challenges in higher education pdf

The New Equation

challenges in higher education pdf

Executive leadership hub - What’s important to the C-suite?

challenges in higher education pdf

Tech Effect

challenges in higher education pdf

Shared success benefits

Loading Results

No Match Found

The state of higher education: Challenges and opportunities in 2023

Perspectives in higher education.

In an increasingly competitive and complex environment, management and trustees of higher education institutions are facing a growing number of issues that require attention. As colleges and universities emerge from their intense focus on the COVID-19 pandemic, new challenges are taking its place. These challenges include grappling with the state of the economy and the related fiscal impact on the institution, focusing on admissions policies and procedures in response to declining college enrollment, and devising appropriate strategies around the safety and security of the campus community.

In this edition of Perspectives in Higher Education, we highlight these pressing challenges, as well as related opportunities for institutions. Other key areas include environmental, social and governance considerations, the state of university compliance programs, and ways to strengthen the path between higher education and postgraduate careers. We also provide our annual update on activities in Washington and how they are affecting higher education. Finally, we offer commentary on how institutions can enhance the educational experience of international students.

challenges in higher education pdf

Download the report Challenges and opportunities for higher education in 2023

  • Challenges and opportunities in 2022
  • Challenges and opportunities in 2021
  • Challenges and opportunities in 2020
  • Challenges and opportunities in 2019

{{filterContent.facetedTitle}}

{{item.publishDate}}

{{item.title}}

{{item.text}}

challenges in higher education pdf

Get started with PwC's preference center

Our insights. Your choices.

Margaret Stover

National Higher Education Advisory leader, PwC US

Christopher Cox

National Higher Education Assurance leader, PwC US

Linkedin Follow

© 2017 - 2024 PwC. All rights reserved. PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of which is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further details.

  • Data Privacy Framework
  • Cookie info
  • Terms and conditions
  • Site provider
  • Your Privacy Choices

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

WOMEN AND INDIAN HIGHER EDUCATION: CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS

Profile image of Dr. Anjali Sehrawat

2022, UGC Care Group-I

Higher Education as a policy intervention is a force multiplier that enables self-sufficiency, enhances economic growth by enriching skills, and improves people's lives by opening up opportunities for better living. The history of the world is witness to how education can bring in socioeconomic mobility and acts as an agent of affirmative change. For centuries women, which constitute almost half the population of the world were deprived of their most basic rights including education. Despite significant progress made in enrolment in elementar education in the past centur , omen s enrolment in higher education remains much lower in comparison to men. In a developing country like India, where the plight of women is deplorable for ages, the education of women is imperative for their upliftment. My paper aims to analyse the challenges posed to omen s enrollment in higher education, the reasons for their lower participation, and to provide the solution for breaking the stereotyping and sex isolation. The paper analyses the initiatives of the New Education Policy 2020 for the inclusion of women. This paper will examine the inclusion of women not only in terms of enrollment in higher studies but also inclusion in curriculum, teaching, and pedagogies which makes learning more meaningful and participative.

Related Papers

Global Journal For Research Analysis

Shanjendu Nath

challenges in higher education pdf

IJRISE Journal

Women render the most vital service to the society by playing different roles. But it is quite unfortunate that after the first decade of 21 st century women are suffering with gender discriminations in society. So it is the need of the hour to bring them in the lime light to receive the cosmic rays of education. To this end their full as well as effective participation and equal enrolment with boys are the preconditions. So this paper puts focus on girls' participation in higher education in India. For this reason data were collected from different secondary sources. The analysis revealed that condition of girls' enrolment is quite miserable in higher level of education. Gender parity is not achieved till now by India in Higher education. Though disparity is reducing here, but it is present in majority of the states. Some of these states are very developed in higher education. On the other hand some states of India's NorthEast and UTs providing more opportunities to women in higher education though these are not well developed in higher education. There is also disparity in different levels of higher education. This disparity is not uniformly distributed across the levels. In some level female are in advantageous position. But in majority of the levels they are lagging behind. The disparity is also observed in the distribution of women enrollment among the various faculties. Here general education is more favorable to women than that of vocational and technical education. Gender disparity is also found in different teaching and hierarchical post in higher education. So the paper ends with suitable suggestions to foster gender equity as well as equality in education.

