India's US$J.B. education market is experiencing a surge in investment.
Capital, both local and international, and innovative legal structures
are changing the face of this once-staid sector
The
liberalization of India's industrial policy in 1991 was the catalyst for
a wave of investment in IT and infrastructure projects. Rapid economic
growth followed, sparking a surge in demand for skilled and educated
workers. This, combined with the failure of the public system to provide
high quality education and the growing willingness of the burgeoning
middle class to spend money on schooling, has transformed India's
education sector into an attractive and fast-emerging opportunity for
foreign investment.
Despite being fraught with regulatory
restrictions, private investors are flocking to play a part in the
"education revolution". A recent report by CSA (Asia-Pacific Markets)
estimated that the private education market is worth around US$40
billion. The K-12 segment alone, which includes students from
kindergarten to the age of 17, is thought to be worth more than US$20
billion. The market for private colleges (engineering, medical,
business, etc.) is valued at US$7 billion while tutoring accounts for a
further US$5 billion.
Other areas such as test preparation,
pre-schooling and vocational training are worth US$1-2 billion each.
Textbooks and stationery, educational CD-ROMs, multimedia content, child
skill enhancement, e-learning, teacher training and finishing schools
for the IT and the BP sectors are some of the other significant sectors
for foreign investment in education.
Opportunity beckons
The
Indian government allocated about US$8.6 billion to education for the
current financial year. But considering the significant divide between
the minority of students who graduate with a good education and the vast
majority who struggle to receive basic elementary schooling, or are
deprived of it altogether, private participation is seen as the only way
of narrowing the gap. Indeed, it is estimated that the scope for
private participation is almost five times the amount spent on education
by the government.
CSA estimates that the total size of
India's private education market could reach US$70 billion by 2012, with
an 11% increase in the volume and penetration of education and training
being offered.
The K-12 segment is the most attractive for private
investors. Delhi Public School operates approximately 107 schools, DAVE
has around 667, Amity University runs several more and Educe Solutions
plans to open 150 K-12 institutions over the next four years. Coaching
and tutoring K-12 students outside school is also big business with
around 40% of urban children in grades 9-12 using external tuition
facilities.
Opening the doors
Private initiatives in
the education sector started in the mid-C's with public-private
partnerships set up to provide information and communications technology
(ICT) in schools. Under this scheme, various state governments
outsourced the supply, installation and maintenance of IT hardware and
software, as well as teacher training and IT education, in government or
government-aided schools. The central government has been funding this
initiative, which follows the build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) model,
under the Sara Shish Fabian and ICT Schools programmers. Private
companies such as Educe Solutions, Everyone Systems, and NIT were among
the first to enter the ICT market, which is expected to be worth around
US$1 billion by 2012.
Recently, the central government invited
private participation in over 1,000 of its industrial training
institutes and offered academic and financial autonomy to private
players. Companies such as Tata, Larsen & Tour, Educe and Wiper have
shown keen interest in participating in this initiative.
Regulatory roadblocks
Education
in India is regulated at both central and state government levels. As a
result, regulations often differ from state to state. K-12 education is
governed by the respective State School Education Act and the Central
Board of Secondary Education (BSE) Rules and Regulations concerning
affiliation and/or the rules of any other affiliating body. Under
current regulations, only not-for-profit trusts and societies registered
under Societies Registration Act, 1860, and companies registered under
section 25 of the Companies Act, 1956, qualify to be affiliated with the
BSE and to operate private schools.
While the K-12 segment
accounts for the lion's share of India's educational market, weaving
through the complex regulatory roadmap to qualify for affiliation poses
serious difficulties for investors. The BSE requires privately-funded
schools to be non-proprietary entities without any vested control held
by an individual or members of a family. In addition, a school seeking
affiliation is expected to have a managing committee controlled by a
trust, which should approve budgets, tuition fees and annual charges.
Any income accrued cannot be transferred to the trust or school
management committee and voluntary donations for gaining school
admission are not permitted.
Schools and higher education
institutions set up by the trust are entitled to exemptions from income
tax, subject to compliance with section 11 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
In order to qualify for tax exemptions, the trust needs to ensure that
its predominant activity is to serve the charitable purpose of promoting
education as opposed to the pursuit of profit.
