India Education News
Courtesy of The Times Of India
Management institutes in India are sharpening their focus on the social sector. Surbhi Bhatia reports on two independent initiatives.
The biggest beneficiary of economic liberalisation in India has been the financial services segment, which is commonly referred to as the Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) segment.
In order to be part of the future world order India is working towards a knowledge economy. In keeping with its mission, the government has set a target to create a critical mass of people that would propel the knowledge economy.
Although tigers are in the news, many of them are still dying unnatural deaths across the country. Like all living beings, tigers have the right to survive. Additionally though, we need to understand that the survival of the tiger is important for our own survival too.
What will be the priorities of budget 2010 in the education sector? Education Times talks to a cross-section of people about their expectations.
Sakshi Khattar profiles this professional who changed fields to follow ones true calling.
When Kumar realised his interest was in serving the people, he decided to join the Indian Police Service (IPS). He is a deputy with the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) in Delhi.
Spain offers prospective MBAs not only a thriving economic environment but also three of the world’s top ranked business schools. Ashwamegh Banerjee provides an overview.
The Dutch system of higher education enjoys a worldwide reputation for high quality. This quality is achieved through a national system of regulation and quality assurance.
Mapping expert, Peter Fretwell, at British Antarctic Survey (BAS), UK, tells Tirna Ray how satellite images of penguin poop can be used to locate breeding colonies of emperor penguins
The questions surrounding the evolution of the universe have not been sufficiently answered till date.
Delhi University (DU) has been taking steps to simplify the admission process at the undergraduate level.
With revision for the board exams in full swing, Sunita Roy,counsellor, Apeejay School, Sheikh Sarai, Delhi offers a few tips to assist students
Through his research, Raman Kumar aimed to learn more about the Woodpecker community in the Sal belt of Uttarakhand and its relationship with the habitat.
The Times of India

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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