International Journal of Education Economics and Development

Urmila Moon

Publisher ijmra.us UGC Approved

Empowerment of women strongly associated with level of education i.e. higher the level of education greater the empowerment of women. Women are a backbone of a family playing multiple roles. By educating women the process of development of the nation can be accelerated.

Journal of Education and Practice

Tushar Kanti Ghara

Women education and empowerment are the indicators of development. Women education ensures the holistic and long development. It includes equitable and increased access to technical and vocational education and training, higher education and research with due attention to quality assurance. This communication has taken a look on women participation through women higher education institutes, women enrolment as compared with population. The participation in terms of distribution of institutes and enrolment has been studied for the years 2011-2016. The trend has been found as increasing but slow. Correlations have also been studied. Key Words: women population, women enrolment, women teachers, correlation coefficient, regression

International Research Journal Commerce arts science

Universities are ‘light house’ of the society and the teachers are ‘torch bearers’ to bring social change. Every year girls do better than boys in class X and class XII examination. Majority of top achievers are girls.There are several reasons which indicate that they used to make pragmatic choices about their future because they were conditioned to believe that marriage and family come first. But now in India great concern is being shown regarding career for them in different spheres nurturing their talent by providing various options.

Euro Asia International Journals

Abstract Gender-based discrimination in education is both a cause and a consequence of deep-rooted disparities in society. Poverty, geographical isolation, ethnic background, disability, traditional attitudes about their status and role all undermine the ability of women and girls to exercise their rights. Harmful practices such as early marriage and pregnancy, gender-based violence, and discriminatory education laws, policies, contents and practices still prevent millions of girls form enrolling, completing and benefiting from education. This paper deals with gender equity in higher education in India. It outlines the Indian higher education scenario. This paper makes a special note on gender wise students’ enrolment in India, discipline wise enrolment, enrolment in major research disciplines and gender distribution. This paper concludes with some interesting findings along with policy suggestions.

sarbani chakraborty

Higher Education

Rohini Sahni

ANUSANDHAN ANVESHIKA (A Peer Reviewed Refereed Bilingual International

Dr G Kamalakar

Views expressed in the research papers/articles inside are the personal opinions of the contributors. National Educationist Council or Editorial Board of the Anusandhan Anveshika will not be responsable for them. All disputes are subject to the Jurisdiction of Meerut (India) courts only.

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

Search Issues

Chesley Bonestell, “The Exploration of Mars” (1953), oil on board, 143/8 x 28 inches, gift of William Estler, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Reproduced courtesy of Bonestell LLC.

Vol. XL, No. 3, Spring 2024

Tools That Would Make STEM Degrees More Affordable Remain Unexamined

By Dominique J. Baker

Last fall’s update from the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics once again warned that Black, Hispanic, American Indian, and Alaska Native students continue to be among the “missing millions” in science and engineering fields. Despite gradual gains among Black and Hispanic students, all four groups remain disproportionately underrepresented among those earning STEM degrees in the United States. The National Science Board and others have proposed various strategies to address the problem, but the expense of obtaining a STEM degree remains underexplored as a limiting factor.

Controlling for inflation, the cost of attending a public four-year college in the United States has more than doubled since the early 1990s. Concurrently, federal student loan debt has ballooned by over 200%, from $500 billion in 2007 to $1.6 trillion today, though the number of borrowers has only grown by 53% in that time. This surge in borrowing, coupled with nearly one-third of students defaulting on their loans , has not escaped notice. Many in media and policy spheres continue to sound the alarm and explore ways to help borrowers manage their student debt. Most of the federal focus has been on lowering debt borrowers have already accumulated; notably, last year the Biden administration launched its Saving on a Valuable Education Plan, which aims to cancel debt or reduce borrowers’ monthly payments through a number of executive actions.

The cost of attending a public four-year college in the United States has more than doubled since the early 1990s.

