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Niti Aayog’s Three Year Action Agenda: ‘Focus on higher education, greater skills must for raising employability’

The Indian Express | Sunny Verma | New Delhi | August 26, 2017 |

Niti Aayog also suggests reforms in the Right to Education Act as well as the University Grants Commission, and a comprehensive & continuous evaluation system to bring in improvement in learning outcomes.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, along with Union Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Gas Dharmendra Pradhan, Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog Arvind Panagariya and CEO, NITI Aayog, Amitabh Kant releases the book “India: Three Year Action Agenda” at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi. (Source: PTI Photo)

In a series of proposals that might lead to improvement in the higher education infrastructure and skill development of individuals in urban regions, the Niti Aayog in its Three Year Action Agenda 2017-18 to 2019-20, released on Thursday, said that the government needs to create 20 world-class universities, provide autonomy for top colleges and universities, reform the regulatory system, establish system of project-/researcher-specific grants and increase focus on vocational and profession-led education. Stating that the skill development initiatives by the government have not yielded the desired result and the country still faces a challenge of training a large workforce, it recommended that for those who undergo skill training, the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) should target a placement rate of 80 per cent or more by 2020. In its agenda report, it said that there is a need for greater focus on improving quality higher education. “An assessment of 1,50,000 engineering graduates in 2016 found that only 18 per cent of engineers were employable in the software services 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. The government’s strategy on improving higher education should focus on autonomous governance and transparency, and outcomes are critical components of a vibrant and successful higher education sector,” the agenda said.

The Aayog has suggested a series of measures to improve learning outcomes and improve skills for jobs. It has recommended changes in the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act to focus on learning. Improving quality of higher education and NSDC working on achieving an 80 per cent placement target are among the other suggestions given by the think-tank, to improve education and skills of people. Among the regulatory reform, the Aayog has pitched for overhaul of the University Grants Commission (UGC). “The UGC Act, 1956, is in dire need of reform. The UGC’s position as an overarching regulator of every aspect of higher education from student fees to curriculum to teaching and course hours keeps India’s higher education system from responding to the changes and challenges that it faces in a fast-evolving world. Various professional councils further complicate the regulatory environment in higher education. We should introduce a system of regulation that focuses on information disclosure and governance rather than micro management of universities. This requires an overhaul of the UGC as a regulatory system and a rationalisation of the role of professional councils,” the agenda said.

Skill development

The Aayog noted that despite a numerous skill development initiatives by the government that have been undertaken till date, the country still faces a challenge of training a large workforce. Estimates suggest that only 2.3 per cent of India’s workforce has undergone formal skill training, compared to United Kingdom’s 68 per cent, Germany’s 75 per cent, USA’s 52 per cent, Japan’s 80 per cent and South Korea’s 96 per cent, the report said. According to estimates for the period 2013-14, India’s annual skilling capacity at around seven million is significantly lower than the workforce entering the market annually, while the quality of skills imparted is also a matter of concern, it said. According to the Skill Development Sector Achievements report, December 2016, the NSDC partners skilled 24.9 lakh people, of which 12 lakh were placed in 2014-15. This translates to a placement rate of below 50 per cent. “It is recommended that a target of a placement rate for 80 per cent or more should be set for 2020.

Furthermore, all NSDC partners should be required to report on the additional metrics…including the per cent of certified candidates employed, longevity of certified candidate in their chosen job field, wage difference between certified and unskilled candidates, number of entrepreneurs created through the vocational training ecosystem and number of certified candidates employed in overseas vocational jobs,” it said. The Agenda also recommended a national-level Overseas Employment Promotion Agency that should be set up under the Ministry of External Affairs to consolidate all the promotional initiatives of the government.

Improving outcomes

The agenda said that the challenge in front of the Indian school education system is to improve learning outcomes. Through initiatives like the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and the RTE Act, the Indian school system has focused on measuring and delivering inputs. The gross enrolment ratio (GER) in 2015-16 for grades I-V was 99.2 per cent and for grades VI-VIII was 92.8 per cent. Pupil-teacher ratio at national level for elementary schools was 24:1 and for secondary schools it was 27:1. “Unfortunately, this success in getting more children into schools with more teachers has not translated into more education. The proportion of children in grade-III who can read at least a grade-I level text dropped from 50.6 in 2008 to 40.3 in 2014, before increasing marginally to 42.5 in 2016, according to Pratham’s Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) data. The proportion of children in grade-III who can do at least subtraction fell from 39 per cent in 2008 to 25.4 per cent in 2014, and again increased slightly to 27.7 per cent in 2016. Poor learning outcomes are reflected in multiple other sources as well, including the National Achievement Survey (NAS), which found worse results in Class V Cycle 4 (2015) compared to Cycle 3(2012),” the Aayog said in its report.

These are not the only results, which suggest that a focus on inputs does not help improve education. Data show that the traditional levers — more or better infrastructure, lower pupil-teacher ratios, higher teacher salaries and more teacher training — by themselves have not been effective in improving student learning outcomes. “The most critical missing pieces that evidence has shown to be effective are pedagogy that focuses on teaching at the right level, outcome-linked incentives and governance that enables the system to operate smoothly,” the report said, while pitching for these changes to improve outcomes. It said that between 2010 and 2014, public schools increased by approximately 13,500 in number but total enrolment in them fell by 1.13 crore, while private school enrolment rose by 1.85 crore. “This shift has been accompanied by hollowing of an alarmingly large number of public schools…public schools with fewer than 50 students (and an average of 29 students per school) stood at 3.7 Lakh schools in 2014-15. They represented 36 per cent of all public schools. High rate of teacher absenteeism, limited time spent on teaching when the teacher is in class and generally poor quality of education are among important reasons for this emptying out. Outcomes are worse in government schools than in private schools, and those who can leave are voting with their feet,” the agenda report said.

