India’s greatest asset is its human potential.
AMITABH KANT
CEO, National Institution for Transforming India (NITI Aayog)
Indian Administrative Service, IAS (Kerala Cadre: 1980 Batch)
Economic Time Policy Change Agent of the Year Award Bloomberg TV Personality of the year Award One Globe Award-2016 for leadership in Transforming Governance for the 21st Century
Member of the Steering Board of “Shaping the Future of Production Systems” of World Economic Forum
With over one-sixth of the world’s population, and poised to be the youngest country, India stands at an opportune juncture for transformative economic and social progress. Education is, however, a critical element that must be strengthened to attain this potential. Higher education saw unprecedented action recently in the form of regulatory reforms that address critical challenges.LONG-STANDING CHALLENGES
India has one of the world’s largest higher-education systems, with over 900 universities, 39000 colleges, and 3.7 crore students. While the sector’s size grew exponentially over seven decades, the regulatory framework stood almost still in time. The UGC, established under the UGC Act, 1956 in a scenario of 25 universities, has continued to regulate over 900 universities with the same stick.
Long-standing regulations have been criticised for their overly prescriptive and restrictive nature, emphasis on inputs, ‘inspector raj’ that lacks transparency and objectivity, and continuance of obsolete elements. In many ways, such regulation has fettered dynamism and innovation for enhancing educational quality and relevance.
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Denne historien er fra June 2019-utgaven av Careers 360.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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The 50 colleges in 5 countries where most Indians go for MBBS abroad
Data on countries and colleges from the Foreign Medical Graduates Examination (FMGE) 2022 - the latest available - shows that most Indians who completed medical degrees abroad and wrote the FMGE went to five countries.
Foreign medical colleges: Look before you leap
A close look at foreign medical colleges that thousands of Indians have graduated from shows that many are unaccredited, don’t have hospitals or even their own websites
'Either I clear FMGE or leave the country'
After spending lakhs on MBBS degrees abroad, thousands spend years trying to clear the FMGE. That is the only option for Indian graduates of foreign medical colleges to build a career in India
Why hundreds of nursing graduates leave India each year
There has been an increase in nursing institutes over the past two decades but policy gaps, lax regulations, poor pay and opportunities are pushing a large number of nursing staff to seek opportunities abroad
In Kashmir, why NEET and JEE candidates flock to private reading halls to prepare for exams
These are accessible round-the-clock, even on public holidays, have private cabins and booths, kitchen, discussion area and some, even places for napping
Battling despair and depression in medical school
Long hours, bullying, lack of support make a difficult programme tougher for medical students. They hope for clear guidelines from the NMC
This father-daughter duo uncovered a scam in NEET admissions in West Bengal
Several generalcategory students had secured admission in medical colleges with forged ST certificates. Ishita Soren spotted the names, and her father followed up
'Forced to take up bonded labour
There's massive resistance to a state policy in Karnataka that requires even private medical college graduates to do one year's mandatory rural service
‘A routine circus': PG medical students lobby, move court to get stipends
Despite NMC orders, many medical colleges still seriously underpay resident doctors and threaten them into silence. In government colleges, stipends can be delayed for months
Why Mizoram wants centre to take over its only medical college
Mizoram got its first state medical college in 2018. In 2023, it asked the union government to take over. Mixed up in this are questions of funding, MBBS seat distribution