However, a gender disparity prevails in the number of teachers in higher education with merely 64 female teachers per 100 teachers, the All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) 2014-15 (provisional) has found.
Noticing this disparity, Human Resource Development (HRD) minister Smriti Irani, who unveiled the survey report today directed her ministry to formulate schemes so that the number of women teaching in higher education institutions can be increased.
She said it is a "big challenge" from the point of view of data, that the report for year 2013-14 was being presented today.
A 60 day drive, she said, is being undertaken to ensure that data for 2015-16 can be expeditiously taken up in conjunction with states, institutes of higher learning in an attempt that before the next academic year, the data should be out.
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Referring to the provisional data, Irani said it showed GER at 23.6 per cent which indicates that XII plan target of 30 per cent GER will be achieved. The data, she added, also shows that the women are taking to higher education in greater numbers as per the provisional data.
The GER for male population is 24.5 per cent and for females is 22.7 percent. However, for Scheduled Castes the Gross Enrollment Ratio is 18.5 per cent while for Scheduled Tribes it is 13.3 per cent, which is lesser than the national average.
The provisional survey on Higher Education for 2014-15,
found that the highest number of students are enrolled at Undergraduate level. Out of the total 3,32,72,722 students, 79.9 per cent were found to be undergraduate students, the survey report said.
Scheduled Castes students constitute 13.4 per cent and Scheduled Tribes students 4.8 per cent of the total enrollment. 32.9 per cent students belong to Other Backward Classes, 4.4 per cent Muslims while 1.9 per cent were from other minority communities, as per the survey.
The AISHE (provisional) 2014-15 also found that distance enrollment constitutes 11.7 per cent of the total enrollment in higher education, of which 46 per cent are female students.
According to the AISHE for 2013-14, which too was released today, the GER was 23 per cent in that year. The number of women teaching in higher education was marginally higher in that year, with 65 female teachers to every 100 males counterparts.
The AISHE 2013-14 also noted that the share of female students is lowest in Institutions of National Importance, followed by Deemed University (Government), State, Private Universities and Deemed University (Private).
College density in terms of number of colleges per lakh eligible ranged from 7 in Bihar to 60 in Puducherry with All India average being 26.
As per the AISHE 2013-14, foreign students came from 158 countries from across the globe with highest number coming from Nepal.
It also found that there are more than 75 per cent colleges running in private sector which cater to only 65 per cent of the total enrollment.