Meeting of Private ODL
Institutions in
India
Pune
3 April 2008
Optimising
a Vital Contribution to the Expansion of Higher Education
Inaugural Remarks
Sir John Daniel1,
Professor Asha Kanwar
1
and Ms. Stamenka Uvalić-Trumbić2
1
Commonwealth of Learning; 2UNESCO
It is a
great pleasure to be with you today in Pune. Ever since we conceived the idea
of this meeting I have been looking forward to it immensely.
My
anticipation of an important event was increased by reading the exhilarating
book Symbiosis: The Biography of an Idea.
It has been a very great privilege to meet Dr Mujumdar and I express the
warm thanks of the
Commonwealth
of Learning
and
UNESCO to Symbiosis for organising and hosting this important first gathering
of private-sector providers of distance education in
India
.
The
Commonwealth of Learning
,
COL
for short, has teamed up with UNESCO to
facilitate this meeting and I have worked with two esteemed colleagues in
preparing these remarks.
Professor
Asha Kanwar is our Vice-President
and Programme Director at COL. She is actually in
India
at the moment but
unfortunately could not be with us here in Pune today. Stamenka Uvalić-Trumbić
is the Chief of the Section for Reform, Innovation and Quality Assurance at
UNESCO headquarters in
Paris
.
Sadly she could not be here today either, but is ably represented by her
colleague Molly Lee from UNESCO's Bangkok Office.
Professor
Kanwar, Ms. Uvalić-Trumbić and I have written a number of papers together in
recent years about the urgent imperative of expanding higher education to meet
the exploding demand for access, particularly in developing countries. They are
the co-authors of these remarks. Much of our thinking is summarised in a paper
that we published in Change: The Magazine
of Higher Education in 2006. One of the key themes of that paper, which is
the focus of our short address to you now, is the absolute importance of
encouraging private institutions to contribute to that expansion and of
building an integrated higher education sector that includes public and private
providers, both for profit and not for profit. Tomorrow I shall focus more on
the issue of quality in distance education.
Let me start by putting my remarks
in context. Wide participation in higher education is important. It is seen as
one of the keys to national development and success in the 21st
century.
Expanding higher education: four
challenges
But the expansion of higher
education faces massive challenges in almost all countries.
The first challenge is the
disparity in access to higher education around the world. The most developed
countries now consider it normal for about half 18-23 year-old age cohort to undertake
higher education. Yet in many developing countries, including very big ones
like
India
,
the Age Participation Rate or APR is less than 10%. In parts of Africa it is less than 5%.
And it is not just a question of
raising the participation rate for young people. This is an era of lifelong
learning, when many people will return to higher education at various points in
their lives. This is more than a theoretical idea; as I know from experience.
Since I completed my doctoral degree in 1969 I have completed a master's
degree, a diploma, and six other university courses as a lifelong learner.
The second challenge is that most
countries have built up their higher education systems on models that cannot
readily be expanded at reasonable cost and are probably not appropriate to
today's needs even if they could be scaled up. The nub of the problem is the
role of the state. The extreme cases - and it is not an accident that they the
ones with the lowest participation rates - are those countries where all higher
education is provided by the state and no tuition fees are charged.
No country - not even the richest
countries - can provide all the higher education that their citizens need on
this economic model. There is simply not enough money in any national treasury.
The third challenge is that in
countries with low access to higher education the existing institutions
conceive their roles too narrowly. First, they focus too much on teaching in
classrooms on campus. This is unsuitable for many adult lifelong learners and
is also increasingly unsuitable for younger students who want to be employed,
at least part time, so that they can afford to study.
Second, the higher education
curriculum does not properly reflect the very diverse needs of the world we
live in. Courses and programmes must reflect a greater awareness of the ways in
which their students will earn their livelihoods.
The fourth challenge - and I shall
limit myself to four challenges - is that even where institutions are trying to
diversify their methods and their offerings they are missing important
opportunities. In particular, they assume that they must 'go it alone' and
develop all curriculum and systems themselves, rather than taking advantage of
the rich resources that globalisation makes available.
For these reasons the profile of
higher education in the 21st century is going to be very different
from what we have been used to. Higher education will be a much larger
enterprise.
China
recently doubled enrolments in a few years and numerous countries now have
double digit growth rates in higher education. This much-expanded world system
will differ from what we have now in four ways.