But reducing student debt in the long term—especially for marginalized populations—requires making college more affordable in the first place. Unfortunately, as evidenced by the growing student debt crisis, current policy tools used to manage the cost of tuition and fees across the ecosystem of US higher education are falling short. Building a more affordable and equitable path to higher education will require policymakers, researchers, and leaders in higher education to broaden the national conversation around existing options, and particularly their impact on underrepresented degree seekers.

The state of college affordability

Undergraduate student loan debt has become unmanageable for a wide swath of borrowers in the United States. Bachelor’s degree recipients borrow on average $41,300, with a median of $30,000. The median borrower still owes 92% of their loan four years after earning a bachelor’s degree, and nearly one-third of people who took out a student loan between 1998 and 2018 fell into default. As part of its emergency response to the pandemic, the US Department of Education suspended action on federal student loans that were in default as of March 13, 2020, until at least September 2024.

Student loan debt is uneven across racial groups. Figure 1 highlights a disparity scholars have found across various datasets and over time : that Black students rely on student loans at a substantially higher rate compared to their peers. Disparities continue when students enter repayment , as Black students not only borrow the largest amount for a bachelor’s degree, but also owe the highest amount four years after graduating. These realities are connected to the interlocking structural inequalities of anti-Black racism that make it more difficult for Black families to accumulate wealth and for Black students to access healthy environments and well-funded schooling.  

Figure 1. Cumulative student loan debt of 2015–2016 bachelor’s degree earners by race

Recent data has also shown variation in loan repayment patterns by major, challenging the popular assumption that all STEM graduates have similar prospects after college. Though the median amount owed on student loans for STEM majors four years after earning their degree is 80%, this varies—from 59% for engineering to 94% for biological and physical sciences and agricultural sciences (Figure 2). These figures do not include the amount of additional debt students may incur in pursuit of further graduate education. Due to interest accrual, delayed repayment of undergraduate student loans can also result in greater debt burdens.

One relatively unremarked aspect of this analysis is that many public colleges and universities in the United States adjust tuition prices based on a student’s progress through higher education or by major, a practice called differential tuition . Public four-year institutions have a history of differentiating tuition based on in-state or out-of-state residence. They may also charge higher tuition or fees for certain majors based on the costs associated with educating students in these programs as well as the projected income of graduates. Figure 3 shows that by the 2015–2016 academic year, more than half of research-intensive public institutions in the United States used differential tuition, generally charging more for majors in business and STEM.

Figure 2. Amount owed compared to amount borrowed four years after earning a bachelor’s degree

The fact that differential tuition may make a STEM major more expensive than a non-STEM major at some universities deserves more attention when considering how to make STEM degrees more affordable. For example, advanced, in-state students at the University of Maryland pursuing engineering and computer science degrees pay $1,500 more per semester than their peers enrolled in other disciplines (nearly 27% higher).

Of particular concern are the ways in which differential tuition may counteract efforts to attract and retain people historically excluded from STEM fields. Studies have shown that differential tuition policies have reduced the number of degrees awarded in majors with higher tuition, especially for women and students of color. Unfortunately, financial aid increases have been insufficient at offsetting these disparities, especially for low-income students .

Figure 3. US public research-focused institutions using differential tuition

A suite of unsustainable solutions

In addition to loans, most students rely on a combination of other federal, state, or local financial aid resources to cover the price of earning a bachelor’s degree. The majority of public and private institutions subsidize education expenses to some extent, and those with significant resources also offer grants large enough to guarantee that students from families below a certain income level will not incur loan debt to attend college. But in general, public US colleges and universities are more limited in their ability to help because tuition subsidies are determined, in large part, by state funding .

During and after the Great Recession of 2008, financial support for higher education dropped significantly in most states. But it wasn’t the first time. States have regularly cut education funding during tough economic times, and although state funding has finally started increasing, and the average subsidy that institutions provide has started to grow, decades of underinvestment have left a mark on public higher education . Deferred maintenance in several key areas like building repairs and further tuition loss from the pandemic have kept the pressure on most institutions to make ends meet. What’s more, state funding has yet to reach pre-2008 levels, which may signal a political shift in how states prioritize funds for higher education. Within the last year, even states with multi-billion-dollar surpluses, like Wisconsin and West Virginia , have cut funding for public institutions.