Alternative paths
Alternative
routes do exist for investors seeking to avoid the web of regulatory
barriers that constrain their involvement. Sectors such as pre-schools,
private coaching and tutoring, teacher training, the development and
provision of multimedia content, educational software development, skill
enhancement, IT training and e-learning are prime sectors in which
investors can allocate their funds. These areas are attractive because
while they relate closely to the profitable K-12 segment, they are
largely unregulated. As such, they make attractive propositions for
private investors interested in taking advantage of the burgeoning
demand for quality education. Companies such as Educe Solutions, Career
Launcher, NIT, Optec, and Magic Software, are market leaders in these
fields. Educe recently acquired a large number of educational institutes
and service providers across India. It has also formed joint ventures
with leading higher education groups, including Raffles Education
Singapore, for the establishment of higher education institutions and
universities in India and China. Furthermore, it has entered into a
multi-million dollar collaboration with Anal Properties and
Infrastructure to set up educational institutions and schools across the
country and closed an US$8.5 million deal to acquire Euro kids
International, a private provider of pre-school educational services in
India. Ganja Capital India, an education-centric fund, has completed the
funding of three education services companies in India. NIT and Optec,
meanwhile, are engaged in the IT training business.
Core
Projects and Technology is also focusing heavily on India and is likely
to bid to takeover, upgrade and run public schools for specified periods
on a public-private partnership basis.
Higher hurdles
While
state governments are largely responsible for providing K-12 education
in India, the central government is accountable for major policy
decisions relating to higher education. It provides grants to the
University Grants Commission (GC) and establishes central universities
in the country. The GC coordinates, determines and maintains standards
and the release of grants. Upon the GCS' recommendation, the central
government declares the status of an educational institution, which once
authorized, is entitled to award degrees.
State governments
are responsible for the establishment of state universities and colleges
and has the power to approve the establishment of private universities
through State Acts. All private universities are expected to conform to
the GC guidelines to ensure that certain minimum standards are
maintained.
Amity University in Utter Pradesh is one of the
private universities to open its doors. It was approved by the Utter
Pradesh state legislature on 12 January 2005 under section 2(f) of the
University Grants Commission Act.
Not-for-profit and
anti-commercialization concepts dominate higher education fee
structures. To prevent commercialization and profit-making, institutions
are prohibited from claiming returns on investments. This, however,
does not pose a hurdle for universities interested in mobilizing
resources to replace and upgrade their assets and services. A fixation
of fees is required in accordance with the guidelines prescribed by the
GC and other concerned statutory bodies. For this purpose, the GC may
request the relevant information from the private university concerned,
as prescribed in the GC (Returns of Information by Universities) Rules,
1979.
In line with the policy on Fee Fixation in Private
Unaided Educational Institutions Imparting Higher and Technical
Education, two types of fees are required: tuition fees and development
fees. Tuition fees are intended to recover the actual cost of imparting
education without becoming a source of profit for the owner of the
institution. While earning returns on investment would not be
permissible, development fees may provide an element of partial capital
cost recovery to the management, serving as a resource for upkeep and
replacement.
Legal precedents
In order to be awarded
university status by the GC, institutions must comply with the
objectives set forth in the Model Constitution of the Memorandum of
Association/Rules, and ensure that no portion of the income accrued is
transferred as profit to previous or existing members of the
institution. Payments to individuals or service providers in return for
any service rendered to the institute are, however, not regulated.
In
this context recent court judgments on private universities are
relevant. The Supreme Court, in Gunneries JP v State of Andrea Pradesh,
introduced a scheme regulating the admission and levy of fees in private
unaided educational institutions, particularly those offering
professional education. The ruling was later notified in the fee
policy.
Subsequently, in the case of Prof Asphalt and AMR v
State of Chatting and Ors in 2005, the Supreme Court assailed the
Chatting government's legislation and amendments which had been abused
by many private universities. It was contended that the state
government, simply by issuing notifications in the Gazette, had been
establishing universities in an indiscriminate and mechanical manner
without taking into account the availability of any infrastructure,
teaching facilities or financial resources. Further, it was found that
the legislation (Chatting Meiji Sherpa Inhabitable (Sharpen Aura
Indiaman) Sardinian, 2002) had been enacted in a manner which had
completely abolished any kind of GC control over private universities.
