance quality higher education, the authors noted. In rural India, as per data from the Socio Economic and Caste Census 2011, in nearly 73% of households, the maximum income earned by any member is less than Rs 5,000 per month. Second, an average rural household spends 27% of its total expenditure if any one wants to pursue higher education. “Since poorer households have lower income, this share is likely to be higher for poorer households. This provides support for the policy stance that financial assistance schemes need to be targeted by income slabs,“ said the research.

Faculty

2016-17: Only 4.9% of higher education teachers are Muslims

Vikas Pathak, January 13, 2018: The Hindu


At 4.9%, Muslim representation among teachers in higher educational institutions in India is much lower than the community’s proportion in India’s population (14.2%).

The All-India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) for the year 2016-17 reveals this. The representation of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes is also lower than the populations of the two categories.

While the survey – done by the Ministry of Human Resource Development – shows the representation of SCs at 8.3% of the total number of teachers in higher educational institutions, ST representation is 2.2%.

See also:

Teachers: India

2017: vacancies in IITs, central varsities

Manash Gohain, 35% of faculty posts vacant in IITs, 53% in central varsities, Aug 20 2017: The Times of India


Most centrallyfunded institutions, including the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs) and universities, are conducting classes with large number of faculty positions vacant, prompting the government to launch a major recruitment drive.

Worst hit are new central universities with 53.28% vacancies followed by NITs with 47% teacher vacancies. Old as well as new IITs, too, have over 35% vacancies, human resource development minister Prakash Javadekar said while announcing a major recruitment drive across campuses in the next fortnight.

In an interaction with a small group of journalists, Javadekar said the ministry was thinking of re-employ ment and wooing industry experts to fill up the teaching vacancies. Concerned over the number of vacancies in faculty positions, Javadekar said institutions will have to at least fill up 75% untenanted posts by the year-end.

Information provided to Parliament by the ministry on August 3, 2017 does not indicate that the situation improved significantly .

While vacancy status for old IITs has been recorded at 39%, new ones are only marginally better at 36%.NITs are worst affected with 47% vacancies. In fact 14 of 20 old NITs have a 40% and more vacancies, while four of eight old IITs have the same vacancy levels.Even Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) have 26.01% vacancies. Among the IIMs, Indore has 51% vacant positions, followed by Kolkata with 41%.

Among central universities, central university of Haryana, according to HRD records, is reeling under 75.11% vacancies as on April 1, 2017, while in the same period Delhi University recorded a total of 54.75% vacancies against permanent positions. University of Allahabad too has over 64% vacancies to be filled.

Speaking to TOI, Javadekar said the government is monitoring the recruitment process every month and the universities have already started the recruitment process. “In JNU, of the 300 vacancies, we have recruited 200 and the rest will be completed soon.By next month, large number of interviews are to be conducted across DU colleges,“ said Javadekar.

Institutions of Eminence

2017: 100 Institutions apply against 20 slots

Institutions of Eminence plan sees ‘overwhelming’ response, December 13, 2017: The Times of India


The ministry of human resources development has received 100 applications for the ambitious 20 world class institutions project. The 90-day deadline for submission of application ended on Tuesday. The last day saw 27 applications. Maximum number of applications were received from public institutions.

Terming the response as “overwhelming”, HRD minister Prakash Javadekar said,“All lovers of education will welcome this development. This is how world class universities were built in various countries. The same thing will happen in India. The selection of ‘Institutions of Eminence’ will not only improve the quality of education, but also propel competition in the entire education sector.” According to official data, 100 applications have been received. Under public sector, 10 central universities, 25 state universities, six deemed to be universities, 20 institutions of national importance and six stand-alone institutions have applied.

Under private sector, nine private universities and 16 deemed to be universities have applied in brown field category and eight institutions have applied in green field category.

Among those who have applied from the public sector are seven Indian Institutes of Technology (Madras, Delhi, Bombay, Kharagpur, Kanpur, Guwahati, Roorkee), Delhi University and Jawaharlal Nehru University, Jadhavpur University, Goa University, Panjab University and Mangalore University.

From the private sector OP Jindal Global University, Ashoka University, Manipal University and Amity University, among others, have applied for the tag. The UGC had in September started inviting applications from all institutions that are keen to enter the top 100 of global rankings with the government's assistance.

National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) 

Set one question paper for all languages: SC

AmitAnand Choudhary, Set one question paper for all: Court on NEET, August 11, 2017: The Times of India


The CBSE's practice of preparing different sets of question papers for students taking the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) in regional languages is set to go with the Supreme Court terming it “illogical“ and ordering that there must be one question paper for all students irrespective of language.

