New rules to help with recognition for online courses
The Aadhaar or unique identity number
will be made part of the Online Education Policy for authentication of Students
and to link them to the upcoming National Academic Depository
Digital India initiative in mind, the
human resources development ministry is aiming to give online education a big
push, in an attempt to widen the reach of higher education.
Indian Institutes of Technology
(IITs), Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) and leading universities — both
private and public — came together on July 9 in an initiative taken by the
human resources development ministry to chart an online education policy for
the University Grants Commission (UGC) and deliberate how best to integrate it
with the mainstream.
An online degree finds no recognition
by regulators in India though several countries including the US have adopted
them in a big way in the higher education space.
“When the country is adopting digital
in most sectors, keeping education away is not the right approach. Pure online
courses — adopted and aided by Indian institutes — will push quality higher
education to the masses,” said a human resource development ministry official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The official said the promotion of
massive open online courses (MOOCs) was the first step and it was time to take
the initiative forward.
In the past year-and-a-half, the
government has asked top Indian institutions to develop MOOCs on various
subjects for supplementary knowledge for all the students.
These are in the nature of short-term,
subject-specific capsule courses, available online to all.
“The UGC is already working on a plan
and top educational institutions will be in a better position to tell us about
the market demand, the drawbacks if any, and the way forward,” a second
government official, who will be attending the meeting, said.
The second official, also on condition
of anonymity, said Aadhaar or the unique identity number will be made part of
the online education policy for authentication of students and linking them to
the upcoming national academic depository. Institutions will be asked to
present their innovations and best practices in the digital education space in
sync with the ‘Digital India’ push of the Union government.
The new online education rules will
enable institutions to offer courses for both regular students as well as
working professionals.
While online courses for regular
students will allow the higher education space to grow, and cater to more
students, the offerings for professionals will help re-skill them and be a good
source of revenue for institutions as they can charge market rates.
Indian has 799 universities, 39,071
colleges and 11,923 standalone institutions catering to around 30 million
students. Despite the size of the sector, the gross enrolment in higher
education is just 24%, way below leading economies.
With limited government spending on
education, online education could spur the sector.
The second government official cited
above said that the outcome of the meeting will aid in formulating online
education rules, which may also find a place in the broader education policy
being formulated by the K. Kasturirangan Committee.
“The meeting will familiarise the
leaders of higher education with all digital initiatives of the government and
help evolve action plans for effective adoption and utilization of these
digital initiatives in higher educational institutions,” said the second
government official.
Source | Hindustan Times | 12 July 2017
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Librarian
Rizvi Institute of
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