States have regularly cut education funding during tough economic times, and although state funding has finally started increasing, and the average subsidy that institutions provide has started to grow, decades of underinvestment have left a mark on public higher education.

At the onset of the pandemic, some public and private institutions committed to freezing tuition at 2020 levels. Though tuition caps and freezes may score political points for appearing to improve affordability, several lines of evidence suggest instances of their adoption at the state or institutional level have done little to make college degrees more affordable—especially over the long term. First, caps are often set so high that their effect on student tuition charges is negligible. Second, research has shown that when tuition is capped, student fees rise —and when fees are capped, tuition rises, essentially negating any savings to individual students. Third, studies suggest that institutions may even reduce financial aid in the wake of tuition caps to keep net tuition revenue steady. And finally, evidence suggests that tuition rapidly increases when short-term caps end. As commonly structured in the United States, tuition caps do not have a consistent effect on student enrollment and do little to improve affordability.

A vision for affordability

The United States currently relies on a rough patchwork of policies and mechanisms to project the image of college affordability while actually depending on students to navigate huge variances in higher education costs. Inevitably, they’re often left to shoulder a debt burden that might follow them around for decades. Lessons from other countries on how to assemble the policy patchwork more deliberately—to actually lower student costs and subsidize tuition in targeted disciplines—may help.

Australia’s Commonwealth Grant Scheme combines permanent tuition caps with differential tuition and government subsidies. The government sets caps on the amount of tuition students can be expected to contribute for different majors and provides supplementary government contributions based both on the cost to educate a student in a given major and the government’s prioritization of the major’s importance. For example, in 2014, students pursuing a mathematics major at any public institution would have a maximum student contribution of A$8,613 with a government contribution of A$9,782. In the same year, engineering majors had the same maximum student contribution, but the government contribution was A$21,707—more than twice as much.

Figure 4 shows the significant difference in tuition rates at public four-year institutions in the United States versus Australia. In recent years, the highest annual tuition at public four-year institutions in the United States is nearly three times as much as the average maximum student contribution in Australia. The highest annual tuition in the United States is still almost twice as much as the highest student contribution in any discipline in Australia.

Figure 4. Comparison of student contributions at public four-year universities in the United States and Australia, 2013–2020

Another lesson can be drawn from efforts to improve college affordability in the United Kingdom . The UK government capped tuition for all domestic undergraduate students and, at the same time, reduced funding for higher education. Universities and colleges have coped with the situation by cutting courses and programs, slashing faculty and staff compensation, and increasing enrollment of international students paying higher fees. To some extent, the tuition cap, implemented without complementary public support for higher education, has created a trade-off between educational quality and affordability—a reminder that tuition caps alone will not automatically create a more stable higher education sector.

Instituting country-wide tuition caps in the United States would require Congress to craft new policy under the auspices of the Higher Education Act. Several questions would need to be addressed in order to design such a policy: Whom should the caps benefit? Who will set it? How often should it be reset? Should the cap be different depending on the major or number of classes taken? Should the cap be the same for all states? How might caps affect financial aid and student borrowing, and how should that influence their design? These and other issues need to be rigorously examined to see how and whether tuition caps could feasibly help the United States create a more affordable pathway to college.

Experts on college affordability, tuition setting, and other related topics in higher education should convene to examine the value of tuition caps as a policy, particularly within the context of bringing the missing millions into STEM disciplines. Since most public university subsidies come from state coffers, federal efforts alone are unlikely to solve college affordability. And yet there are no clear policy tools available to ensure that states contribute their due for higher education. The decentralized nature of US higher education conceals useful information from researchers, decisionmakers, and policymakers—like the national average tuition increase for STEM degrees under differential tuition. Higher education leaders, especially in STEM fields, should be invested in creating spaces for ongoing conversations about real changes in college affordability as another avenue for removing barriers to STEM education and careers.