A bench of Justices Dipak Misra, Amitava Roy and A M Khanwilkar said this was a very serious issue as there would be no uniformity in the entrance examin ation as students would be asked different questions.

“It is illogical practice.How will you evaluate the competence of students when their questions are different.There is no reason for setting different question papers for students. There must be same question paper for all students who take the exam in Hindi, English or other languages,“ the bench said.

The CBSE had found itself in a fix over the regional papers of NEET 2017 conducted on May 7. There were allegations that some of the regional language papers were more difficult than the English and Hindi papers.

Same question papers for all examinees

AmitAnand Choudhary, January 26, 2018: The Times of India


CBSE: Same sets of question papers for all NEET examinees

The current practice of preparing different sets of question papers for students taking the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) in regional languages is set to go with the CBSE telling the Supreme Court on Thursday that from this year only one question paper will be set, and that it will be translated into different languages.

The decision was taken after the board found itself in a fix following allegations that the question papers in regional languages for NEET 2017 were more difficult than the English and Hindi papers and a bunch of petitions was filed in the apex court by students seeking quashing of the exam. The students also alleged that some questions in regional languages were wrong and hampered their chances in the entrance test.

The CBSE, which conducts the medical entrance test, was forced to take the decision after the SC termed the practice illogical as there would be no uniformity in the entrance examination and students would be asked different questions.


Different sets of questions illogical: Court

Appearing before a bench of Justices Arun Mishra and S Abdul Nazeer, CBSE’s counsel, Tara Chandra Sharma, told the court that only one question paper would be set for all students and those who opted for vernacular languages would be provided translated question papers in their preferred medium.

Students are allowed to take the exam in 10 languages. The SC had earlier said there would no uniformity in the entrance examination if students were provided different question papers. It had asked the CBSE to get the same question paper translated into different languages.

“It is an illogical practice. How will you evaluate the competence of students when their questions are different? There is no reason for setting different question papers. There must be the same question paper for all students who take the exam in Hindi, English or other language,” the court had said.

The board had contended that if the level of difficulty of all papers was the same, then it served the purpose of uniformity in the examination process and there was nothing wrong in having multiple papers. But the court was not convinced and asked it to do away with the practice.

Private Universities

Siddhartha Rai , Thinking minds “India Today” 26/6/2017

Top private “India Today”

Quotas in teaching slots

Quotas in Universities; Graphic courtesy: [ From the archives of the Times of India]

[ From the archives of the Times of India]

Akshaya Mukul TNN

SC/ST teaching slots in central univs lie vacant

The HRD ministry has overwhelmingly supported the proposed Bill that seeks to give reservation to SC/ST employees in promotion. But the scenario in HRD’s own backyard is anything but enthusiastic.

Just over 32% of sanctioned teaching posts for SCs and 41.8% for STs in 40 central universities are occupied. This includes premier institutions like the Delhi University, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Aligarh Muslim University and University of Hyderabad. Vacancies exist in all three categories — assistant professor, associate professor and professor. Ironically, in central varsities, central government run deemed universities and colleges, not only there are reservation for SCs/STs for direct recruitment, but also in promotion. JNU was the last central varsity to agree to give reservation in promotion. Only IITs and IIMs have been exempted from grant of reservation in promotion. On the face of it, the ministry claims it has done everything possible to improve the situation. Its effort includes writing regular letters to central varsities and other institutions to launch special drives to fill the backlog vacancies for SCs/STs.

The regulator, UGC, shows its 2006 guidelines for strict implementation of reservation policy in central government institutions. UGC also told universities not to indulge in the practice of creating department-wise cadres which tends to create single posts with artificially reduced number of posts to avoid reservation. “Initially, many universities protested against quota in promotion but eventually fell in line,” a ministry official says. Rajya Sabha MP Bhalchandra Mungekar, who was actively involved in formulation of UGC’s 2006 regulation, counters the ministry’s claim. “The basic problem is that central universities are not following UGC’s guideline. Reservation in direct recruitment is being flouted,” he says. Another senior universities says, “If vacancies at the entry level are not filled, it would adversely affect the overall picture. Reservation in promotion would not help and vacancies would still remain.” While JNU has worked out a process of quota in promotion at the level of associate professor, DU is yet to form anything concrete. A section within JNU say diluting quality for promotion would have long-term impact. System of affiliated colleges in DU makes it difficult to put in place a system of reservation in promotion, says a senior DU official.