Quality improvement through improved governance is one way of slowing or reversing this process. These measures include a focus on school leadership, administrative tenure, basic monitoring by administrators to resolve school level issues such as teacher absenteeism, and transparency in teacher appointments and postings/transfers. One way to improve learning outcome is to modify the RTE Act to actually make it a ‘right to learning’, instead of being, as it currently is, a ‘right to go to school’, the Aayog said. The recent amendment of Rule 23(2) under the RTE Act, which makes it compulsory for all state governments to codify expected levels of learning for students in classes I to VIII, is a positive step. It requires states to prepare “class-wise, subject-wise learning outcomes for all elementary classes” and devise “guidelines for putting into practice continuous and comprehensive evaluation, to achieve the defined learning outcomes”. In implementing this mandate, states should begin by devising their learning indicators and planning a state-level measurement system for every child, the report said. – Courtesy

PMO advises HRD ministry to give full autonomy to 20 ‘world-class’ educational institutions

Economic Times |  By Anubhuti Vishnoi, ET Bureau | Jun 28, 2016 |

NEW DELHI: The Prime Minister’s Office has advised the human resource development ministry that 20 educational institutions the government hopes will attain global excellence standards should be given full autonomy.  Of these, the 10 state-supported institutions are expected to receive public funding of up to Rs 500 crore each. An Expenditure Finance Committee note seeking Rs 5,000 crore for these institutions has already been moved. The institutes can be existing or greenfield (the latter for private institutions). The PMO had earlier intervened in favour of IIMs in the matter of autonomy for the institutions. For the 20 ‘world-class’ universities, first proposed in this year’s Budget, the PMO has told HRD ministry that even a softer version of the regulation as practised by the University Grants Commission (UGC) should be relaxed further.   Officials who spoke to ET for this report requested anonymity. Questions sent to PMO and HRD ministry did not receive any response. ET has learnt that PMO has strongly asked for greater autonomy in even the lighter-touch regulation HRD had proposed for these institutions.

HRD’s separate rules — UGC (Declaration of Educational Institutions as world Class Institutions) Guidelines — allow these institutes to fix their own fees for foreign students and decide salaries for foreign faculty, as well as freedom to choose admission procedures. Existing universities don’t have such freedom and are guided by detailed UGC rules. But PMO wants HRD to relax regulations even further and has advised the ministry that the new universities be given freedom to determine course structure, course duration, course credits and timetables. PMO also wants easier norms on foreign student intake (the ministry proposed that a maximum of 30% foreign students can be admitted) and the procedures on hiring faculty.  PMO is also not fully in favour of HRD’s proposal that these new universities face a penalty in the event they can’t meet certain quality parameters in 10-15 years. The PM’s office is learnt to advised HRD that the time period must be longer for a fair assessment of whether a new university has emerged as world-class.  Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced in the 2016 Budget that “enabling regulatory architecture will be provided to 10 public and 10 private institutions to emerge as world-class teaching and research institutions”.   –  Courtesy

UGC’s funding role halved

Business Standard | M Saraswathy  |  Mumbai | March 4, 2016 |

For the Rashtriya Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan, a provision of Rs 1,300 crore has been made in the Budget, up from Rs 1,155 crore in the current financial year.

The Budget allocation for the University Grants Commission (UGC), which provides funds and maintains standards in institutions of higher education, has been cut by almost 55 per cent, from Rs 9315.45 crore in 2015-16 to Rs 4286.94 crore in 2016-17. Funding for the UGC has declined with the setting up of a Higher Education Financing Agency and increased focus on the Rashtriya Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan. Rohin Kapoor, director, Deloitte in India, said the UGC’s role as a funding agency would come down with the Higher Education Financing Agency being set up. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said in his Budget speech earlier this week that the Higher Education Financing Agency would be set up with an initial capital base of Rs 1,000 crore. The agency will leverage funds from the market and supplement them with donations. For the Rashtriya Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan, a provision of Rs 1,300 crore has been made in the Budget, up from Rs 1,155 crore in the current financial year. The centrally sponsored scheme launched in 2013 aims at providing strategic funding to eligible state higher educational institutions. Overall, the allocation for the department of higher education has climbed to Rs 28,840 crore from Rs 25,399 crore. This amount includes provisions for various technical institutions. A sum of Rs 190 crore has been earmarked for setting up of new Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). Similarly, Rs 695 crore is available for Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs).

The previous budget had set aside Rs 300 crore for IIMs and Rs 1,000 crore for setting up new IITs and IIMs. No new IITs or IIMs were, however, announced this year. Narayanan Ramaswamy, partner and head of education and skill development, KPMG in India, said there was a growing need for higher education institutions to reach the gross enrolment ratio target of 30 per cent by 2020 from 23.5 per cent now.  “No new IITs or IIMs were announced in this year’s budget, which was a big change from last year. This could be due to the fact that many of the announced institutions are yet to commence operations,” he added.  The Budget has also provided a fillip to skill development with an outlay of Rs 1,804.28 crore for 2016-17. S Ramadorai, chairman, National Skill Development Agency and National Skill Development Corporation, said the setting up of 1,500 multi-skill training institutes was a good initiative. –  Courtesy