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    South Asia
     Mar 29, 2008
Western colleges find school mates in India
By Indrajit Basu

KOLKATA - Last month, St Xavier's College of Kolkata, one of the most orthodox educational institutions in India, announced collaboration with the University of Manitoba, Canada.

For St Xavier's, one of the country's oldest and most prestigious educational institutions that has steadfastly stuck to its independent values, this collaboration is significant - it is its first partnership with any external institution in its 150-year history. Despite being affiliated with a local university, St Xavier's resisted all types of external intervention and insisted on autonomy, which it finally gained two years back.

"It is significant because for one, St Xavier's has become sufficiently flexible to make educational collaboration workable," said Professor Michael Trevan, dean of the University of Manitoba, Canada. "[And also because] this bilateral agreement may be


 

used in future to create multi-lateral pacts globally where St Xavier's could be a part of such pacts."

St Xavier's is not alone. Over the past two years, India has seen an influx of many marquee names, including Harvard, Kellogg, Michigan University, Carnegie Mellon, Georgia Institute of Technology (all in the US), Grenoble Ecole de Management (France), and Aston Business School (United Kingdom), while research-oriented institutions like the London Business School, Stanford University and University of California Los Angeles Anderson School of Management, and many others from the world over are working towards setting up bases in India.

Their method of entry or teaching may be different, but all are trying to fill the one biggest need of Indian students; to acquire foreign degrees without incurring the prohibitive expenses of foreign education offshore.

Enamored by foreign degrees and treating them virtually as a passport to a job abroad - and hence a good life - Indian students have been flocking overseas, particularly the US, in hordes for years. According to the Ministry of Human Resource Development, for instance, more than 100,000 Indians leave the country every year to study abroad, and with over 200,000 students already based abroad, the country's students spend over US$4 billion a year on foreign education.

But now, with quite a few foreign universities opening classrooms in India and many more weighing the option seriously, it appears a new phase is to begin for the education sector.

"I think India's education sector, which was considerably lagging behind compared to its economy, is finally opening up," said Mahesh Senagala, an associate professor at the University of Texas and an advocate of liberalized education in India. "Although the impact of privatization and globalization was not felt in India's education sector until recently, the rush of foreign educational institutions in India is an indication that it is happening here as well."

Driven partly by the pull factor - the dire need of Indian students for a degree with a brand value, and partly by the push factor - the need for foreign institutions to discover India - foreign universities are entering not only the five largest Indian cities but also smaller towns and cities offering almost every type of professional course.
According to a recently released study on foreign education providers in India conducted by the New Delhi-based National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration, more than 130 local institutions have already collaborated with foreign institutions offering either a foreign degree or a foreign diploma. Reports suggest that at least another two dozens more are in the process of joining the bandwagon.

"While the credentials of many, some of which are not even recognized in the country where they come from, are questionable, the willingness of Indian students to spend huge sums of money for acquiring a degree from a foreign university is attracting huge foreign interest," said Prasad Krishna, the quality assurance advisor in The All India Council for Technical Education - a statutory body that regulates technical education.

Their educational models vary. While some like Georgia Institute of Technology, Harvard, and Wigan and Leigh (UK) have set up independent campuses in India, most prefer collaboration with a local institution. "Many find collaboration with a local institution better than setting up a stand-alone campus because that gives the foreign university an advantage in getting immediately plugged into the local culture and local issues," said Trevan.

Such collaboration also reduces the cost of education drastically. While it takes $20,000 Canadian dollars (US$19,600) per year for four years to get a degree from Manitoba, under the St Xavier's University of Manitoba collaboration an Indian student can attend the first two years of the course at the St Xavier's campus while finishing the final two years at the Manitoba campus. "That way the cost of getting a degree reduces to half," said Trevan.

Similarly, thanks to Wharton Business School (Pennsylvania) and Kellog Business School (Chicago) collaboration with the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad, Indian students can obtain a degree from two of the world's top universities without having to spend a relative fortune by studying in America.

According to Trevan, the growing foreign interest in the Indian education sector reflects the lag between demand and the availability of good education in the country. "As a country's economy develops, usually the provisions of sufficient higher education lag behind the demand and the need for it," said Trevan. "I know there are very good universities in India, but the potential number of [students] who get into them is a tiny fraction of 1%. That's another reason why we get students abroad - they couldn't find the right place in their country."

Undoubtedly, the Indian education sector is still too small to meet the demands of the country's burgeoning 1 billion plus people. According to the National Knowledge Commission, of all Indians in the 18 to 24 age group, which constitute some 60% of the country's population, merely some 7% enter a university. Compare this number with other developing Asian countries - let alone the developed Western world - and the difference is stark. In China, for example, 13% of the population in the same age group complete higher studies, and the number is even more impressive for the Philippines (31%), Malaysia (27%) and Thailand. (19%).

Moreover, experts say Indian students are educated with courses most of which are completely outdated or irrelevant. Educators claim that the curricula isn't evolving quickly enough and professors and institutions have little control over improving the situation.

The quality of India's higher education system is also in question. Domestic industries constantly complain that only about 25% of India-trained engineers and 15% of finance and accounting professionals posses the skills to work for progressive companies.

"The fundamental problem with the state of the higher education system has been that it has divorced creation of knowledge from learning," said Senagala of the University of Texas. "Creation of knowledge comes essentially from research, moreover the education system in India is a centrally regulated enterprise with bureaucratic overtones and all these have eroded Indian education's competitive advantage and even its intrinsic values."

"Foreign universities outside India play a large role in the Indian higher education scene, [by filling in] the need to supplement Indian content-rich curricula with activity-based learning and bridge the gap between academia and industry," said Jane Schukoske, of the US Educational Foundation in India. (Schukoske added that this is only her opinion as the executive director of a bi-national foundation).

But according to Trevan, the benefit is not just a one-way street. Collaborating in a foreign country, "particularly India and China", benefits the foreign institutions as well. "It is not just students transferred halfway through their course and finishing it off here, but we also get students from other countries and from other continents that enriches the student life here and enriches the students' experience," said Trevan.

Yet not every student succeeds easily in these hybrid universities. Firstly, there's no provincial-level regulation for foreign education in the country, the absence of which often confuses a foreign entrant, said Senagala. Meanwhile, Trevan highlights the lack of teaching staff, infrastructure and the affordability factor as serious challenges.

Still, an entry in India provides enough competitive advantage to those who are willing to take risks. "These players [foreign institutions] are aware of the risks; they have seen what businesses have done and they get some kind of assurance that eventually India will open up," Senagala said.

Small wonder then that the American Council on Education already feels that India is the next frontier (after China) for American institutions. According to Senagala, "India has more potential than the USA because the US system has been established and it is not nimble enough at this time to change to global forces and globalization."

Indrajit Basu is a Kolkata-based journalist.

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