The spread across the states (2014, presumably)

Indian households with at least one graduate and above, statewise; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India

See graphic, ' Indian households with at least one graduate and above, statewise '

Status of higher education/ 2009-15

The Times of India, Aug 21 2015

2011: Statewise percentage of population with a college degree (graduation and above); Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, October 9, 2015
Some changes introduced in higher education, 2009-11; Increase in the number of students, 2000-13 and expenditure on higher education, 2012-15; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, Aug 21 2015

Subodh Varma

Amid staff crunch & fund cuts, new tweaks hobble higher edu

India's gigantic higher education set-up -712 universities, 37,204 col leges, 30 million students, 1.3 million teachers -is in the grip of a simmering crisis as the hunger for better education grows. From UPA-2's time and in the days of the present government too, a top-driven policy of change has seen a semester system started, a four-year undergraduate programme introduced and withdrawn, a new grading system fitfully implemented and, recently , a choice-based credit system partially introduced.

These are deep-striking changes affecting millions.How have they gone down among students and teachers? How is the system, straining to accommodate a flood of students, with teachers in short supply , classrooms filled beyond capacity , and curricula being questioned for relevance, absorbing these changes? TOI found some answers talking to teachers and students across states.

In some varsities the semester system is yet to be implemented. Anil Singh, a lecturer at RML Awadh University in Faizabad, UP , says although UGC introduced it in 2009-10, it has yet to percolate to colleges of his university. “There are no teachers, classrooms, or facilities. We're barely coping in the present system. How can we run a semester system,“ he says.

Allahabad University runs a semester system at the PG level, but a teacher shortage is dragging it down. Over 500 posts of teachers are vacant, says Vikas, who is pursuing a political science PhD.“There are classes where 150 to 200 students sit together. Is that a desirable pupil-teacher ratio,“ he asks.

In MP , semesters were introduced throughout. Without adequate classrooms, laboratories and sufficient teachers, it's a load for stu dents, says Kuldip, an MTech student of RG Technical University. The state decided to scrap the system last year, but under Central pressure it had to continue with it.

In Rajasthan's eight state universities and 40 private ones, the semester system is partially implemented in undergraduate courses, says Mahipal, a student of JNV University , Jodhpur. The experience has been very bad, he claims, because of a teacher shortage. “In many cases, a student gets his or her degree one-and-a-half years late because there are insufficient teachers and non-teaching staff to conduct exams and process results,“ he explains.

Shahnawaz of CDL University, Sirsa, Haryana, complains semester exams clash with the peak harvesting season. “Students travel long distances from far-off villages.They can't spend the whole day in college,“ he says.

Kurukshetra University has 464 regular and 400 contractual teachers, Shahnawaz says. “In many colleges, half the classes are not held. Some times guest lecturers are fixed up -at Rs 250 per lecture.“

In Haryana, Shahnawaz says, results get delayed 6-8 months because of extended exam schedules. In Punjab, the clash with agricultural work crops up among the litany of complaints against semesters.Delayed results, mechanical division of syllabus, lack of teachers, are the others.

“The fee structure changed with the semester system and most colleges added a few hundred rupees, supposedly to meet the cost of extra work in exams etc. This caused hardship to many students,“ says Harinder Bajwa of Punjabi University , Patiala.

In Uttarakhand, semesters have resulted in delayed results, says Dehradun's Abhishek Bhandari. This is because of a teacher shortage in the interior areas and also difficult communication.

“Many distant colleges skip internal assessments.About 50% of internal assessments are delayed. All these add up. Results of the 2013-14 academic year were declared after one year,“ he says.

Himachal too implemented the system at all levels. But teacher shortage has created a “crisis“, Suresh Sarwal of HP University , Shimla, says.PG departments have 300 vacancies and 120 students pack into a class, he says.

Some 60 varsities are supposed to implement the choice-based credit system this year. But in most of thofficials and teachers are unclear how it is to be done.Singh from Faizabad says it will be impossible to implement when the semester system is in doldrums. Delhi University , a laboratory for implementing these changes, has seen stiff opposition from both students and teachers.

Instead of increasing funds for the teetering higher education system so that infrastructure can be improved and more teachers appointed, the government has like the UPA, cut funding. According to a Parliament statement, in 201415, the allocation for higher education was Rs 27,656 crore, actual spending was squeezed to Rs 24,518 crore. This year, allocation was slashed by over Rs 800 crore and reports talk of further curbs on fund release. It doesn't look as if the government has any plans of rescuing the shaky system, headed for chaos.