Join the Conversation

Sign up for the Issues in Science and Technology newsletter to get the latest policy insights delivered direct to your inbox. When you do, you'll receive a special offer for nearly 50% off a one-year subscription to the magazine—or simply subscribe now at this special rate .

  • Name * First Last
  • Phone This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

IMAGES

  1. Top 10 Challenges Faced by Higher Education

    challenges in higher education pdf

  2. Challenges in Higher Education

    challenges in higher education pdf

  3. (PDF) Issues and Challenges for Teaching Successful Online Courses in

    challenges in higher education pdf

  4. (PDF) CHALLENGES IN HIGHER EDUCATION CASE: BACHELOR COURSE IN

    challenges in higher education pdf

  5. (PDF) E-Learning in Higher Education; Challenges and Opportunities

    challenges in higher education pdf

  6. (PDF) Student Support in Higher Education: Understandings, Implications

    challenges in higher education pdf

VIDEO

  1. HIGHER or LOWER: WORLD CUP APPEARANCES (CHALLENGE) 🏆 #shorts #football #soccer

  2. Managing Teacher Education: Challenges in 21st century |(Pre-Service In-Service Teacher Education)|

  3. Football HIGHER or LOWER challenge: FREE-KICK GOALS! 🏆 #shorts #soccer

  4. Digital Marketing

COMMENTS

  1. PDF Trends and Challenges Facing Higher Education: Implications for

    using two primary sources: Inside Higher Education and The Chronicle of Higher Education. 2) More recently, I sought input from 20 of my associate dean colleagues, plus some veteran chief financial officers at land -grant universities. As we begin, I will ask you the same question asked of my colleagues. What are the greatest challenges or ...

  2. PDF Tertiary Education in the Twenty-First Century Challenges and Opportunities

    Abstract. Rapid transformations are taking place in tertiary education systems and institutions all over the world. This document examines on-going trends, innovations, initiatives and reforms in the context of the wider challenges facing higher education at the beginning of the 21st century. It starts by assessing the impact of three key ...

  3. PDF Challenges Facing Higher Education in the Twenty-First Century

    Ami Zusman. The twenty-first century has brought with it profound challenges to the nature, values, and control of higher education in the United States. Societal expectations and public resources for higher education are undergoing fundamental shifts. Changes both within and outside the academy are altering its character - its students ...

  4. PDF Understanding the Purpose of Higher Education: an Analysis of The

    the tension between how academics and government policies view higher education, an analysis that compares and contrasts the personal or private purpose(s) of higher education may help educators better understand the current disconnect between higher education institutions and college graduates (McClung, 2013; World Bank, 2012).

  5. (PDF) Higher education: issues, challenges and suggestions

    Abstract. This paper introduces the notion of holistic education into the context of higher education eco-systems. The study intends to conceptualize the theme and list out issues and challenges ...

  6. PDF Introduction to 'Economic Challenges in Higher Education'

    This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research Volume Title: Economic Challenges in Higher Education Volume Author/Editor: Charles T. Clotfelter, Ronald G. Ehrenberg, Malcolm Getz, and John J. Siegfried Volume Publisher: University of Chicago Press Volume ISBN: -226-11050-8

  7. PDF Perspectives on the challenges to access and equity in Higher Education

    Making a difference - innovation in equity across higher education 11. Challenges to access and equity in the Australian higher education context 12. The Pandemic Has Made Equity in Higher Ed Worse. It's Time to Fix It. 13. Challenges to access and equity in higher education across the world in the context of COVID: An Australian ...

  8. Unprecedented challenges to higher education systems and academic

    Current geopolitical tensions pose very serious challenges for this global engagement. While diffuse and complex, the implications for global engagement in higher education and research in these volatile times are likely to be severe. As Altbach and de Wit ( 2022) state, 'The debate about academic engagement and academic values is not an easy ...

  9. (PDF) The Challenges and Expectations for Higher Education

    Abstract and Figures. In this chapter, we address the complexity of challenges that Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) are facing by first defining the relationships between trends, forces and ...

