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Higher education, lowest standards

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  • The dropout rate among Scheduled Tribes is maximum (61.5 per cent), followed by Scheduled Castes (51.21) and Other Backward Classes (50.09).

    “We followed a rigorous methodology for each institution which, in an average, took as long as seven months,” said NAAC’s director V S Prasad. “This included a self-appraisal, a peer review and an independent monitoring.”

    So far, no IIM, IIT or NIT (formerly RECs) have been assessed by the council — these anyways are likely to be Grade A institutions, said Prasad.

    The key findings (see charts) are startling:

    Of 123 universities, only a third is of “good quality,” over a half are B-grade and a sixth C-grade

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    Among 2,956 colleges, only 10 per cent made the Grade A cut; 66 per cent were B-grade and 24 per cent C-grade.

    Thorat, present during the meeting with the PM, told The Sunday Express: “We have to focus on bridging the quality gap between A-grade and the rest. There are mainly two reasons for this quality gap: availability and quality of facilities and quality of faculty.”

    Thorat says that one key factor behind the quality gap is the under-investment in higher education since 1980s. Between 1951 and 1980, the government spending on higher education sector grew at the rate of 17 per cent, but then it dipped to 10 pc between 1981 to 2003-04.

    The result, the UGC claims, is that it’s unable to fund 60 per cent of colleges and 40 per cent of state universities. To “improve the situation”, the UGC, backed by the HRD ministry, has sought Rs 77,779 crore as funds for the XIth five-year-plan. And plans to make NAAC assessment and accreditation mandatory, link funding to performance, expand operations in districts with enrolment less than 10 per cent, increase funds to institutions with higher share of students from the poor and the marginalised sections.

    ... contd.

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