Critical Issues in Higher Education in Nepal
Critical Issues in Higher Education in Nepal
Introduction
Prior to the establishment of TU in 1959, Nepal had only a few small colleges
affiliated with Indian universities. Since that date, however, Nepalese higher education
has become virtually synonymous with TD. Mahendra Sanskrit University has about
1000 students which offers the study of Sanskrit to a very restricted group and
Kathmandu University, a private sector university, has about 700 students in the
Schools of Sciences, Management and Engineering. By 1992 enrolment in TU had
risen to about 155,000 students scattered over 195 campuses (65 public and 130
private) throughout the country. Of this student body, about 61 percent was at the
Certificate Level, 30 perc~nt was at the Bachelor's degree level, and 8 percent was at
the Master's degree level. There are about 400 doctoral level candidates working over
the years on dissertation writing.
TU enrolments are highly skewed in other respects as well. In 1992, more than
80 percent of the student body was enrolled in Humanities, Social Sciences,
Management, and Law; less than 10 percent was in Engineering, Agriculture, Forestry,
or Medicine. Only about 24 percent of all students were female, and they accounted
for only 15 percent of science-related enrolments. Moreover, a significant number of
girls attended one large women's multi-faculty campus and nursing campuses.
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Thus, as greater numbers of students have completed grade 10 successfully,
pressures on the TV system have mounted. Enrolment increases have not been. met
with commensurate investments in the human, physical or institutional infrastructure of
TV, and the quality of higher education has suffered accordingly. Neither the structure
nor the financing of the institution has kept pace with the dramatic growth in
enrolments, and the situation has reached crisis proportions. It has become increasingly
clear to all parties that reforms must be made if Nepal is to develop and maintain a
university system capable of meeting the manpower demands of the twenty-first
century. The Governrnent, which has become aware of the higher education problems
and is dealing with increasingly articulate body of TV students, is beginning to review
its policies regarding all aspects of higher education and has invited IDA to participate
in and support these reform efforts.
Firstly, the rate of increase of Nepalese higher education enrolment in recent .f.
years has been very rapid. The total number of university students in 1975 was 22,765.
It reached 34,094 in 1980,54,636 in 1985 and 115.,772 in 1990. It is striking to see
that the higher education enrolment in Nepal doubled in the five years from 1985 to
1990, tripled in ten years trom 1980 to 1990, quadrupled in fifteen years from 1975 to
1990. The higher education enrolment ratio exceeded 5 percent in 1991, which is a
remarkable situation for one of the lowest income countries in the world, considering
the median enrolment ratio in higher education for similar countries is about 3.7
percent. As the population of Nepal increased and access to primary and secondary
education expanded, demographic pressure on the university increased sharply.
Furthermore, according to the current 7% per annum rate of growth, it is projected
that without appropriate restraints, the enrolment will double again from 1990 to 1995
from 115,772 to 230,000, and would reach over 300,000 by the year 2000. This
dramatic expansion of enrolment causes many problems. The increase of the university
student population has outstripped the rate of increase of the Government
appropriation to higher education. Thus the per student allocation in constant prices
has been decreasing dramatically in recent years. Infrastructural investments have been
narrowly focused on a few externally aided campuses, so that the physical facilities in
many other campuses are badly overstretched. Local campus administrations lack
authority to limit admissions to available capacity. The quality inputs per student, such
as teachers skills, classrooms and laboratories, library books, have also been declining.
The current physical capacity of the university is only 30,000 to 40,000 students, if run
on single shift basis; 60,000 to 70,000 if run two shifts. The current student population
is 115,772, requiring many campuses to run three or four shifts, probably resulting in
deterioration of higher education ql:lality.
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Thirdly, the rapid expansion of higher education is producing more university
graduates than the labour market can absorb because of the deteorating economic
situation of the country. A recent survey on education and employment in Nepal
showed that more than 25 percent of the university graduates in Nepal have been
working on jobs requiring less education than they obtained. Experience has shown
that this under-utilization of educated manpower usually leads to a higher turnover
rate, lower job satisfaction and reduced productivity. There also is an increasing
number of unemployment of university graduates in Nepal.