First, the private sector, whether
for profit or not for profit, will have a much larger role.
Second, study programmes will
relate more closely to livelihoods. The key question will be: 'How does this
study prepare me for employment or self-employment?'
Third, a far greater proportion of
higher education will take place by distance learning, which many today call
eLearning.
Fourth, and particularly in
distance learning, we shall see the emergence of many cross-border partnerships
that will improve the quality, lower the cost, and enrich the curricula of the
courses on offer. Can partnerships and collaboration help countries to develop
their higher education systems?
I shall address the first three of
these issues briefly.
First, a word about private
education.
Private universities
Higher
education is a private good that gives direct benefits to those who
participate; but it is also a public good. The proportion of people with higher
education correlates well with a society's economic and civic development.
By
tradition, governments control public goods in order to extend their benefits
to all citizens. But how far should the principle of public control apply to
higher education?
Practice,
principle, and pragmatism all challenge the notion of higher education as a
public monopoly.
Past
practice reveals that philanthropists and religious bodies were providing
higher education long before governments took an interest in doing so. At
independence there were 496 private higher education institutions in
India
and in
1950 less 50% of the funds for higher education came from government.
The
challenge from principle concerns the right role of government and holds that
apart from services like defence, government may be most effective when it
monitors and regulates the provision of public services by others, rather than
controlling them directly. As a frequent visitor to
India
I am struck, for example, by
the contrast between Indian Airlines and Jet Airways in terms of customer
service.
In
higher education demography and demand present pragmatic challenges. Rapidly
increasing numbers of young adults will want education at all levels. In this
era of lifelong learning there is
no way
that governments can provide, at no cost, all the education that people will
need throughout life. They will have to focus their contributions.
There
is a choice between inadequate provision of higher education by a public-sector
monopoly and meeting the demand by a combination of public and private
institutions. This is a political dilemma for many developing-country
governments, which now realize that a public-sector monopoly on higher
education is a serious handicap to national development.
How can
governments get more resources into higher education by taking advantage of
private-sector higher education? The answer is to achieve a balance between
accessibility for students, quality of provision and economic viability.
Fees:
The Heart of the Issue
The heart of the issue is fees, because fees ensure economic viability.
Fees are a special problem for those countries that made higher education free
- i.e., totally subsidized by the state - in the days when only a tiny
proportion of the population was expected to go to university. At that time
entry to higher education was highly competitive, but
many citizens believed - and still believe - that the
combination of competitive entry and free tuition would produce equitable
participation in higher education from all socio-economic groups.
Abundant research now shows that this is simply not
true. The socio-economic profile of students in countries that charge fees
while also providing scholarships and loans for poorer students is more broadly
based than in those that do not charge fees. This is a very important finding,
and one that governments are only gradually finding the courage to act on.
Having
a free public sector alongside an expensive private sector does not create an
effective higher education system. As countries gradually introduce fees in the
public sector, either because of a conviction that it is more socially
equitable or because there is no financial alternative, the private sector
finds itself on a more level playing field.
This in
turn makes it easier for the private sector to build arrangements for
need-based scholarships and loans into their fees regimes. Obviously it takes
time to build up enough scholarship funds for admissions policies to be truly
blind to a student's wealth, but if private institutions are to play a major
role in the expansion of higher education, they must be able to attract a
diversity of people. Only then can they truly claim that private investment in
higher education is making its contribution to widening access and that it is
thus contributing to the public good.
In
widening access, private institutions also foster good relations with
governments and the public higher education sector, thereby gradually reducing
the scepticism of many governments about expanding the private sector.
The
trends in
India
are most encouraging. In the 1980s the share of government funding of higher
education rose to 80%. This stimulated considerable expansion of the sector,
although the World Bank has commented that this was done at the price of
considerable regulation and loss of autonomy that led subsequently to an
erosion of efficiency and quality.
From
1991 the economic liberalisation policy has encouraged the expansion of self
financing higher education which is now
India
's most dynamic and growing
sector. Whereas private provision accounted for only 57% of the sector in the
1980s it grew to 75% in the 1990s.
Another
important trend is that the proportion of students enrolled in the private
sector in professional programmes such as engineering, medicine, management,
information technology and teacher training has grown from less than 15% in the
1990s to 50% in 2007. Let me say a word about relating learning to livelihoods.
