Why India’s Higher Education Must Shift from Traditional to Holistic, from Information to Insight
India today stands at the crossroads of remarkable opportunity. With one of the world’s youngest populations and an economy rapidly integrating into global innovation networks, the expectations from higher education have dramatically expanded. Higher education institutions have grown by 13.8% over recent years, and the Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) among 18-23-year-olds has increased from 23.7% to 28.4%, reflecting increased access and demand. When considering the future of higher education in India, a degree of growth is necessary, but it is not enough. Our universities are no longer just degree-granting bodies; they need to be the places that ignite intellectual capacities, ethical dimensions, social awareness, and the ability to solve real-world problems.
Indian higher education must undergo a change, transitioning from narrow, compartmentalised, and sometimes even rigid academic silos to a holistic and integrated system that allows for more wholesome growth of students. NEP 2020 stresses the need for Indian education to move away from rote learning and focus on real understanding. It promotes a well-rounded approach, helping students build academic knowledge along with critical thinking, creativity, ethics, communication skills, and problem-solving. The policy encourages hands-on, inquiry-based learning, where students can explore, connect ideas, and use their knowledge in real-life situations. It also supports flexible education that combines arts, sciences, sports, culture, and life skills to help students grow in all areas. The goal is to prepare learners with a deep understanding, wisdom, and the ability to keep learning throughout their lives, instead of just training them for exams.
Holistic learning represents a fundamental rethinking of what it means to be “educated.” Beyond academic knowledge, it must also include emotional intelligence, ethical reasoning, interdisciplinary awareness, and a readiness to engage with real-world societal challenges. The spirit of holistic learning demands reimagining not just the curriculum, but also classrooms, mentoring, assessment and the broader ecosystem in which students grow.
Today’s world demands that interdisciplinary education be a central feature of higher learning. Challenges such as climate change, public health crises, AI regulation, sustainable development and social inequality rarely belong to a single discipline. Science must converse with the humanities; technology must engage with ethics; management must recognise environmental and social imperatives. Holistic education thrives on these overlaps, allowing students to understand how ideas interconnect rather than treating each subject as a separate entity.
With the world of work evolving faster than ever, modular learning and micro-credentials deserve the same footing as conventional degree pathways. Coming hotfooting from nowhere, the digital revolution and AI have made the need to upskill or reskill an absolute necessity. Well-known subjects such as data literacy, sustainability, digital ethics, soft skills, design thinking, and communication can be taught in short-term, flexible modules, equipping students to leap into the modern job market. This approach to learning aligns with the learner-centred vision at the heart of the National Education Policy and similar reform efforts.
With respect to education, technology is having a profound impact, opening up new possibilities for teaching, learning and assessment through AI-enabled learning systems, digital labs and personalised feedback tools. From a well-designed perspective, these tools have the potential to kickstart deeper, more nuanced dialogue and can unshackle classroom time for high-stakes critical thinking and team-based learning, thereby making the learning experience more accessible, inclusive, and effective.
Now, the adoption of these technologies must be equitable so that students from all backgrounds and areas of the world can have access to them. The traditional end-of-term exam will no longer be an obstacle to a student’s progress. In the future, we will see a combination of portfolios, a bouquet of activity-based assessments, team projects, reflective appraisals and real-world challenges. Such assessments will allow creativity, tenacity and moral judgement to be demonstrated and recognised.
Assessing the changing landscape of industry and its needs, a disturbing 92.7% of graduates struggle to find jobs that match their qualifications. This statistic is not only disquieting, but it is one of the symptoms that signify the severe gap between academic output and employability. We need to turn our minds to these problems.
We should therefore build deeper connections between academia and the industry. Several approaches are being employed, including structured internships, live project collaborations, co-designed curricula, flexible academic systems, and ongoing discussions with employers. The end result of these types of measures will ensure that young people don’t just leave university with a degree, but also the know-how, moral fibre and flexibility that the modern world and economy require.
Holistic learning is not a passing idea. It is an imperative shaped by the complex realities of the 21st century. India needs graduates who can adapt, innovate, think across disciplines, act with integrity and contribute meaningfully to society. The next decade of higher education will shape the nation’s trajectory, determining whether we continue to produce degrees or become creators of thoughtful, capable citizens.
As a society, educators, parents, students and policymakers, we must embrace a vision of education that goes beyond exams and certificates to the full human potential.
Note: The views expressed in this article are of GITAM School of Business and do not reflect/represent those of Shiksha.
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Answered a week ago
The M.Tech placements at GITAM University Bangalore are good. Check out the key highlights of GITAM University Bangalore placements for M.Tech Class of 2025 from the table below:
Particulars | Placement Statistics (2025) |
|---|---|
Students placed | 1 |
the highest package | INR 5 LPA |
Average package | -INR 5 LPA |
the lowest package | INR 5 LPA |
Answered a month ago
The highest package offered during GITAM Bangalore placements stood at INR 1.4 crore per annum. In addition to this, over 250 recruiters participated in the 2025 placement drive. The top recruiters included BOSCH, MuSigma, 360 Realtors. Bluestone, Omega Heathcare, Amazon, TCS, Skolar, Patterns LLC,
Answered a month ago
GITAM Bangalore tuition fee costs around INR 69,900 – INR 14.2 L. This fee is exclusive of other components such as examination fee, application fee, hostel fee, security deposit, etc. This fee is taken from the official website. It is subject to change. Hence, it is moderately costly.
Answered a month ago
GITAM Bangalore offers admission primarily on the basis of the scores obtained in the national level entrance exams including JEE Main, JEE Advanced, GITAM GAT, KCET, TS EAMCET, CUET, UGC NET, GATE, etc. To get admission to GITAM Bangalore, candidates must fulfil the course-specific eligibility. Can
Answered a month ago
Admission criteria to GITAM Bangalore is both, merit and entrance based. The eligibility criteria to get into GITAM Bangalore programmes is graduation in any discipline (this may vary from course to course) with the specified minimum aggregate, along with entrance exams. For UG courses, candidates n
Answered a month ago
GITAM Bangalore BTech tuition fee costs around INR 4 L – INR 14.2 L. This fee is exclusive of other components such as examination fee, application fee, hostel fee, security deposit, etc. This fee is taken from the official website. It is subject to change.
Answered 5 months ago
GITAM School of Science admissions are based on entrance exam scores, i.e., GAT. Candidates must meet the eligibility criteria set by the college. Candidates must pass Class 12 for the UG course and graduation for the PG course.
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Contributor-Level 10
Answered 5 months ago
GITAM School of Science Bengaluru appoints well-trained and expert faculty members with years of experince. The faculty focuses on therotical and practical knowledge under the guidance of experts. The faculty engages the students with the latest activities innovative teaching and quality research.
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How good are the M.Tech placements at GITAM University Bangalore?