The
Supreme Court concluded that parliament was responsible for ensuring
the maintenance and uniformity of higher education institutions in order
to uphold the GCS' authority. Following the judgment, only those
private universities that satisfied the GCS' norms were able to continue
operating in Chatting.
Professional institutions
Professional
and technical education in India is regulated by professional councils
such as the All India Council for Technical Education (ALICE).
Established under the ALICE Act, 1987, ALICE gives recognition to
courses, promotes professional institutions, provides grants to
undergraduate programmers, and ensures the coordinated and integrated
development of technical education and the maintenance of standards. The
ALICE has recently exerted pressure on unrecognized private technical
and management institutes to seek its approval or face closure.
A
single bench decision of the Delhi High Court in Chartered Financial
Analysis Institute and AMR v ALICE illustrates the far-reaching
implications this kind of pressure can have on all institutions
operating independently of the ALICE. The court found that the Chartered
Financial Analyst Institute, a US-based organization, was engaged in
imparting technical education and that its charter, though not described
as a degree or diploma, was nevertheless descriptive of the candidate
attaining an academic standard, entitling him to pursue further courses,
and achieve better prospects of employment in the investment banking
profession. The ALICE argued that the Chartered Financial Analyst
Institute fell within the ambit of its regulation and was therefore
obliged to submit to the jurisdiction of the regulatory body. The Delhi
High Court upheld the Apices' view that the Chartered Financial Analyst
Institute did qualify as an institution imparting technical education..
This
judgment may have emboldened the ALICE to proceed against a number of
other establishments that are on its list of unapproved institutions. It
holds particular significance since despite not granting degrees and
diplomas, the Chartered Financial Analyst Institute was still deemed by
the court to be covered under the description of a "technical
institute".
Enthusiasm grows for foreign participation
While
regulators such as the ALICE continue to exercise influence in the
Indian education system, the sector is expected to witness a surge in
foreign investment and perhaps a reduction in the number of regulatory
roadblocks as a result of the central government's enthusiasm for
overseas investors. Foreign direct investment in higher education could
help reduce government expenditure and there is a general consensus that
education as a whole should be opened for domestic and foreign private
participation.
The entry of foreign educational institutions
into India will be covered by the new Foreign Education Providers
(Regulation for Entry and Operation) Bill. The bill seeks to regulate
the entry and operation of foreign education providers, as well as limit
the commercialization of higher education. Foreign education providers
would be given the status of "deemed universities" allowing them to
grant admissions and award degrees, diplomas or certificates.
Operationally,
the bill proposes to bring foreign education providers under the
administrative umbrella of the GC, which would eventually regulate the
admissions process and fee structures. Since these foreign institutions
will have to be incorporated under central or state laws, they will also
be subject to the government's policies of reservations. The bill is
pending approval from the Indian Parliament but it is unclear if it will
be taken by the present government for a vote prior to the general
elections in 2009.
Innovative structures unlock profitability
The
regulatory restraints on running profitable businesses in the K-12 and
higher education sectors have driven Indian lawyers to devise innovative
structures that enable private investors to earn returns on their
investments. These typically involve the establishment of separate
companies to provide a range of services (operations, technology,
catering, security, transport, etc.) to the educational institution. The
service companies enter into long term contracts with the trust
operating the institution. Payments made by the trust to the service
companies must be comparative and proportionate to the services rendered
by such companies. Furthermore, in order to qualify for tax exemptions,
the expenses paid by the trust to the service companies must not exceed
what may reasonably be paid for such services under arm's length
relationships.
Despite the regulatory constraints, the Indian
education sector is on a path of exponential growth. A growing number of
private companies are undertaking creatively structured projects in the
education business and the level of investor confidence is demonstrated
by the recent spate of M&A activity that has taken place.
With
more domestic players emerging, the education sector is likely to
witness consolidation, but at the same time, increasing foreign
participation will drive competition and raise standards. Liberalization
will continue to intensify as the government struggles to remedy its
poor public education system and provide quality institutions to educate
India's masses.