Cities: The educational levels of various/ 2011

The Times of India, Dec 12 2015

Percentage of graduates in population, city-wise, 2011; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, Dec 12 2015

Subodh Varma


44% of Mohali residents are grads, the highest among Indian cities


Sahibzada Ajit Singh Na gar, better known as Mo hali, the cricket venue near Chandigarh, has the distinction of having the highest share of graduates in its population among all Indian cities.Nearly 44% of its residents are either graduates or above. Another Chandigarh neighbour, Panchkula, has the second highest share at 39%. Others in the top 10 include Bidhan Nagar, popularly called Salt Lake City, in Kolkata, Gurgaon, and Alandur in Chennai.

These details have been drawn from the data on educational levels of cities collected during Census 2011 and released recently . A total of 505 cities are included, ranging from Jehanabad in Bihar, with a population of 6.6 lakh, to the giant Mumbai Municipal Corporation, with 96 lakh residents. They represent 45% of urban India.

About 6% of India's population were graduates or above in 2011. One third of them stayed in rural areas, and the remaining in urban areas.

The Census office follows its own methodology of classification which does not always harmonise with other authorities, or with common sense. For instance, urban Delhi is divided into New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC), the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD), and several census towns which would actually come under the jurisdiction of MCD.These were created as categories many decades ago, but continue as units even now.

Bidhan Nagar, Panchkula and SAS Nagar were the top three cities, in that order, in the 2001 Census too. They are urban areas that evolved as hubs of the educated middle class in the 1980s and 1990s. Both Bidhan Nagar and Panchkula house a large number of state government offices and institutions, with their employees staying nearby .

In 2001, again because of a Census office peculiarity , NDMC was broken up into several parts and counted as separate units. This led to four of these parts figuring in the top 10. This time round, NDMC has been aggregated into one unit, and it comes in at the tenth spot.

Gurgaon was placed at the 15th spot and Noida at 14th in 2001. Both have since moved into the top 10, pushing NDMC behind. Two cities from Uttarakhand, its capital Dehradun and the educational hub Roorkee, have moved up into the top rankings. Dehradun became the capital in 2001, drawing within it an explosion of government employees, besides being a base of several institutions since the British times.Roorkee's famous engineering college was upgraded to a fullfledged IIT in 2001. Both Dehradun and Roorkee are major Army cantonments too. So where are the big metropolises of India in this ranking? Delhi is divided into several smaller units. Many of Delhi's Census towns, surprisingly , are near the bottom of the list. The reason is that these areas -like Sultanpur Majra, Mustafabad, Kirari, Bhalaswa Jehangirpuri -are populated by the working class and poorer sections of Delhi. The share of graduates and above in their popula tions is between 5 and 6%.

Chennai clocks in at number 53, with about 24% of its population graduates or above, Kolkata at 79 with 22%, and Greater Mumbai at 192 with about 19% graduates and above. At the very bottom of the ranking are small towns, mostly with industrial populations. The five cities with the least number of graduates are Jamuria and Dabgram, suburbs of Asansol and Siliguri, respectively , in West Bengal, and Bhiwandi (Maharashtra), Loni (UP) and Botad (Gujarat), all industrial townships. Loni is on the outskirts of Delhi.

The spread of higher education

Bengaluru district: villages without graduates

Kumaran P, 104 areas in Bengaluru have zero graduates , Aug 14, 2017: The Times of India

HIGHLIGHTS

30,000 villages in the state were surveyed by the Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Department

The data shows said that over 2,070 villages in Karnataka have zero graduates.


It may be hard to believe that in a booming city like Bengaluru, there could be a whole village that doesn't have a single graduate. And yet, in reality, there isn't just one but 104 areas here (with a population of 200 or more) that have zero graduates!

Take, for example, a place called Manchanahalli, under Bengaluru Urban district. It has a population of 1,796, but not one of them is a graduate. This is also the case with Hosahalli (population of 881), Arehalli (842) and Patnagere Gollahalli (252).

Recently, 30,000 villages in the state were surveyed by the Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Department and the compiled statistics said that over 2,070 villages in Karnataka have zero graduates. But the fact that even Bengaluru, the country's IT capital, has such pockets came as a surprise to the Department of Collegiate Education. It now plans to fix the situation.

Ajay Nagabhushan MN, Commissioner, Department of Collegiate Education, told Mirror: "This census was done based on the socio-economic status of villages in the state. They've given us the list and now it's our job to identify the real numbers and take action to improve the situation."

BUT, HOW'S IT POSSIBLE?

Asked why Bengaluru has so many settlements with no graduates, Nagabhushan explained: "These are places where the infrastructure is poor and teachers are not up to the mark. Then there are several social issues affecting students of such regions too. They quit college mid-way, but more worryingly, they don't want to go to college at all. It is in these areas that we see youth having early marriages. They usually stop education after PU."

