Largely, the corporate interventions to educational
systems were more on a philanthropic note or on a social support basis till
early seventies. The attitudinal shift from ‘business of education’ to
‘business in education’ started in late seventies and gained momentum from
mid-eighties. Aggressive participation of venture capitalists for investments
in education with a profit note did bring a commercial dimension to the
transaction of education both at the school level and at the higher education
level.
While private participation in education was indeed a
welcome intervention given the extent of work that had to be done in the Indian
subcontinent, the role of government has been more on facilitation without any
major change in the rules that govern the systems of educational organizations.
Mentoring and monitoring had to be the focus , but conventional rules and ‘policing’ the system forced unhealthy and
corrupt practices for easy access and undeserved branding.
While one understand the idea that “ Rome was not built
in a day” , many institutions that started with a fanfare and huge budgets with
imposing infrastructures did not meet the targets and could not deliver the
assured quality in academics. They do survive as participants in a marathon but
are basically failures in their own concept. Many may not agree with the
reality and say that ‘they are still working it out’ – ‘they are still
re-engineering’, but the reality is far from their own statements.
Some issues for that led to such misadventures are:
1. Poor field study – Many corporate engaged expert
market surveyors to identify good locations for educational start ups. The
focus of many of these players were either on the absence of quality
institutions in a given area, absence of competitive institutions,
affordability for quality education, resource paradigms in the locations and
the like. These inputs were statistically true, but there was not adequate
measurement about the social psyche of the people in the area. Hence, people
who were trained to low cost education systems had serious doubts about their
investments in such organizations.
Numbers did not pick up. Huge expenditure in marketing did not pay
dividends. Schools started monitoring admissions on hourly basis least
realizing that it is a long drawn process. They held the academic heads
responsible for their inability to attract the populace by one means or the
other. Their exercise failed to generate the faith in the community as the infrastructures
were still in the completion process and the message that ‘not fit (ready) for
use’ impacted their reach.
2. Mismatch between the promises and the delivery: In a number of new ventures, the promises
made were sky high, but even after a period of two years their delivery was
less than ten percent. Quality brochures were indeed a delight to view but the
parents started questioning and hence increasing disappointment forced them to
shift their faith. The investors least realized that at least a sizable portion
of the commitments made have to be fulfilled on a time bound basis or there
must be evidences to show that the process is on.
3. Poor HR support:
Many of the institutions which had excellent infrastructure did not have
a qualified and experienced team. All that could be done was to mobilize some
faculty from the existing schools or colleges nearby who were otherwise unhappy
with the earlier institutions by paying them some attractive packages. Absence of quality staff and hence resultant inefficiency
in delivery processes brought dismay to the parents. This reduced the lure for
these institutions subsequently.
4. Dichotomy in leadership: While corporate thinking for running an
organization has its own rewards, the leaders were not adequately sensitive to
educational sensitivities. Conflicts between administrative heads and academic
heads surfaced in most of these institutions. The frequency in change of academic
leadership impacted the team and hence frequent changes in delivery processes.
The message went wrong to the community.
5. Poor investments in empowerment: While enormous
investments were made in infrastructure, the staff were not paid adequately
even to the basic prescribed levels. Thus the institutions failed to attract
competent staff. The managements wondered why they should invest in empowering
teachers as they may leave after empowerment. Hence the quality continued to
remain poor. “Saving from the salary payable to staff” was a totally wrong
insight in the management concept.
6. Inefficient pedagogical interventions: While many schools fancied to call themselves
as ‘world’ ‘global’ ‘international’ and similar terms, the pedagogical
interventions were far below the expected levels. The encouragement to outdoor
and co-curricular activities and their advertisement and marketing were
considered spectacular performances, thus the frames marginalizing the soul –
the academics. Paid advertisements, paid
branding of the institutions through the media was not indeed a good marketing proposition.
Apart from some of these major reasons, there are
many.. It must be understood that returns on investments from educational
institutions run on ethical practices do take time, but they are certain. The
investors need patience and should address to core issues so that a sustainable
development takes place in such ventures.
Aptly captured the tone of reasons for corporate edventure failures. Each point is insightful. Working on each of them can help institutes facing the heat.
ReplyDeleteAptly captured the tone of reasons for corporate edventure failures. Each point is insightful. Working on each of them can help institutes facing the heat.
ReplyDelete