Though the current data available on sources of higher education financing and
structure of expenditure are inconsistent, an initial assessment of the existing
information indicates that Nepalese higher education is seriously under funded. This is
indicated by:
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ii. The real resources available to higher education have been declining
dramatically in recent years, because the rate of inflation has been higher than the rate
of increase of State appropriation for the sub-sector, and also because the share of the
Government expenditures on higher education in the total education appropriation has
decreased from about 30% in early and mid 1980s to 21% in early 1990s.
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vi. Shortage of funds for updating curriculum and teaching lilaterials meant that
most of the curricula have not been updated since early 1970s, some of them were
actually developed in mid 1960s. The equipment in the university laboratories are not
only out of date, (most of which are products of the 1960s), but also in serious
shortage. The equipment and other facilities of chemistry laboratories at the Kirtipur
campus were built in the 1960s for 24 students, but now more than 130 students use
them.
vii. Building maintenance is not carried out due to the serious lack of funds. Many
classrooms and laboratory buildings are in serious disrepair. Many classrooms have nf')
glass in the windows, making them unsuitable for morning shift classes at 6:30 am in
winter.
viii. The university library has had to cut half of its subscriptions of academic
journals this year because of shortage of funds. For example, the allowance is so low it
had stopped subscribing to important journals for science teaching, which it has
provided for many years.
First, the economic austerity of the country and the financial constraint of the
Government have limited the resources available to higher education.
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Fourth, the under finance of the system is also related to the lack of financial
incentives for efficiency gains. The current resource allocation approach is not based
on thorough analyses of the cost behaviour of education activities, thus it is neither
fully transparent, nor does it encourage efficiency gains in better using the limited
financial resources. For example, under the current appropriation approach, if a
university campus raises its internal efficiency by raising student-teacher ratio from
20: 1 to 25: 1, the campus could not bene~t from the cost-saving of the reduction of
personnel expenditures, such as reallocating the saving for raising the salaries of the
existing teachers or improving the physical conditions of campus. Instead, the campus
would receive less resources from the central administration.
Fifth, weak financial management at grass-root level worsens the situation. (a)
Many campuses do not have very well kept financial management records. (b) Some
campus administrators have little sense of cost-effectiveness and even less sense for
developing institutional strategies for better financing their institutions, such as getting
communities and parents involved in financing their institutions, generating revenues
by work-study programmes and other self-financing strategies. Some of the campus
administrators even do not know how much funds they received for each categories of
expenditures for the previous schools years and how the funds were used. (c) There is
a dearth of modern technologies and equipment, such as computers, for more effective
financial management.
Managerial, Problems
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a. Over-Centralized Decision-Making and Control
Despite the large topographical obstacles that separate many parts of the
country from Kathmandu, individual campuses have extremely limited administrative
control of their operations. For example, they do not have the authority to set or
modify course content, or even score the examinations of their students. Although
technically the campuses are supposed to determine enrolment, TV's central office has
in practice set campus enrolment at levels relative to demand pressure. Personnel
decisions are made at the central level. Although poorly trained, most university
employees are permanenJ, and no monitoring mechanisms are used to assess their
performance. As a result, campus chiefs have very limited control over their staff and
the quality of education they deliver. Having few opportunities for leadership, the
management skills of campus chiefs are weak.
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c. Decentralized Admissions
. d. EntranceExaminations
e. The CentralizedExaminationSystem
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papers, the process directly affects. instructional delivery, because students must take
approximately a month off to study, and examinations must be scheduled over several
days so that there is no time conflict for students who must still pass courses of
previous years.
g. Overstaffing
h. Facilities Utilization
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Structural Probl~ms
The increase of enrolment has been markedly skewed to the field of Humanities
and Social Sciences, thus leading to an irrational structure in terms of subject
composition in higher education. More than 80 percent of students are enrolled in
Faculties of Humanities and Social Sciences, Management and Law and Institute of
Science and Techonoly while less than 10 percent of students are enrolled in Institutes
of Engineering, Agricu}ture, Forestry and Medicine, showing an absence of strategic
planning for the laoour force needs in the economy.
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certain fields of study, such as sciences, engineering, agriculture and forestry, female
students account for less than 15 percent.