Seem Jing and Dimply Shanty are partners at
Lexicons Law Offices. The firm is headquartered in Delhi and advises on
areas including mergers and acquisitions, private equity and venture
capital, projects, telecommunications, software/information technology,
education, media and entertainment, taxation, retail, licensing and
franchising, insurance, general corporate and commercial work and
international arbitration. Seem can be reached at Shiga@lexcounsel.in
Areas of Practice:
Infrastructure,
Telecommunications, Power, Mergers/Acquisition, Software/Information
Technology, Business Process Outsourcing, Media & Entertainment,
Private Equity and Venture Capital, General Corporate and Commercial,
International Arbitration.
Professional Summary:
Seem
Ginghams' practice spans over fourteen years during which she has
acquired substantial expertise in representing developers,
sponsors/lenders, venture capital investors, international corporations,
financial institutions, and other strategic investors involved in the
establishment, development and financing of major infrastructure and IT
projects in India.
Seem Jing is a Partner with a Delhi Based
Law Firm Lexicons, Law Offices and regularly contributes to journals and
publications and often takes up speaking engagements.
India's Education Sector - Back to School
Home Education Is Every Parents Right to Educate a Child at Home
All valid questions. If your child is currently in public school you would trust the school and teachers to make sure your child was getting everything they needed to be productive adults when they grow up. But what if you don't agree with some of the things they are teaching in school? You can not simply ask them to stop teaching it, they won't do that for just 1 or 2 children. Taking on the school board would be a huge undertaking and it sometimes causes more strife than good.
As a parent you have the freedom of providing education for your child in your hands. You can chose to remove your child from public school and give them a home education. Homeschooling has become a very popular way to make sure your child is getting the education you want them to have, without the added opinions of a teacher or school board that you may not agree with fully. Taking your child from the public school environment to home school is not a difficult task, each state has a set of laws or regulations to assure you as a parent can educate your child in your home if you so choose. Be sure to check your states education website for homeschooling laws and regulations.
There are many books and home education resources out there to tell you what your child should learn and by what age they should learn certain things. Each child is different so you can not base your child's learning totally on a book someone wrote. No two children learn the same, even if they are the same age, it just doesn't happen. Children vary in how they learn, just as adults vary in learning styles. Some will learn only by reading, others by doing or seeing and some by using all their senses to gather the information.
If you decide to homeschool your child be sure to first watch to see how they learn, their learning style will make all the difference in the world to how you will be able to teach them. Home education can be very rewarding, watching your child grow and learn daily from the world around them.
For more great information on how to home school or some fun resources check out Homeschooling Professor we are here to help you learn to educate your child.
Identify A Number of Affordable Special Education Schools Online
As the name shows online degree from online special education schools is
intended for training deserving academics who are ready to develop
their skills and eager to make work in special education (usually
university students with special education needs and requirements).
Obviously, making job in this profession is quite challenging as
educators need to take good care of their students with special
educational specifications. Compared with other standard teachers this
job involves much more from mentors and lecturers but when it comes to
gains and remunerations they may expect to see far better income
packages and other rewards.
There are several types of programs
available in special education university for instance Master of Arts
and Bachelor of Arts in schooling or special education. Most online
special education university courses are planned to train young and
ambitious minds based on Response to Intervention approaches since
several students would have special specifications to be addressed by
them. Depending upon your ease and comfort and choice you can go with a
particular type of program from various training programs available.
Most schools, for instance St. Joseph University, University of Phoenix,
Ashford University, Liberty University among many others. For
eligibility conditions, selection process and fee details you have to
check with the suitable web site comprehensively and in case of any
question you must talk to them in person before receiving yourself
enrolled.
Another significant point in online special education
schools is that you need to possess special style traits and bent of
mind so that you can enjoy working with students with special needs and
disabilities. If you think you have such attributes and attitude to take
care of such students and you are self enthusiastic, well-organized,
cool minded, able to motivate others and in the position to understand
those who need you, then there is a great news that you can find
thousands of vacancies available even in the US itself. In United States
all states require that you must be licensed to teach children with
special specifications. Quite a few states require you to have a 4-year
college higher education degree while others specially expect you to
have at least a Master's college diploma, so it is best to check all
these details carefully.
