Tuesday 29 May 2018

CBSE results and Indian higher education system


Dr.  Devendra Kothari PhD
Population and Development Analyst

Forum for population Action


While the desired levels of research and internationalization of Indian campuses remain weak points, Indian higher education also suffers from a lack of funds, and its largely linear model with very little focus on specialization.”

livemint

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has announced the Class 12 examination results on May 26, 2018. An analysis of the results brings very interesting facts, as noted in the TOI Edit: Give them wings: CBSE results reveal lakhs of students raring to go. The system mustn’t fail them[1]

CBSE’s Class 12 board examination results lay out neatly the contradictions of the Indian education system.  There is no dearth of bright students – 72,599 scored 90% or above and 83.1% of the 1.18 million students who took the test have passed. But rather than exult or be relieved these students face a harrowing time securing admission to undergraduate courses of their choice. Often the best among them head to a clutch of prestigious colleges in big cities amid uncertainty and insecurity over making it through.
This is most evident in Delhi University (DU) colleges where students from across the country flock to. First list cutoffs are known to soar over 99 per cent, not surprising considering that 12,737 students have scored over 95 per cent. Also note that CBSE is just one among other education boards and a ten million (crore)  or so students pass out of education boards run by state governments. While it is not clear whether the consistently rising pass percentages and topper scores are a result of quality improvements or a liberal testing regime, the trend does require higher education to play catch up.
It has tried to do so by increasing seats and courses in top institutions like DU and IITs. But unlike school education where the private sector has stepped up and catered to rising aspirations, this has happened more slowly in higher education, mainly because of the vice-like grip of UGC and AICTE. Granting more autonomy to decide fees, student intake, courses and industry partnerships can reverse the quality stagnation in higher education.
But analysing Class 12 CBSE results alone may not give a general picture of school education. For instance, ASER survey results (Pratham) show declining learning outcomes in lower classes and very little probability of those students reaching Class 12.[2]
But the CBSE results are an aspiration index that policy makers cannot ignore. For example, some toppers are contemplating going abroad to pursue undergraduate education. These students have the gap between foreign and Indian universities in mind. This suggests the need for education reforms at every level to ensure better quality. Both public and private education approaches have their task cut out.

According to CBSE results, Meghna Srivastava topped all India with 499 marks out of 500. This is the calibre of many young Indians, at least on education, but the system is letting them down and forcing them to seek greener pastures.

The higher education and research sector in India is not in a good shape, due to mismanagement. The Times Higher Education World University Rankings provide the definitive list of the world's best universities, evaluated across teaching, research, international outlook, reputation and more.  According to THE, not a single Indian university/institute gets a place in the top 200 world university rankings in 2016. [3] The rankings reveal that Indian Institute of Science (IIS) lies between 251 and 300 and IIT-B are ranked between 351 and 400.  On the other hand, China takes four places in the top 200 in 2016, up from two in 2015, with its leader Peking University joining the top 30, at 29th place (up from 42nd in 2015).

If the private sector is fulfilling a felt need in school education, it should be encouraged to do so in higher education as well. Open up the regulatory maze, in order that this space is not dominated by the political class. Foreign universities should be invited to set up campuses in India. Another major problem in higher education is getting good teachers.




[2] Kothari, Devendra. 2017. “Managing school education in India”, in Administrative Change, Vol. XLIV (2) 78-89.

[3] India Today. 2016. “World University Ranking 2015 to 2016: No Indian university in top 200, IITs and others in top 600”, India Today at: https://www.indiatoday.in/education-today/news/story/top-indian-universities-322233-2016-05-07


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