UNIVERSITY GRANTS COMMISSION
UNIVERSITY
GRANTS COMMISSION
From ancient Bharat to modern
India, higher education has always occupied a place of prominence in Indian
history. In ancient times, Nalanda, Taxila and Vikramsila universities were
renowned seats of higher learning, attracting students not only from all over
the country but from far off countries like Korea, China, Burma (now Myanmar),
Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), Tibet and Nepal. Today, India manages one of the
largest higher education systems in the world*.
The Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru,
The present system of higher
education dates back to Mountstuart Elphinstone`s minutes of 1823, which
stressed on the need for establishing schools for teaching English and the
European sciences. Later, Lord Macaulay, in his minutes of 1835, advocated "efforts
to make natives of the country thoroughly good English scholars". Sir
Charles Wood`s Dispatch of 1854, famously known as the ` Magna Carta of English
Education in India`, recommended creating a properly articulated scheme of
education from the primary school to the university. It sought to encourage
indigenous education and planned the formulation of a coherent policy of
education. Subsequently, the universities of Calcutta, Bombay (now Mumbai) and
Madras were set up in 1857, followed by the university of Allahabad in 1887.
The Inter-University Board (later
known as the Association of Indian Universities) was established in 1925 to
promote university activities, by sharing information and cooperation in the
field of education, culture, sports and allied areas.
The first attempt to formulate a
national system of education in India came In 1944, with the Report of the
Central Advisory Board of Education on Post War Educational Development in
India, also known as the Sargeant Report. It recommended the formation of a
University Grants Committee, which was formed in 1945 to oversee the work of
the three Central Universities of Aligarh, Banarasand Delhi. In 1947, the
Committee was entrusted with the responsibility of dealing with all the then
existing Universities.
Soon after Independence, the
University Education Commission was set up in 1948 under the Chairmanship of
Dr. S Radhakrishnan "to report on Indian university education and suggest
improvements and extensions that might be desirable to suit the present and
future needs and aspirations of the country". It recommended that the
University Grants Committee be reconstituted on the general model of the
University Grants Commission of the United Kingdom with a full-time Chairman
and other members to be appointed from amongst educationists of repute.
In 1952, the Union Government
decided that all cases pertaining to the allocation of grants-in-aid from
public funds to the Central Universities and other Universities and
Institutions of higher learning might be referred to the University Grants
Commission. Consequently, the University Grants Commission (UGC) was formally
inaugurated by late Shri Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, the then Minister of
Education, Natural Resources and Scientific Research on 28 December 1953.
The UGC, however, was formally
established in November 1956 as a statutory body of the Government of India
through an Act of Parliament for the coordination, determination, and
maintenance of standards of university education in India. The offices of the UGC
are located in three locations in Delhi: Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, 35, Feroze
Shah Road, and the South Campus of the University of Delhi.
Pankaj Mandape
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