The
classroom as the instructor’s castle
The
autonomy of the teacher has been cramped, and it reflects in the state of
higher education
Some months ago, a global leader of the IT
industry set sections of India’s corporate-sector elite aflutter with the
comment that Indians are not creative. It is possible to disagree with the
criterion Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of Apple Computer, had adopted while at
the same time agreeing with some of his observations. He had predicted that
Indians are unlikely to create world-leading IT companies because they lack the
creativity to do so and argued that this has to do with the education system.
While building global IT giants may have more
to do with an appetite for growing a business rather than anything else, Mr.
Wozniak’s assessment of India’s education system is sharp. He traced the lack
of creativity to an education system that rewarded studiousness over
independent thought. He also managed an anthropological take when he identified
the ‘MBA and the Merc’ as the mark of success in India’s corporate world. For
good measure he likened this to the culture of Singapore, but here he may have
missed a trick. The per capita income of Singaporeans is quite close to that of
Americans. And that country has achieved much of what it set out to do when it
struck off on its own, which was to turn a swampy colonial port into a
prosperous city state proudly independent of world powers. Also, it has a
national leadership more educated and responsible than what the U.S. has
currently. Singapore’s orderly society may not be everybody’s cup of tea but
its history suggests one way we could identify the creativity of a people as a
whole. That is, a people are truly creative when they are able to collectively
surmount the challenges that their country faces.
Crisis
in higher education
Actually, what India is experiencing in higher
education today is far worse than merely the production of studious but
creativity-challenged youth. There is abetment of a toxic productivity whereby
our universities churn out youth with a poor grasp of the subject matter that
they are expected to know and an even poorer understanding of the challenges
that India today faces, for which they alone can provide the solutions. This is
particularly troubling as public expenditure on education in India favours higher
education far more than elsewhere in the world when schooling is severely
neglected by comparison. In addition, this is a sector so micro-managed that it
answers to former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s description of the Indian
economy in the 1990s as “over regulated and under governed” better than the
economy itself. So, neither funding nor neglect can be blamed for the lack of
vitality in India’s institutions of higher education.
Universities are embedded in society and cannot
be expected to naturally rise above them. Close to 50 years ago, Nobel laureate
Amartya Sen had spoken of a ‘crisis in Indian education’ pointing to how
India’s educational policy had been shaped by the aspiration of its middle
class. Creativity is unlikely to have been a part of it. However, it is
precisely to ensure that there is no sectional capture of public institutions
intended to serve a larger purpose that we have public regulators. While there
is more than one regulator for the higher education sector in India, for sheer
reach the University Grants Commission (UGC) is unmatched. To say that it has a
major responsibility in the state of affairs that we are experiencing in higher
education would be an understatement. The government would be advised to follow
email discussions of UGC regulations circulating on the Internet right now to
garner a sense of how wide the resentment against the body is.
Journal
publication
The bone of contention is the basis on which
the regulator identifies ‘recognised’ journals, publication in which alone
earns credit for faculty. Having drawn up such a list a couple of years ago,
the Commission appears to have now backtracked. Possibly stung by the claim
that an astonishingly high percentage of the journals on its original list are
of dubious distinction — the term for which is ‘predatory’ in that they either
solicit articles to be published for a fee or follow no clear refereeing
procedure — the UGC has suddenly trimmed the list. This has led to questions of
the criterion that has been used.
While predatory journals are not a uniquely
Indian problem, the problem appears to be more grave here, and has possibly
been aggravated by the UGC’s policy of soliciting recommendations for inclusion
of journals in its approved list. The whole process has led to a severe
diminishing of credibility for one of the most crucial regulators of the
country.
To believe that the problem of dubious journals
on the UGC’s whitelist is the sole issue awaiting resolution in the university
would be naive. This is actually quite recent and just another manifestation of
the unaccountable regulation that has had a vandalising effect on the higher
education space in the country. A small set of actionable points, not every one
of them the responsibility of the UGC, would be as follows.
Revise
the API
The problem of predatory journals emerged after
the UGC introduced a quantitative scoring system leading to an Academic
Performance Indicator (API) in which publishing is a part. The activities
approved for toting up a teacher’s API are many, extending beyond teaching and
research. This has led to a form of academic entrepreneurship that has very
likely demoralised the less entrepreneurial, who are often the more academic
and therefore more deserving of being in the university to start with. For this
reason, the contents of the API must be revised to include only teaching and
research, thus also saving scarce administrative resources. Teaching input can
be partly measured by the number of courses taught, but research assessment should
avoid the quantitative metric. Instead it should be judged by committees that
have reputed and recognisably independent subject experts on it. This is not
foolproof but, in the context of the email discussion now on among India’s
academics, superior to a discredited list of approved journals.
Next, compulsory attendance, which goes against
the spirit of learning, must be replaced by credit for classroom participation.
Third, introduce student evaluation of courses
to be made public. It needs emphasis that this is meant to be an ‘evaluation’
and not some ‘feedback’ to be contemplated upon by the lecturer at leisure.
However, it is important to see the process in perspective. Course evaluation
is meant to instil in students both a sense of confidence that their view is
being solicited and a sense of responsibility in wielding authority early on.
It can effectively check truancy among faculty but there should be vigilance
against its misuse.
Fourth, the UGC should remove all
experience-related considerations to career advancement. The present system
leaves the able to stagnate during their best years and the undeserving to
believe that time served grants entitlement to promotion. There must be a
drastic reduction in the number of hours faculty have to teach. While this may
not be much in the research institutes and the Central universities, in India’s
colleges the teaching load is not merely taxing to the point of lowering
productivity but leaves teachers no time to address the burgeoning literature
in their disciplines.
Finally, once courses are evaluated by
students, the classroom should revert to being the instructor’s castle. A
pincer movement of corporate interest and political pressure combined with
regulatory overdrive have cramped the autonomy of the teacher. The state of
higher education in India today partly reflects this.
Source | The Hindu | 22nd May 2018
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi
Institute of Management
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