NAAC Assessing System
Source: Indian Express
GS II: Policies and Developmental Studies
What is discussed under NAAC Assessing System?
- What is NAAC?
- Accreditation Eligibility and Process
- The NAAC Accredited Institutions in India
- Challenges
Why in News?
- The National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), has sparked controversy by changing the grades of Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda from A to A+.
- NAAC carries out quality checks or assessments of Indian Higher-level Educational Institutions (HEIs).
What is NAAC?
- As part of accreditation, the NAAC, an autonomous agency within the University Grants Commission (UGC), analyses and certifies HEIs with gradings.
- A higher education institution learns if it fulfils the evaluator’s quality requirements in terms of curriculum, faculty, facilities, research, and other factors through a multi-layered procedure.
- Institutional grades range from A++ to C.
Accreditation Eligibility and Process
- Only higher education institutions that are at least six years old or have graduated at least two batches of students are eligible to apply.
- The accreditation is valid for a period of five years.
- Aspiring institutes must be UGC-approved and have regular students engaged in full-time teaching and research programmes.
- NAAC mainly depends on applicant institutions’ self-assessment reports.
- The first phase requires an applicant institution to submit a self-study report with quantitative and qualitative indicators.
- NAAC expert teams then evaluate the data, followed by peer team visits to the universities.
The NAAC Accredited Institutions in India
- The All India Survey on Higher Education webpage lists 1,043 universities and 42,343 institutions.
- According to the most recent data from June 21, there were 406 NAAC-accredited institutions and 8,686 colleges.
- Maharashtra has the most authorised institutions among the states, with 1,869 – more than twice as many as Karnataka, which has 914.
- With 43 accredited universities, Tamil Nadu has the most.
Challenges
- The fear of receiving a low grade or receiving no accreditation at all prevents higher education schools from freely requesting the review.
- This is despite the fact that the UGC (Mandatory Assessment and Accreditation of Higher Educational Institutions) Regulations, 2012 made accreditation mandatory.
- NAAC investigated the feasibility of a new system of Provisional Accreditation for Colleges (PAC) earlier this year, under which even one-year-old colleges might seek for accreditation.
- It advised that the provisional credentials be valid for two years.
- However, the group that drafted the white paper, which also went through numerous rounds of changes, recognised that such a system can lead to quality compromise.
- The PAC plan suggests decreasing requirements in order to allow more universities to get Provisional Accreditation.
- Instead, NAAC would be better to assist institutions in improving the quality of education they deliver, so that they can satisfy the requirements required for NAAC certification.
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