If you are already working in any
other occupation, or have family issues due to which you can't show up
at programs full time at the university, you may then look into
acquiring your Degree program online. there are actually numerous
colleges and universities which offer online college diploma modules. If
you are already an educator and must get your college diploma so that
you can be certified to teach inside your subject area, then too,
getting a college diploma online will come in handy for you.
You
could start off by acquiring an Undergraduate Degree in Studies and
continue with a Master's and even a Doctoral Diploma with an learning
major. When you study for these certifications online, you can work
while you're studying. The activities can be quite versatile and you may
pace yourself as you study. You can work through the certification at a
reduced tempo as well, if that makes balancing your life less
complicated .
These days most of the top colleges offer courses
online. You will be offered courses in the mode of online classes and
presentations which you can access online. You will also have to refer
to quite a few standard college textbooks and reference books. You will
typically be provided the list of the textbooks required for your study
at the start of the degree from online special education schools
5 Good Reasons to Get a Masters Degree in Early Childhood Education
It is no secret that the further you take your education, the better you
will fare in your career. There are a multitude of reasons that someone
would want to get a masters degree in early childhood education.
Preschool children learn in a much different way than other age groups,
so this is one area of specialty that requires particular focus.
1. Greater level of education:
Of
course, that one seems obvious, considering that a master is a higher
degree than an associate or a bachelor's. However, one of the reasons
that an educator would choose to go into a master program is that there
is a more inclusive course-load. MS degree programs in early childhood
education will delve more deeply into child psychology, family
engagement and other aspects.
Pursuing MS in early childhood
education will also help you to continue to learn more techniques for
dealing with the career specific situations you may find yourself faced
with, on all stages of your career.
2. Broader range of career prospects:
Supervisory
jobs that you may want to work your way into will require a graduate
degree. It is also the next logical step towards furthering your
educational career if you want to grow. There will be career options in
areas even outside of education, such as social work.
Other
options may include deeper government work, such as working with
educational policy and more. Associates degrees and Bachelors degrees
are great first steps and they certainly can be an excellent place to
hold your career. However, if you are interested in growing and
furthering your career, a master's is definitely the way to go.
3. Flexibility:
This
degree not only broadens your career prospects, it can also make a vast
difference in what you are able to do with those prospects. For many,
it can mean branching out into other areas of early childhood education
specialty, such as special education or working with larger groups of
children, or working in an administrative capacity.
Additionally,
with competition in the education fields growing more all the time,
having MS will give you a wider variety of choices, as opposed to those
contemporaries that may not have such an extensive education.
4. Greater Salary Range:
According
to the US Department of Labor, those with an associates or bachelors
can expect to bring in anywhere from $23,000 to $40,000 per year.
However, those with a master degree may be able to expect to see an
annual salary of often, greater than $60,000. Because this is a
specialty, there are usually incentives in place. You won't typically
see those incentives in private education; however, public education
does often have a salary ladder that indicates a graduate degree will
improve your yearly salary.
5. Greater Level of knowledge To Hand Down:
One
of the most frequently cited benefits for obtaining a master's in early
childhood education is that the teacher can then pass that level of
learning down to their students. By gaining a more in depth education in
a variety of areas, an educator who furthers their education can then
expect to be able to pass both the knowledge but the techniques on to
the students.
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Homeschool Curriculum Review: Easy Peasy All In One Homeschool
Finding the right mix of lessons can be a great task for parents who
don't want to be bound by a certain curriculum for all of their needs.
Easy Easy All in One homeschool offers variety and flexibility for the
beginning homeschoolers who is trying to find their way around the
process. And, did we mention that it is completely free?
Homeschooling
can be expensive. Buying materials for more than one child for all of
their subjects each year that they are in school can add up. There are
also the organizational materials to create a comfortable homeschool
classroom environment. Some parents can afford it while others do what
they can.
When you feel strongly about wanting to teach your
children at home, cost is the last thing that should stand in your way.
Homeschooling parent Lee Giles understands that. She knows that finances
aren't always conducive to buying what you need when you need it. She
decided to make it easy by posting her children's lessons on line as
free lessons for other children.
She has painstakingly compiled
complete subject lessons for grades pre-K throughout high school. All
of the lessons are not posted, but she does have everything needed for
at least preschool through ninth grade. If your kids are young, by the
time they reach high school everything should be in place. She adds new
lessons and subjects as they are completed.
