Having just declined an invitation to speak at a seminar on quality assurance (QA) in higher education, I thought I might record some of my "heretical" ideas on the subject here.
The post-NAAC (National Assessment and Accreditation Council) period has seen the emergence of a plethora of fashionable terms in higher education. One of them which has become so well-known on account of its having been bandied about in seminars and reports is QA. Over the past two decades, there has been a surfeit of national seminars on quality assurance, quality enhancement, and the role of the internal quality assurance cell (IQAC) in quality enhancement. I have attended some of them either as a resource person or as a mere participant, and I have gone through the proceedings of a few other seminars which I did not have the opportunity to attend. As I reflected on the seminars I participated in, I had three thoughts, two of which were disturbing and one amusing. I would like to share them here.
The post-NAAC (National Assessment and Accreditation Council) period has seen the emergence of a plethora of fashionable terms in higher education. One of them which has become so well-known on account of its having been bandied about in seminars and reports is QA. Over the past two decades, there has been a surfeit of national seminars on quality assurance, quality enhancement, and the role of the internal quality assurance cell (IQAC) in quality enhancement. I have attended some of them either as a resource person or as a mere participant, and I have gone through the proceedings of a few other seminars which I did not have the opportunity to attend. As I reflected on the seminars I participated in, I had three thoughts, two of which were disturbing and one amusing. I would like to share them here.
Thought 1: Are the seminars on QA themselves qualitative?
If
the seminars I attended were representative, seminars on QA do little more than
dishing out in, textbook language, theoretical information on QA norms which
would make little sense in the context of education but which provide easy
answers to questions about quality assurance and enhancement in higher
education. That even these borrowed
ideas and easy answers are expressed in a sloppy, slipshod way is a measure of
the presentation skills of professionals who are primarily communicators. This sad spectacle in QA seminars is due not
so much to the dearth of competent resource persons in our country as to our
choice of resource persons. It is also
due to the fact that a national seminar has become a numbers game. The upshot of all this is that, ironically
enough, it is quality that becomes a casualty in many quality assurance
seminars! That this casualty is
“achieved” by spending enormous amounts of the taxpayers’ money is indeed a
disturbing thought.
Thought 2: Is the corporate QA model
necessary?
QA
and the other derivatives of ‘quality’, such as quality sustenance, quality
control, and quality enhancement, which are often part of the discourse on
higher education nowadays, come from the industry – from the corporate
world. In the industry, QA refers to the
methods that a company uses to check that the standard of its services and
goods is high enough. And, in the industry,
the Darwinian Law operates: only the fittest survives. To ensure its continued survival, therefore,
each company adopts rigorous and standardized QA measures. Quality, conceived in this way, has a
distinct corporate identity.
Over the past two decades,
higher educational institutions have been making desperate attempts to acquire
this corporate identity because, in the global market, their survival is at
stake. In the process, they have been
using an idiom unknown to education systems in the past. It is a corporate idiom, and it comes with
their attempts to acquire a corporate identity.
How this idiom operates
is at once interesting and frightening.
A college is not a college; it is a service
sector. It doesn’t impart education;
it provides educational services.
Teachers are not teachers; they are service
providers. And we have products: at one level, the courses we
offer are our products, and, at another, our own students are our
products. We have customers also: our interim customers are our students, and
ultimate customers are employers. And
our job as service providers is to ensure the salability or marketability
of our products. This is where the
quality mechanism comes in: quality assurance, quality control, quality
sustenance, quality enhancement, and what not.
If a college ensures all this, it will have a brand image (not ‘reputation’ which is an old-fashioned
expression) – an image determined by
NAAC accreditation, NBA accreditation, ISO certification, and so on. In short, a college will not be imparting
education; it will be trading in
educational services.
Now, the question that needs to be raised is: Do we
need a corporate image, a corporate identity, and the accompanying corporate
idiom? The corporate identity seems to be a
dehumanizing identity according to which the learner, who is a human being, is
a product, and the college, which produces this product, is like a
factory. Institutions such as Loyola where
I have taught for about three decades have (or had) an ennobling image and identity as
institutions which regard(ed) education as a creative art, as a humanistic
discipline, and as a means of ethical transformation. This does not at all mean that quality need
not be our concern. We do need high standards, and, to achieve high standards
and maintain them, we do need to adopt rigorous measures. But, in the process, there is no need to
adopt the corporate model, the corporate pattern, and the corporate mode of
functioning. It is certainly possible to
evolve a humanizing non-corporate model which is in keeping with the genius of
educational institutions. This calls for
some introspection. We must remember here that quality is not something unknown
to higher education. In the past, our
institutions – some of them, if not all of them – have rather unselfconsciously
maintained quality of a high kind without even using the term quality. What we need to do, therefore, in evolving
quality norms in higher educations is to take a hard look at our long-neglected
traditions and healthy practices, instead of merely searching for a chimerical
creature called quality in the corporate jungle.
This
leads to my third thought, an amusing one.
Thought 3: Why this deafening
noise about quality in higher education now?
Why
has there been so much noise about quality in higher education during the past
few years? The easiest answer is:
globalization and the impending internationalization of trade in higher
education. But, as I reflected on this
question, I remembered an old joke which perceptively answered the
question. Once a German asked a Swiss,
‘Why is it that we Germans often talk about honour, where as you Swiss often
talk about money?’ The Swiss quietly
replied, ‘I guess people often talk about what they most lack.’
I
didn’t intend this post to be so lengthy – I hope it is not unreadably so. Just
a brief concluding paragraph. In my opinion, adopting a corporate model for QA
in higher education will be as futile an exercise as painting stripes on an
elephant. For one thing, the stripes
will make no essential difference: the elephant will still be elephant-like,
not tigerish. For another, as Gurcharan
Das so perceptively pointed out in a different context – I think the book is The
Elephant Paradigm: India Wrestles with Change – it is a meditative,
elephant-like approach rather than a tigerish one that can ensure a safe
passage for higher education in the treacherous terrain that lies ahead.