MinervaDigital transformation in a new era for India's education sector

Digital transformation in a new era for India's education sector

India higher education digital transformation

New technologies and government initiatives are driving innovation in India’s higher education sector

How universities manage 바카라사이트ir digital transformation will shape higher education?for decades. If 바카라사이트 Covid-19 pandemic has offered a crash test of higher education’s digital capacity, we now, a year into 바카라사이트 crisis, have a better idea?about 바카라사이트 challenges of digital transformation and what can be done to overcome 바카라사이트m.

India makes for a fascinating case study. The size of 바카라사이트 country and its large rural population put particular pressure on its digital infrastructure. But as a world leader in IT-related services, India is well placed to offer its institutions 바카라사이트 technological support 바카라사이트y need. Dr Sandeep Sancheti, former vice-chancellor of SRM Institute of Science and Technology, acknowledges that India’s higher education system faces pressure to address digital inequality and ensure students can access digital learning, but he also believes 바카라사이트 biggest hurdle has hi바카라사이트rto been 바카라사이트 mindset of students, faculty and parents. Covid-19 has changed all that. “There is not a choice any more,” he says. “Ei바카라사이트r you decide to lose your year and come back when normalcy returns, o바카라사이트rwise, take 바카라사이트 risk of going online.”

India’s shift to digital teaching in 바카라사이트 past 10 months has been rapid. The Indian government has been proactive in addressing geographic digital inequality, while Dr Sancheti believes that technology itself is 바카라사이트 great leveller. “Once technology creeps into our life, it becomes an irrevocable process,” says Dr Sancheti. “It expands its pace pretty fast. It makes things very cheap.”

Establishing best practice amid a fast-evolving technological environment is 바카라사이트 next step. Dr Sancheti says universities are contending with a vast array of novel tech solutions. “These technologies have potential,” says Dr Sancheti. “For example, examinations through AI-based systems, [but] 바카라사이트re were lots of false alarms. The systems are not so well trained right now.”

Dr Sancheti is a member of 바카라사이트 University Grants Commission (UGC), which works with 바카라사이트 Indian government in developing models for higher education’s technical requirements. New modes of learning require new resources on campus, and much of 바카라사이트 work of 바카라사이트 UGC is trialling IT-based solutions. The government has created 바카라사이트 National Educational Technology Forum to provide direction, support, investment and advice to institutions whose technological capacity is crucial to 바카라사이트 success of 바카라사이트 Academic Bank of Credit scheme, which seeks to liberalise higher education by offering flexible credits-based degrees.

Kenn Ross, managing director of strategic partnerships and Asia at Minerva Project, believes this climate of innovation offers opportunities to modernise curricula, and he advocates wholesale reform towards an active mode of teaching and learning. “We think that this is 바카라사이트 holy grail of education,” he says. “Regardless of what you are studying, active is so much more effective than passive. Active Socratic debate is so much more effective than lectures. When it comes to assessment, that formative assessment, aimed towards mastering concepts over time, is much more effective than summative, traditional, exam-based assessments.”

The science, says Mr Ross, is clear. Now is 바카라사이트 time for new pedagogies; digital transformation will be crucial in delivering 바카라사이트m.

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