An ambitious plan of the University of Pune (UoP) to set up an offshore campus in Dubai has come a cropper. The Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA), Dubais apex licensing and regulatory authority for education, has rejected the varsitys detailed proposal. According to an explanation proferred to the media by the KHDA, UoPs bouquet of study programmes dont offer novelty, nor are they in alignment with the thrust areas highlighted in the Dubai Strategic Plan (DSP)-2015.DSP-2015, which was unveiled on February 3, 2007 by the UAE prime minister, vice president and Ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, roadmaps a strategic plan to develop the emirates most dynamic economic sectors. The plans objective is to sustain real economic growth at 11 percent per annum, to expand GDP to $108 billion (Rs.540,000 crore) by 2015, and to increase real per capita GDP to $44,000 (Rs.22 lakh) per year. The education sector is a key focus area of DSP-2015. The rejection of UoPs proposal, forwarded for KHDAs approval in early 2008, has come as a blow to the universitys administration which had worked on it for over a year. The objective was to set up the campus in partnership with the Dubai-based Edulink Services, an academic infrastructure provider. The plea before the KHDA was for an academic licence to enable UoP to offer its programmes and a commercial licence for Edulink Services to deliver the programmes in Dubai. According to KHDAs chief of licensing and customer relations, Mohammad Darwish, Dubai needs higher education institutions which focus on the needs of learners and address the requirements of the workforce in the Emirates. But the UoP courses are a duplication of those already in existence, says Darwish. UoPs bouquet offered to introduce 14 degree programmes in subjects such as business management, engineering, foreign trade, computer applications, business administration and science at the proposed Dubai campus. Asked to comment on the rejection of UoPs proposal, vice-chancellor Dr. Narendra Jadhav says: I dont want to speak about the issue right now. However, the UoP will definitely establish a good academic relationship with the Emirates in the coming years. Undoubtedly the rejection of its proposal to establish an offshore campus in Dubai has come as a shock to the UoP top brass. Because currently nine Indian universities have established branch campuses in this tiny sheikhdom (pop. 1.4 million). Yet its perhaps the sheer size of UoP which scared KHDA. Perhaps the largest university in India, UoP has 520 colleges and 300 recognised institutes spread across Pune, Ahmednagar and Nashik districts affiliated with it. Together, these institutions have an aggregate student population of 650,000, including 14,000 foreign students mainly from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq and Africa. However nothing loath, UoP and its go-getting vice-chancellor have operationalised Plan B: opting for Ras Al Khaimah (RAK), another one of the seven emirates of the UAE, as the new starting point for the universitys offshore campus initiative. As per the revised plan, we will…
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EducationWorld April 09 | EducationWorld