By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
India Times NowIndia Times NowIndia Times Now
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • India News
    India News
    Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.
    Show More
    Top News
    The States Braces for Protests Over New COVID Rules
    August 29, 2021
    R. Venkataramani re-appointed as Attorney General
    September 26, 2025
    CPI(M) fielding candidates with criminal links: Satheesan
    November 30, 2025
    Latest News
    Short of crossing the red line
    March 6, 2026
    Chief Minister Stalin stood firm in protecting communal harmony in Thirupparankundram issue: Sekarbabu
    March 6, 2026
    Elevated walkway project at Thalassery sea bridge to begin on March 12
    March 6, 2026
    Chief Minister Stalin stood firm in protecting communal harmony in Thiruparankundram issue: Sekarbabu
    March 6, 2026
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    Strengthening the Team: Thryve PR Onboards Pranjal Patil as PR Executive & Project Manager
    October 1, 2025
    How to Take the Perfect Instagram Selfie: Dos & Don’ts
    October 1, 2021
    Apple iMac M1 Review: the All-In-One for Almost Everyone
    Hands-On With the iPhone 13, Pro, Max, and Mini
    September 4, 2021
    Apple VS Samsung– Can a Good Smartwatch Save Your Life?
    August 30, 2021
  • Posts
    • Post Layouts
      • Standard 1
      • Standard 2
      • Standard 3
      • Standard 4
      • Standard 5
      • Standard 6
      • Standard 7
      • Standard 8
      • No Featured
    • Gallery Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • layout 3
    • Video Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • Layout 3
      • Layout 4
    • Audio Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • Layout 3
      • Layout 4
    • Post Sidebar
      • Right Sidebar
      • Left Sidebar
      • No Sidebar
    • Review
      • Stars
      • Scores
      • User Rating
    • Content Features
      • Inline Mailchimp
      • Highlight Shares
      • Print Post
      • Inline Related
      • Source/Via Tag
      • Reading Indicator
      • Content Size Resizer
    • Break Page Selection
    • Table of Contents
      • Full Width
      • Left Side
    • Reaction Post
  • Pages
    • Blog Index
    • Contact US
    • Search Page
    • 404 Page
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • Join Us
Reading: Education: Why India needs to radically think its doctoral education programmes
Share
Font ResizerAa
India Times NowIndia Times Now
  • Finance ₹
  • India News
  • The Escapist
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Insider
Search
  • Home
    • India Times Now
    • Home 2
    • Home 3
    • Home 4
    • Home 5
  • Categories
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    • The Escapist
    • Insider
    • Finance ₹
    • India News
    • Science
    • Health
  • Bookmarks
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Home » Blog » Education: Why India needs to radically think its doctoral education programmes
India News

Education: Why India needs to radically think its doctoral education programmes

Times Desk
Last updated: March 4, 2026 3:37 am
Times Desk
Published: March 4, 2026
Share
SHARE


Contents
  • Academic malaise
  • Scholars’ plight
  • Hurdles with theses
  • Relevance of doctoral work

The recent announcement that China awarded its first “practical PhDs”, doctoral degrees conferred for tangible products rather than traditional research papers, is a timely catalyst for a long-overdue conversation on the relevance, design, and culture of PhD education in India.  In China’s new model, doctoral candidates are evaluated on working prototypes and real-world applications instead of lengthy theses and publication counts.

Also Read | Second-generation reforms required in higher education to make India a developed nation

This shift recognises applied innovation on par with scholarly writing and challenges the deeply rooted academic paradigm in which a PhD is almost synonymous with a long thesis and a suite of published papers. Our universities should ask themselves whether we need to evaluate a thesis based on the number of papers a scholar has produced or if we need to focus on the societal relevance of the work.

Academic malaise

One major difficulty students interested in research in India face is the prolongation of the PhD. In many universities, there are students who have spent more than three years; in some cases, students spend eight. Even though there are many issues with delays in PhD work, most instances are due to delays in publishing. In several departments, progress is judged less by the depth of original insight and more by the number of papers indexed in certain databases and the reputational clout of journals in which they appear. This culture undervalues the quality and relevance of research.

While publication is undeniably a pillar of academic excellence, the current fixation on having multiple indexed papers for a degree to be considered completed can encourage superficial research that may not push disciplinary boundaries or address pressing real-world problems.