  10. (PDF) Higher education: issues, challenges and suggestions

    The higher education system in India has grown in a remarkable way, particularly in the post-independence period, to become one of the largest systems of its kind in the world in the 21 st century.

  11. PDF Assessments of Higher Education's progress towards the UN Sustainable

    Volume 2: for higher education institutions participating in assessments. Foreword. Since Higher Education Institutions educate and train decision makers, they play a key role in building more sustainable societies and creating new paradigms. As educational institutions, they have the mission to promote development through both research and ...

  12. PDF BENEFITS, CHALLENGES, AND SAMPLE USE CASES OF ...

    Generative AI presents solutions and carries limitations for administrators, faculty, and students in the higher education setting. For administrative staff, generative AI can help scale support services and more efficiently evaluate applications from prospective students. Faculty can use AI to assist with simple research tasks, curriculum ...

  13. PDF Numbers Behind 10 Contemporary Issues in Higher Education Policy ...

    trends-college-pricing-web_1.pdf; and Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, "National Postsecondary Student Aid ... Numbers Behind 10 Contemporary Issues in Higher ...

  14. PDF The new normal: Higher education in a post-COVID-19 world

    COVID-19 has created severe short-term financial and operational challenges for higher education institutions, and accelerated the impact of external demographic, financial, technological, and political trends on the higher education sector. Higher education leaders remain steadfast in their commitment to their organizations' core missions ...

  15. [PDF] Issues and challenges in higher education leadership: Engaging

    Issues and challenges in higher education leadership: Engaging for change. G. Drew. Published 1 December 2010. Education. The Australian Educational Researcher. It is proposed from this study that engaging productively with others to achieve change has never been more critical in educational environments, such as universities.

  16. PDF Design Thinking in Higher Education: Opportunities and Challenges for

    Design Thinking in Higher Education: Opportunities and Challenges for Decolonized Learning ABSTRACT This article builds upon current research to understand the value and limitations of teaching and learning design thinking (DT) in higher education. We implemented a mixed-methods

  17. (PDF) Challenges and Opportunities in Higher Education

    The various challenges in. higher education are, managing tasks and activities independently, managing finances, understanding of lesson plans, instructional strategies, quality of the system of ...

  18. Higher education: Challenges and opportunities 2023: PwC

    Perspectives in higher education. In an increasingly competitive and complex environment, management and trustees of higher education institutions are facing a growing number of issues that require attention. As colleges and universities emerge from their intense focus on the COVID-19 pandemic, new challenges are taking its place. These ...

  19. WOMEN AND INDIAN HIGHER EDUCATION: CHALLENGES AND PROSPECTS

    Over the years higher education sector has witnessed a tremendous increase in its institutional capacity. After China and United States, India's higher education system is the third largest in the world, comprising of 330 universities and institutions of national importance, 16,000 colleges, 10 million students and 3,50,000 teachers (Narayan Jaiprakash 2005).

  20. Making STEM Degrees More Affordable

    The fact that differential tuition may make a STEM major more expensive than a non-STEM major at some universities deserves more attention when considering how to make STEM degrees more affordable. For example, advanced, in-state students at the University of Maryland pursuing engineering and computer science degrees pay $1,500 more per ...

  21. (PDF) ISSUES AND CHALLENGES IN HIGHER EDUCATION SYSTEM

    Status of Higher Education in India Even though the HE syst em of India is third larges t in the world but. it has many issues lik e: I. Access to the higher education system is still restricted ...

  22. NY State Senate Bill 2023-S9079

    2023-S9079 (ACTIVE) - Summary. Authorizes the state university of New York at Stony Brook to lease certain lands for the purpose of developing a facility to support research and development to address the national semiconductor chip shortage and related environmental sustainability issues. 2023-S9079 (ACTIVE) - Bill Text download pdf.

  23. (PDF) Challenges in Higher Education in South Africa

    One of South Africa's greatest challenges is providing quality education to sustain the country's human. resources. In this regard, teacher education plays a pivotal role: as Wolhuter states ...