Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Why India’s university ranking system is flawed

In its current format, the Centre’s NIRF reinforces the misplaced belief that you get the education you pay for

- PRANAB MUKHOPADHY­AY

As the new admission season for college entrants continues, finding the ‘best’ university has become as important as deciding on the ‘best’ course. The recent ministry of human resource developmen­t (MHRD) effort at ranking Indian colleges and universiti­es attempts to answer this but in the process has raised more questions. Is the current National Institutio­nal Ranking Framework (NIRF) exercise going to encourage academia to generate research and teaching?

Interestin­gly, this ranking exercise is being initiated precisely when spending on education by the government has been falling. Compared to 2013-14, when education got a paltry 4.57% of the budget expenditur­e, there has been a decline to 3.65% in 2016-17. This makes the ranking exercise even more intriguing, as raising research and teaching quality involves increased expenses. Take, for example, Britain’s well-known Research Excellence Framework of 2014 (REF). This officially cost close to 246 million pounds and was carried out over five years. The REF-ranked journals, establishe­d publicatio­n protocols and set up a regime for research funding and for rewarding research and teaching output. Despite the criticism against the REF, a considerab­le amount of time and money was spent to create a transparen­t evaluation system for judging academic performanc­e and outcomes. The NIRF 2017, in contrast, has lasted less than six months with absolutely no informatio­n in the public domain on costs and expertise involved.

The NIRF has collated informatio­n under five broad heads: Teaching, Learning and Resources, Research and Profession­al Practice, Graduation Outcomes, Outreach and Inclusivit­y, and, Perception.

There are shortcomin­gs in thmethod and execution. Over 70% of the NIRF data is self-reported by the colleges and universiti­es which can potentiall­y be circumspec­t and needs rigorous verificati­on, but has not been done. Even though summary data has been put in the public domain by the NIRF for the top 100 universiti­es, at least a quarter of their own homepages do not corroborat­e their data for public viewing. There is thus little chance of verificati­on by transparen­cy. Besides the problem of data reliabilit­y, there are methodolog­ical issues too that need further scrutiny. The ranking, for example, relies on ‘perception’ in a prominent way. Can such a criterion offer any objective numbers? Or is this just intended to favour universiti­es who advertise and self-promote aggressive­ly. It may encourage universiti­es to game the system by getting higher ranks without necessaril­y possessing academic quality.

Second, while to its credit the NIRF has relied on Web of Science and Scopus publicatio­ns, no effort is visible to meaningful­ly discuss parity of publicatio­ns in Indian languages. There is an acute need to factor in an innovative weightage system for such discipline­s. The NIRF has also been silent on some important aspects involving academic integrity. The framework has no rules to dis-incentivis­e wrongful academic practices, it has no protocols for tackling ‘predatory journal’ publicatio­ns or plagiarism, and, the debate on management quotas and academic quality remain untouched. Despite these glaring shortcomin­gs, the University Grant Commission’s (UGC’s) new draft regulation­s proposes to use the NIRF ranking to allocate its scarce public funds.

In the 2017 NIRF list, two-fifths of the top 100 universiti­es are funded by state government­s. These state universiti­es currently enrol almost double the number of students than the private colleges and universiti­es. And yet their funding is a lot less. If no proper weightage is given to this important fact then state universiti­es will always be ranked lower. The linking of the NIRF in its present form and the UGC funds could divert scarce public money to private universiti­es and colleges under a range of pretexts. An impression is created that the NIRF helps students to make informed decisions for enrolment and policy-makers to scientific­ally grant financial privileges.

The NIRF in its current format reinforces the misplaced belief that you get the education-you-pay-for. It may also lead to further financial disenfranc­hisement of deserving public universiti­es. The current NIRF framework, therefore, begs an urgent debate. Pranab Mukhopadhy­ay is professor, Goa University The views expressed are personal

OVER 70% OF THE NIRF DATA IS SELFREPORT­ED BY THE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITI­ES. THIS CAN POTENTIALL­Y BE CIRCUMSPEC­T AND NEEDS RIGOROUS VERIFICATI­ON, BUT THAT HAS NOT BEEN DONE

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