It also intensifies the pressure on students to chase journals — any journals — that will accept their work, inadvertently fuelling unethical practices like engaging with predatory journals.

Scholars’ plight

In most labs, PhD scholars are treated as labour that supervisors can take for granted. Supervisors exploit the scholars in the name of publication, by prolonging their stay in the lab, so that supervisors don’t lose a good student trained in the domain. To maintain their labs, many supervisors also exploit their scholars by offering them the dream of publishing well, which, in reality, is mainly needed for the supervisors’ appraisals.

This culture is further aggravated by paid publications and dubious journals that promise quick indexing and impact metrics for a fee. Such outlets capitalise on the intense pressure on students to publish, thus creating a shortcut that erodes academic integrity. Though many Indian institutions now require papers to be published in indexed journals, the quality and relevance of these outlets vary widely, and the indexing status itself is frequently commodified by publishers. Ultimately, most doctoral research focuses solely on the university’s administrative needs, lacking scientific rigour or societal significance.

Hurdles with theses

In many universities, PhD theses are measured by the number of pages, often running beyond 200. There is a misconception that the quality of work is directly proportional to this number. History shows that even Nobel Prize-winning can span only a few pages. When one can concisely explain their research work, expanding it to occupy many pages just because that’s the norm is absurd.

The compulsion to write lengthy theses has led scholars to waste time and energy on introductions and inflated literature reviews. Many leading universities across the globe are moving towards compact dissertations that prioritise contributions over volume.

A major structural impediment in India’s PhD environment is the conventional thesis-defence model and long-lasting bureaucratic procedures. When they complete their studies, students have to deal with extended timelines to submit their theses, have them evaluated, and finally complete their oral defence. Administrative delays can further extend the final phases of a PhD by months, and in rare instances, even years, irrespective of the candidate’s productivity or the study’s significance.

For exceptional researchers who have produced significant ideas, potentially creating technologies or therapies with societal relevance, being constrained by prolonged review cycles diminishes the fundamental objective of doctoral studies.

Relevance of doctoral work

An important criticism of India’s existing PhD system is that a lot of doctoral research isn’t very useful to society. Many theses are still preserved in academic archives and don’t often help with public policy, new ideas in business or the health of communities. In many universities, copies of PhD theses are just dumped in a room or a backyard.

A PhD shouldn’t be a solitary intellectual pursuit but rather a conduit between profound investigation and significant influence. China’s practical PhD model seeks to bridge this gap by matching doctoral outputs with real-world applications and industrial scalability, including welding technology for firefighting systems, and is assessed by panels comprising both academics and industry professionals.

India faces many real-world problems that could benefit from high-quality PhD research. These issues span public health, agriculture, sustainability, digital inclusion, and education. The question is whether our current systems support and encourage studies grounded in what the people need.

Indian universities should brainstorm ways to reform the structure of PhD education to better suit the current world. The age-old practice of spending long years for a PhD doesn’t hold any merit in a digital world. Similarly, the structure and evaluation of the thesis should focus on the innovation it describes and its relevance rather than on the number of papers it produced. Just a mushrooming number of PhD holders does no good for the nation; India also needs good quality work that can support nation-building and humankind.

Biju Dharmapalan is  the dean, Academic Affairs, at Garden City University, Bengaluru,  and an adjunct faculty member at the National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru.

Published – March 04, 2026 07:30 am IST



Source link

Government aims to ‘formally recognise’ 1 lakh tribal healers from STs as ‘partners in health services’
TMC says Union Govt not releasing funds to West Bengal amounts to deliberate financial strangulation
Tension grips village in Chittoor district after miscreants vandalise Ambedkar statue
CREDAI Mysuru to hold RERA awareness workshop
Maharashtra govt declares paid holiday on Dec 2 for voting in civic council, nagar panchayat polls
TAGGED:education newseducation updatesindia doctoral programmesIndia newsindia PhD programmes
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
[mc4wp_form]
Popular News

Watch: ‘VB-G RAM G’ Bill will weaken MGNREGA: Priyanka Gandhi

Times Desk
Times Desk
December 16, 2025
SK Hynix readies production for cutting-edge HBM4 memory chips
The murky deaths in the Haryana Police
Coimbatore gang rape: Tamil Nadu CM Stalin condemns, orders filing of charge sheet in a month
Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan to introduce Tamil as medium of instruction in select schools
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics
© INDIA TIMES NOW 2026 . All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?