Senior academics from some of India's leading universities,
including Jawaharlal Nehru University, Jamia Milia Islamia and Delhi
University, came together on Thursday to strongly oppose the government's
proposed reforms in higher education including standardization of syllabi,
arguing that these changes would turn colleges into coaching centers.
The government plans to reform higher education through the
Choice Based Credit System and the proposed Central Universities Act that will
require the 51 central universities to follow a common admission procedure and
common syllabus. The changes also envision transferable faculty and student
mobility through credit transfers.
Academics for Creative Reform, an informal collective, presented
a position paper on higher education at a press conference held here and was
addressed by historian and JNU professor Romila Thapar, Delhi University
Teachers Association head Nandita Narain and Jamia professor Farida Khan among
others.
Dr. Thapar said we have become used to a situation in the
country where various authorities held forth on professions like education
without actually consulting the professionals involved. She strongly opposed
the government's idea of standardizing and centrally controlling the quality of
education, pointing out that this would be a mammoth and unnecessary task.
She asked that how will this high standard be maintained with
the continuing shortage of teachers and what will it mean for the quality of
education if universities are not allowed to come up with their own syllabi. She
argued that standardized syllabi would lead to lack of academic rigour and
originality.
source : thehindu
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