Learning
for Livelihoods
We live
in a young world. In some developing countries the median age is less than 20
years and in many it is less than 25. Enabling these youngsters to grow up into
adults with livelihoods is the greatest development challenge facing the world
today.
Although
there is a general correlation between education and the ability to earn a
livelihood, many countries complain of unemployed or underemployed graduates. The
challenge is to make the link between education, training and livelihoods much
tighter.
Private
institutions, by following the market, have tended to focus naturally on
livelihood-related programmes. Indeed, in some jurisdictions private
institutions seem to focus exclusively on business, information technology and
languages. This is fine, but private institutions - and public institutions -
do need to do a reality check from time to time to ensure that the topics they
teach really do link well to livelihoods. Market signals sometimes lag the
reality. Yesterday I visited the Symbiosis Institute of Design, which is a nice
example of catering to an emerging need.
Remember
also that linking education to livelihoods is not just a matter of what you
teach but how you teach it. For many people it will be more effective, as well
as much more economic, to study part time while continuing in employment.
Studying for a Master's in Business Administration is a particularly striking
example where feedback indicates that combining work and study and thereby
confronting theory and practice on a daily basis produces much deeper learning
than studying full time.
Distance
Education
This
brings me to my third issue, which is distance learning. Enabling part-time
study on campus by offering courses in the evening allows many urban people to
engage in lifelong learning. However, for those who do not live in cities, or
whose work does not follow a predictable schedule, evening courses in a
classroom are not the answer. In the last thirty years we have seen dramatic
growth in distance learning. In
India
,
for example, a quarter of all tertiary students are learning at a distance.
I shall
come back to this in my comments tomorrow, but let me end now by saying how
delighted I am that the private sector is taking this up and that some of you
are doing this on a large scale.
Ten
years ago I coined the term 'mega-university'
for a university teaching at a distance that enrolled more than 100,000
students. Thirty years ago there were no such institutions. Now there are eight
mega-universities in the Commonwealth alone and they enrol four million
students between them. I note that the SCDL, with over 100,000 students,
qualifies as a mega-institution on my measure.
Whether
you operate on a small scale or a large scale distance education has its own
dynamic. There is an interesting dichotomy. On the one hand, because distance
education requires a systematic approach and uses the principles of specialisation
and division of labour, it is actually easier to assure quality through this
mode than in face-to-face instruction. On the other hand we all know that there
is a tendency to denigrate distance learning and, indeed, that it is the
preferred mode of operation of some dubious providers and bogus colleges.
As a
result some jurisdictions refuse to recognise qualifications gained through
eLearning. This seems to me like taking a sledgehammer to crack a nut, but it
must be a concern to institutions like yours.
That is
why the
Commonwealth
of Learning
and
UNESCO are so glad to be involved in this meeting of private-sector providers of
distance education in
India
.
Although you compete in the market place you have a common interest in
enhancing the credibility of distance learning with the public and giving your
students the best possible experience within the resources available. I hope
that this event will be helpful not just in bringing you together not just for
fellowship but for joint action.
There
are many things you can do that will help all of you without dulling the edge
of the competition that encourages innovation.
First,
everyone in India admits that the higher education system has outgrown the
regulatory mechanisms that are in place. Private providers in particular are
handicapped by the plethora of regulatory bodies that make approval processes
unclear. Private investors hate uncertainty and I am sure that by working
together you can influence reforms of the regulatory systems in directions that
help the whole higher education community, private and public.
Second,
you might want to explore how you can take advantage collectively of the
rapidly expanding pool of open educational resources. There is no virtue in
everyone re-inventing the same wheels when it comes to developing course
content. Much better to take advantage of what exists, or develop some
curricula collectively and then compete on giving students the best possible
support as they study the courses.
I am
sure that at this meeting you will develop other important collaborative
initiatives. The Association of private providers of distance learning that you
are creating here will be much stronger if it has a joint agenda for action.
Fellowship is fine, but by joint action you can secure a better future for your
institutions while at the same time contributing substantially to the
development of higher education in India.
That
brings me to our final point. The government of India is pleased that this
meeting is taking place and very interested in the outcomes.
You
have an excellent opportunity to demonstrate that private provision is a public
good. UNESCO and COL are delighted to have helped to make this meeting happen
and we wish you well. Thank you