So, as the collegiate department begins to take its own count, it has broadly chalked out its plans to remedy the situation.

Women in higher education

Women graduates double/ 2001-11

The Times of India, Aug 02 2015

Percentage growth in higher education, male and female, 2001-11; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, Aug 02 2015

Subodh Varma

Rise in women grads almost double that of men in a decade

The level of women's education in India witnessed a dramatic rise between 2001 and 2011, with 116% more women emerging graduates or above compared to a just 65% increase among men. There was also a spike in women completing post-graduation (151%) and those earning professional and technical degrees (196%), key findings of Census 2011, released on Friday , reveal. In 2011, the country had over 68 million people who were graduates or more qualified. This is over 8% of 838 million people who were 15 years of age or older. A decade ago, this proportion was about 7%. Those with technical degrees (or equivalent) now number 12 million compared to about 5 million in 2001. However, this is a miniscule 1.4% of the total 15+ years population of India.

The number of women with teachers' training graduate degrees went up by 122%; the rise for those with nursing medicine degrees was 157%. What is more surprising is that women engineers grew by 326% in these years. In 2001, there were only about 4.8 lakh women engineers. This has exploded to over 20 lakh now. Engineering has for long been dominated by men -there are over 52 lakh men in the profession, more than twice the number of women engineers. Overall, engineering and related technological degrees appear to be the most popular courses because the number of such graduates has jumped up by a massive 182% in a decade. This may , of course, lead to saturation of the market, experts feel, though the IT sector is still an at tractive proposition.

There appears to be a preference among women to go for technical education as it is seen to help in getting jobs. This is evident from the fact that the number of women with technical diplomas (not degrees) stands at nearly 19 million, up 146% in a decade. Compare this to non-technical diploma which is held by just 0.34 million (3.4 lakh).

Census 2011 has also released data for educational level for all the people who were seven years or above of age, that is, it includes schoolchildren. The drive for girls to be educated becomes immediately apparent: the number of girls at the mid-school level is up 64%, at matric or secondary level by 50% and at senior secondary level by a whopping 146%. Clearly , a new India is being forged in educational institutions and women are moving towards an equal share. It is now for the economy and those who run it to provide decent employment to educated women -something that has been a big failing till now.

2011-17: Gender gap narrowing

Manash Gohain, Gender gap narrowing in higher edu: HRD survey, January 8, 2018: The Times of India



Girl Students Outnumbered Boys In Eight Disciplines In 2016-17

Gender gap in India’s institutes of higher studies has reduced by nine lakh in the last five years with girl students outnumbering men in eight disciplines in 2016-17 academic session, according to a survey of the HRD ministry.

While in master’s of arts, there are 160 women for every 100 men, in bachelor’s of science (nursing) has 384 women for every 100 men. Even in the postgraduate classes of science and commerce, women have handsomely outnumbered men with 167 and 158 respectively per 100 males. However, in undergraduate and technical and professional courses like BTech, law or management, the enrolment is skewed in favour of males and the gap is significant.

The All India Survey on Higher Education, released by the HRD ministry on Friday, says the gender gap in higher educational institutions decreased by over nine lakh from 2011-12 to 2016-17 (31.5 lakh to 21.5 lakh). The survey shows the Gender Partiy Index increased to 0.94 in 2016-17 from 0.86 in 2010-11 with women participation in certain disciplines very high and increasingly sharply in courses like MA, MSc, and MCom.

The enrolment by the end of 2016-17 academic year stands at 3,57,05,905 with a Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) of 25.2. GER is counted from the number of students enrolled in higher education institutions out of the total population in the age group of 18 to 23 years. Women continue to outnumber men in bachelor’s of arts and education. In MBBS there are 99 women per 100 male students, up from 86 in 2012-13, and in BCom up to 93 from 79 in the same period.

At MSc level, mathematics, physics and zoology are subjects where the number of women is over 60% while in chemistry it is 56.3%. At postgraduate level, the highest number of enrolment has been for mathematics with a total of 1,43,762 students of which 62.1% are women. In social sciences and specially in courses like political science, 52.2% students are women.

However, as per the survey, even though the GER of female is higher, there is still significant gap in BTech, MTech, law and MBA programmes. In BTech, there are only 39 women per 100 men, hardly any improvement from 38 women in 2012-13. Barring MPhil and PG levels, the gap is also significant in diploma level courses with 70% male enrolment.

India aims to attain a GER of 30% by 2020.

See also

Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)

Higher Education, India: 1

Higher Education, India: 2 (ministry data)

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