Student cities, educational hubs: India

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Revision as of 10:10, 5 December 2020

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.



Contents

Annual rankings

2017

Yogita Rao, Delhi 86th among top 100 student cities: QS, Feb 16, 2017: The Times of India


Montreal World's Best, Paris Ranks Second

Mumbai, the second most affordable city in the world for students till 2016, has dropped to the 30th position this year. Delhi, on the other hand, ranks way higher at 15, states a report by Quacquarelli Symonds, compilers of the QS World University Rankings. The organisation published the 2017 list of the `top 100 student cities in the world' on Wednesday . Mumbai and Delhi rank 85th and 86th in the list, respectively .

Paris, which had topped the list since it was first compiled in 2012, was replaced by Montreal in Canada for the first time. London, ranked fifth last year, has moved up to the third position. Melbourne, on the other hand, dropped to the fifth position from second.The top five cities in Asia include Seoul, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore and Kyoto-Osaka-Kobe.

Where Mumbai and Delhi managed to get higher ranks was in “employer activity“.

A city's performance is ranked on six composite indicators -affordability , desirability , student mix (international students), university ranking, employer activity and, for the first time, views of students, as in, which city would they like to study in and their willingness to continue living there.

Although an official QS statement shows that Mumbai and Delhi have seen an increase in their desirability score, these cities are still at the bottom. Mumbai is placed at the 90th position and Delhi 91th. The desirability score takes into account the quality of life, including pollution, corruption and safety .

In its inaugural rankings for 2012, QS had published the rankings for the top 50 cities. Later, it began to publish rankings of 75. This year, it has expanded the list to 100.

In 2013, Mumbai was ranked 61 and Delhi 69. Apoorva Palkar, educationist and convenor of the Maharashtra taskforce to bring about internationalisation in higher education, said, “Mumbai is increasingly seen as a preferred destination for education by foreign students despite its shortcomings. Tuition fees here are more affordable than in European institutes. However, the cost of living is high.“

College concentrations

As in 2018-19

Top 10 districts by number of colleges, As in 2018-19
From: March 4, 2020: The Times of India

See graphic:

Top 10 districts by number of colleges, As in 2018-19

On-campus housing

20% of students get it/ 2019

June 8, 2019: The Times of India

Just 20% of students get on-campus housing

Mumbai:

Pune may boast of being the Oxford of the East but 1.9 lakh of the 2.6 lakh students in the city don’t get on-campus residence space. Bengaluru has the highest concentration of university colleges in India with 6.6 lakh students, of whom over 3 lakh require accommodation and almost 90% of them depend on private homes in the absence of campus housing. These are some of the findings of a Knight Frank survey released on Friday. Hyderabad, Jaipur, Nagpur, Noida, all have large migrant student populations looking for accommodation amidst their pursuit of a degree. In Jaipur especially, 85% of students are from outside the state, but just 15% of them are housed on campus. At best, only 20% of the current demand across the country is met by accommodation provided on campus by universities.


‘Most students rent flats or live in pvt hostels’

Presently, private home-owners continue to dominate the student-housing market. The majority of students either rent apartments or live in private hostels outside the university campus,” said Saurabh Mehrotra, national director of advisory services, Knight Frank India. “The quality of this accommodation is often way below what students want or expect. As such, investor interest in the market is growing with the opportunity to meet demand for well-located, highquality accommodation,” he said.

By 2020, the government wants 30% of all 18- to 23-year-olds to be enrolled in higher education courses. This would increase the country’s student population to 40 million.

The purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) or private hostels market remains immature, with demand far outstripping supply at the current time. There are currently 1.6 million PBSA bed spaces in India, a figure which represents just 4% of the total student enrolment. The majority of this accommodation is operated outside of university control by private owners. Often, it is off-campus, of poor quality, and with little modern value-add facilities like WiFi or laundry services.

Knight Frank estimated that there is currently the potential to deliver 6 million PBSA bed spaces on greenfield land located in close proximity to universities while another 2 million can be delivered on brownfield land. The report estimated that the current demand for PBSA bed spaces across the country totals more than 8 million. Around $100 million was invested into the Indian PBSA market in 2018.

See also

Migration: India

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