What is Included
You
can find all of the free resources that you need to get started
homeschooling your child right now on Lee's website. What will you need?
There are pages that need to be printed out so you will need a printer
and of course a computer with an Internet connection. In addition to
that, pencils, paper, scissors, glue and crayons or colored pencils. If
anything else is needed, each lesson plan will detail it for you. Every
lesson plan contains live links to materials needed for that subject for
that day.
It all begins with Getting Ready. This is the
program for preschoolers. They are taught reading readiness along with
lesson plans for math and language arts. Lee has her own unique take on
reading. For her children (and the lesson plans that she posts on the
site), she uses the following method. First, she teaches letter names
and sounds. Next she teaches reading through memorization of sight
words. Lastly, she teaches phonics. The process takes about two years
for kids to complete. By first grade, kids are beginning to read from
Chuffy's First Reader.
She uses materials that she has tried
with her own kids as well as materials from other sites. Everything that
she links to is also free to use like Amble side Online. For grades one
through eight, there are math and language arts included in the lesson
plans. You may also choose your levels individually from the material.
Included in these lesson plans are Programs of Study which adds science,
history, Bible study, computers, music, art and something called
"thinking" to round out each curriculum. There are separate Programs of
Study for lower grades and higher grade levels.
This program is
well put together. Because so much is done for you already, there is
not much additional support like other programs. Visit the site to find
out more.
Best Architecture Schools: Names That Always Make It to the List
1. Harvard University. This is one of the first names that come to mind when talking about best schools-especially in architecture. Everyone should have heard about this reputable school offering international faculty complemented by scholars and theorists from different parts of the globe. Harvard follows a curriculum which is focused on theory, history, professional practice and social environment.
2. Cornell University. One of the best architecture schools, Cornell University's Department of Architecture already have over 130 years of teaching and training students for their careers in architecture. This is one of the country's oldest and most reputable institutions inviting almost 300 undergraduate learners in its bucket every year. If you want to study in this school, you'll have to go through an interview, take the required exams and get high scores and then submit your portfolio. Available undergraduate degrees include Bachelor of Science in Architecture, Bachelors of Architecture Curriculum and Bachelor of Architecture Professional.
3. Syracuse University. When talking about best architecture schools, one of those names that are always mentioned is Syracuse University. Potential applicants in the School of Architecture are advised that its portfolio requirements are very strict. Among those that are required include a student's opening statement describing his/her interest in the field as well as his/her aspirations and artwork pieces-at least 12 of the student's recent and best pieces. Students in need of financial aid are also entertained here based either merit or need.
4. University of Southern California. The institution's School of Architecture has been around since 1925 with various programs available for all aspirants. Those who'd like to apply at the University of California can do so online and if interested in scholarships, aspirants are entertained every 1st of December.
5. University of Miami. You should have heard about this school if you have already started looking for the best architecture schools in the United States. The University of Miami was established in 1927 and has since then been consistently producing high caliber architects. A few years ago, the school opened Jorge M. Perez Architecture Center in addition-another institution that it operates catering to more than 400 students in architecture.
If you want the highest quality of education, you need to consider the best Architecture Schools only and some of those that consistently make it to the top 5 list are the ones enumerated above. You can start from this list in your search so you won't have to deal with the not-so-promising institutions out there. When choosing the right school, make sure that you consider important factors like tuition rate, location, faculty and accreditation. Good luck!
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This blog is a personal blog written and edited by us. This blog accepts forms of cash advertising, sponsorship, paid insertions or other forms of compensation. The compensation received may influence the advertising content, topics or posts made in this blog. That content, advertising space or post may not always be identified as paid or sponsored content. The owner(s) of this blog is not compensated to provide opinion on products, services, websites and various other topics. The views and opinions expressed on this blog are purely the blog owners. If we claim or appear to be experts on a certain topic or product or service area, we will only endorse products or services that we believe, based on our expertise, are worthy of such endorsement. Any product claim, statistic, quote or other representation about a product or service should be verified with the manufacturer or provider. This blog does contain content which might present a conflict of interest. This content may not always be identified.





