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Educational News Today
Friday, July 11, 2008
Deemed varsities resent greater role for State

They say it could simply lead to “unnecessary interference and decline in quality of education”
  • “Already, UGC and AICTE are at loggerheads”
  • These universities are against attempts to control admission procedures and fee structure
Chennai: Deemed universities feel that the State government’s attempts at increasing its role in their functioning could simply lead to “unnecessary interference and a decline in the quality of education.”

Earlier this week, the Tamil Nadu State Council for Higher Education discussed the recommendations of the M. Anandakrishnan Committee on deemed universities and forwarded them to the Higher Education Minister for a final decision.


“This is a retrogressive step…I don’t see why the [State] government is taking on added responsibility when it is not doing a great job of running its own institutions,” says Anne Mary Fernandez, registrar of Karunya University, responding to the proposal to put two government nominees on the management committees of deemed universities.

Increasing regulation does not lead to increased quality, she says. “Already, the UGC and the AICTE are at loggerheads. What will happen if one more body comes into the picture,” she asks.

SRM University chancellor T.R. Pachamuthu says the State government cannot take any unilateral step.

“All-India issue”
“This is an all-India level issue. There is no use if an individual State comes up with such guidelines, unless it is the opinion of all State governments,” he says.

The priorities of Central and State governments seem to be different. “On the one hand, the National Knowledge Commission says 1,500 universities are to be set up and on the other, the State government wants to curb new universities …,” he says.

Deemed universities also resent the attempts to control their admission procedures and fee structure.

“If they insist on reservation, the angle of excellence will be curbed. When we can’t control intake, output quality cannot be ensured,” warns Dr. Fernandez. While Mr. Pachamuthu does not mind implementing reservation, he says if an independent fee structure is not permitted, quality will be hit.

“Only if we invest in infrastructure and teachers’ salaries, can we ensure good education.”

TANSCHE vice-chairman A. Ramasamy, referring to the Anandakrishnan committee report, saying such guidelines were essential.

“There have been cases of campus violence and judicial litigation, exorbitant fees, lack of basic infrastructure…In some deemed universities, teachers’ salaries have not been paid for six months,” he says.

The list of recommendations is long. It includes mandatory 10-year experience before institutions can become deemed universities, a mandatory corpus of Rs. 10 crore, an all-India entrance test to be conducted in consultation with the UGC, fee structure to be fixed in consultation with the State government, compliance with the State’s policy and two government nominees on management committees.

The post of chancellor should also be converted to chairman and other senior management posts should not be given to family members of the founder, but to academics and qualified persons, says Dr. Ramasamy.

Deemed universities feel such regulations are unnecessary.

“These people are investing huge sums of money. Some of them are academics, some are not. What does it matter?” says Dr. Fernandez. “When you give birth to a child, you know the pain and you will take special care. Others may be able to follow regulations, but you will be interested in quality,” says Mr. Pachamuthu.
Courtesy: The Hindu
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