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Extract from the Indian
President’s message
In a presidential address earlier in June, President Pratibha Patil stated that
“the Government’s strategy for higher education will be formulated around a three-fold
objective of expansion, inclusion and excellence,” reinforcing the possibility of
more foreign involvement. Opening the doors to foreign universities would be a sure
way to keep more Indian students in India while ensuring high quality education.
Critics, however, argue that the introduction of foreign institutions would raise
the cost of education making it inaccessible to India’s poor.
Minister Sibal has also voiced his concerns about the kinds of institutions that
might be attracted to India if the Foreign Education Bill is passed. “Fly-by-night”
institutions, or institutions lacking a solid plan and sound degrees, “will not
be tolerated,” he told the American undersecretary of state during a joint workshop
on June 11, 2009. Currently, foreign universities can offer courses in India, but
only if they are extensions of programs based abroad and not standalone graduate
or undergraduate-degree programs.
Foreign university education in India to be cheaper
Hemali, Chhapia, TNN 12 September 2009, 02:57am IST
MUMBAI: Diverse nationalities aren’t a common feature even in India’s top educational
institutions, the IITs and IIMs. However, a mixed campus could well become a reality
when the international universities come to India — particularly because these schools
aren’t planning to price themselves out of the reach of locals.
As they have done in Singapore, most foreign varsities will bring down the price
tag involved in getting a foreign degree, largely thanks to the lower cost of living
and ancillary expenses in India. But, more interestingly, they will also have fees
that match those charged by private institutes in India, HRD minister Kapil Sibal
told this paper.
"A number of foreign universities, and I’m talking about quality institutions, have
met me to express interest in establishing a campus in India,’’ he said. And students
can get a far more cheaply priced degree from, say, Harvard University or Imperial
College, if they sign up from the India campus? ‘‘Exactly,’’ concurred Sibal. ‘‘For
years, thousands of our students have travelled abroad for higher education. Now,
let’s build India into a hub of top-class higher education to which the world comes."
In a complete turn-around of the government’s stand on foreign universities, Sibal
said that foreign institutes coming here would be considered on par with private
unaided universities. When asked if the government would control fees and push quotas,
the minister rebutted, ‘‘When we don’t control fees in private unaided institutes,
why should we do so for foreign universities?’’
However, the accreditation and assessment agency that will monitor the quality of
Indian institutes will also rate the international universities. The Foreign Education
Providers’ Bill is likely to be presented in the upcoming Parliament session in
November, Sibal added.
University presidential delegations from Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon
and Purdue have come to India in the past few years to learn more about and from
the country. Last week, a team from Imperial College met Sibal and also visited
Maharashtra. Several foreign universities keen on coming to India have already moved
beyond the spadework — Georgia Tech has bought land in Hyderabad and the Schulich
School of Business at York University is ‘‘committed’’ to setting up a campus in
Mumbai. To mark its presence in the financial capital, this Canada-based management
school is offering MBA programs by partnering with the S P Jain Institute of Management
and Research.
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