Non-univs can't run distance courses, says UGC
Hemali Chhapia
|
Mumbai:\
|
In a watershed decision, the
University Grants Commission (UGC) has stated that only universities
can offer distance learning programmes in India. With the earlier
decision of the Distance Education Council overturned, standalone
institutes can no longer continue to run programmes via distance mode.
Across the country dozens of B-schools are raking in crores by offering
diploma management courses via distance education. They will all have
to cease operations as the UGC will not extend their recognition. The
decision was notified in the last week of June in a UGC gazette
notification: The mini
mum standards of instructions for the grant of first degree through
non-formal distance education in the faculties of Arts, Humanities, Fine
Arts, Music, Social Science, Commerce and Science.
The decision was taken
after a committee headed by Prof N R Madhav Menon submitted its recommendations to regulate distance education in India.
“Certificates or diplomas or post-graduate diplomas awarded by the standalone in stitutions, which also have been approved by the Commission based on the policies of the then Distance Education Council, of the Indira Gandhi National Open University , for running open and distance learning programmes till the academic session as specified in recognition letters already issued at the level of the Commission, shall remain valid programmes in the field of open and distance learning mode of education and once the recognition period to these standalone institutions ceases, such institutions cannot offer open and distance learning programmes,“ the notification read.
These institutes can continue offering distance education courses if they are converted to university or deemed to be university, “failing which, the Commission shall not accord any approval to the open and distance learning programmes of standalone institutions.
“Standalone institutes were free from university regulation. As they offered diploma courses, they did not fall under the ambit of the AICTE (All India Council for Technical Education) too.Many institutes hence started offering distance education courses and made a lot of money . Soon, there was management in hospital administration, forest management, agriculture and plantation management, etc.,“ said a former director of the Institute of Open and Distance Learning, Mumbai University. In Maharashtra, the UGC's diktat will affect about a dozen institutes.
“Certificates or diplomas or post-graduate diplomas awarded by the standalone in stitutions, which also have been approved by the Commission based on the policies of the then Distance Education Council, of the Indira Gandhi National Open University , for running open and distance learning programmes till the academic session as specified in recognition letters already issued at the level of the Commission, shall remain valid programmes in the field of open and distance learning mode of education and once the recognition period to these standalone institutions ceases, such institutions cannot offer open and distance learning programmes,“ the notification read.
These institutes can continue offering distance education courses if they are converted to university or deemed to be university, “failing which, the Commission shall not accord any approval to the open and distance learning programmes of standalone institutions.
“Standalone institutes were free from university regulation. As they offered diploma courses, they did not fall under the ambit of the AICTE (All India Council for Technical Education) too.Many institutes hence started offering distance education courses and made a lot of money . Soon, there was management in hospital administration, forest management, agriculture and plantation management, etc.,“ said a former director of the Institute of Open and Distance Learning, Mumbai University. In Maharashtra, the UGC's diktat will affect about a dozen institutes.
No comments:
Post a Comment