The problems of the university are compounded by the fact that about two-
thirds of the undergraduate population do not properly belong to higher education and
would be attending secondary school (Grades XI and XII) in most other countries.
Their presence in the TV inflates the number of university students. Thus, the higher
education enrolment ratio in Nepal (e.g., ratio of students enroIled in higher education
vs. the higher education age cohort in the population exceeded five percent in 1991,
which compared favorably with a median enrolment ratio for other lower-income
countries of 3.7 percent. Without the younger students, however, the higher education
enrolment ratio would drop to 1.95 percent. Furthermore, if this situation is allowed to
persist, the proportion of Certificate Level students in the university will continue to
grow.
In 1989, the Government enacted a law to reassign the first two (Certificate)
years of the university to secondary education, thus creating Grade XI and XII, and to
expand undergraduate higher education by one year to three years. The total length of
the educational system would then be 15 years. There would be financial and social
advantages to this reform particularly if entrance examinations are introduced to
control admissions. Long-term pressure on the country's education budget would be
reduced; ~econdary education, which is under community and private control in Nepal,
is managed more flexibly than university campuses, has much lower per capita costs,
and has the potential to provide students with less costly but higher quality education..
Young students, would study under closer parental and school supervision. They
would be more mature when leaving their home towns to attend the university. Since
mobility and family investment for female students are often limited, more rural-area
women would have access to higher levels of education. Implementation of higher
secondary education (also called "10+2" or "+2") would affect nearly all university
functions and policies. Stud~nts would be fewer and older; the crowded campuses
would have space for courses of an additional year.
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macroeconomics,at the very least, the order of the courses would have to be
rearranged. It is' expected to be cheaper to educate Certificate Level students in
secondaryschools in the long term, but considerableplanningand investmentwill-be
needed in the short term. Investment and initial recurrent expenditures may be
unacceptablyhigh if new human and physicalresources are developed solelyfor this
levelof education.IfTU resourcesare reallocatedto highersecondaryeducation(e.g.,
buildings,professors,budget) politicaldifficultiesmay arise. Wary of potential costs,
MOEC plans to financeonly the developmentof the programmeand to leave funding
for its actual implementationto communities.Accordingly,36 schools opened Grades
XI and XII.in1992,mainlyin districtslackinguniversitycampuses.However, care will
need to be taken in planning to avoid the formation of a parallel system to the
universitYinsteadof absorbingCertificateLevelstudentsfromexistingcampuses.
Quality Erosion
The curricula for most courses, which are developed by the the Subject
Committees in Kathmandu or Kirtipur, have not been updated regularly, some not
since the early 1970s. All professors throughout the country must teach the same
curriculum. Consequently, professors with advanced degrees and up-to-date
knowledge are forced ,to teach outdated material for the sake of the uniformity
required by the examinations system; thus, the 'centralized examinations system
reinforces utilization of -outdated curricula.Large-scale curricular updating is needed in
all faculties if the university is to impart usable knowledge to students and to adjust to
the Three-Year Bachelor's degree and implementation of higher secondary education.
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books are: (a) not commercially available outside Kathmandu; (b) too expensive,
particularly when mote than one must be bought; (c) not helpful for the examinations,
which ask for a few, concrete pieces of information to be memorised and reproduced
in essay-type answers; and (d) sometimes incomprehensible. (They either do not
contain sufficient explanations, or students may not know enough English to read
them.) As a result, many students study from commercially or personally available
notes and may only cover 50 pages of disjointed material in a one-year course.
Limited local authority, combined with Nepal's political past, has resulted in
considerable student influence on the resources of the system and a distorted
perception of student rights and responsibilities. Too often student expectations centre
on . unlimited access to the university's subsistence-related resources (cafeterias,
dormitories, low tuition) rather than on instructional delivery. Without substantive
authority to support the decision-making power they have, the campus chiefs feel
forced to admit large numbers of students for whom they have no space. Encumbered
by an administrative structure that discourages local initiative, TV administration has,
until recently, been able to accomplish very little against professor and student interest
groups both of which have lately become increasingly assertive, articulate and at times
resistant to policy reforms and any institutional changes in the status quo.
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