Cover Story
Since Independence, successive Indian governments have had to address a number of key challenges with regard to education policy, which has always formed a crucial part of its development agenda. Improving the standards of education in India will be a critical test and it will need to resolve concerns over the content of the curriculum, as well as tackling the underlying challenges to education. India's "demographic bulge" - the hundreds of millions of young people who will flood its job markets in the next decade is in danger of sliding into a lopsided paunch that will weigh the nation down and crimp its gross domestic product. The problem is simple: Indians are obsessed with textbook education and white-collar dreams. Most of them shy away from blue-collar careers that could guarantee them employment and income. The less formally-educated youth lack proper vocational training and are doomed to drift from one low-paying stint to another. For a long time, academic performance in...
Content
-
Finding the 'Happy Me' in Australia
Nikhil R. S. , Postgraduate student , Edith Cowan University, Australia
-
One Window Overseas Education: To Make the Right Decision at the Right Time
Raman Balakrishnan
-
5 Ways Why Education System Needs to Ensure Safety Measures in the Premises
Gunjan Dhanuka, Co-Founder and Director, Safe'O'Buddy
-
Crossing the Border for a Brighter Future
Sarath Shyam, Managing Editor, The Higher Education Review
-
Gender Disparity in MBA Classrooms: The Road to Women Empowerment
Dr. Nina Jacob, Professor - HR & OB, IFIM Business School
-
Personality Development at College Level
Dr. Deen Dayal, Assistant Professor, Govt. P.G. College, Mant, Mathura, Uttar Pradesh