Main Article Content
Abstract
Higher education will lead the world in 21st era because it not only creates greater personal and social prosperity, but it also affects all facets of development, including intellectual, social, cultural, aesthetic, physical, spiritual, and human capital development, directly or indirectly. Afterward, US and China, India has the world's third largest higher education system. University Grants Commission (UGC) is the largest regulatory body at the higher level, and it enforces its guidelines, advises the administration, and facilitates communication between the federal government and the states. The University Grants Commission oversees accreditation for higher education by 15 independent institutions. While the nation has progressed significantly in terms of enrolment, the standard of education continues to be a source of concern, which is critical for achieving the country's goals and implementing national policy. Weak facilities, exam-driven curriculum, memory-based exams, a shortage of qualified faculty, ineffective teaching strategies, a lack of funding, inconsistencies in government policy on higher education, entrenched political motives, massive demands from the youth population, political unrest, increasing privatisation, a lack of access and equity, and so on are some of the problems in higher education. There are several more problems like this, and this paper objectively examines all of them, as well as potential solutions.
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
References
Department of Higher Education, Ministry of Human Resource Development. The year is 2013. Gov-ernment of India's All-India Higher Education Sur-vey (2010-11). New Delhi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_in_India#:~:text=As%20of%202020%2C%20India%20has,IISERs%20and%20NITs%20among%20others.
O. R. Shaguri. (2013). Access, Equity, and Quality in Higher Education in India 2013 Ean World Con-gress Scholar
Pandya, P.J., Pandya, Pandya, Pandya. (2016). In India, improving the quality of higher education is a pri-ority. ISSN: 2455-734X
Rao. (2016). Problems and Suggestions for the Long-Term Development of Higher Education Volume 3 of the Sai Om Journal of Commerce and Manage-ment (Issue 9).
Singh, J. (2011). Higher Education in India: Issues, Challenges, and Suggestions, (Ed), LAMBERT Academic Publishing, Germany, 2011, Pp. 93-103. The ISBN for this book is 978-3-8465-1753-6.
The Ministry of Human Resource Development is in charge of human resource development. (2015). Government of India, New Delhi, Analysis of Budg-eted Education Expenditure 2012-13 to 2014-15.
U. Pujar. (2014). India's Higher Education Development Trends Volume 2 of the IOSR Journal of Economics and Finance (IOSR-JEF) (Issue 6).