Introduction 1 I. The purpose of knowledge creation 2



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DRAFT

‘The Future of Indian Universities’

(8000-10000 words: current work count: 9,069)

Section: RESEARCH, KNOWLEDGE CREATION AND PUBLICATIONS: RESPONSIBILITIES OF A UNIVERSITY

Challenges of Knowledge Creation for Indian Universities

Stephen P. Marks

Outline


Introduction 1

I. The purpose of knowledge creation 2

A. Types of knowledge and intelligence 2

B. Knowledge as an end in itself 3

C. Knowledge as a means 4

D. Knowledge as a process 4

Figure 1: Key components of the educational system 5

Figure 2: The Production-Re-production-Translation Cycle 6

II. Four Challenges of Knowledge Creation in Indian Universities 7

A. Challenges due to disciplinary fragmentation 7

B. Challenges due to levels of education 10

C. Challenges due to the propensity towards academic dishonesty 10

Figure 3. Dishonesty in Scientific Research: Indian and China Compared 12



D. Challenges due to the politics of knowledge 13

III. Future of knowledge creation in the university 15

A. Disappearance of the classroom 15

B. The digital gap 17

Figure 4: Fixed Broadband Penetration per 100 habitants 18



C. Disappearance of the book 19

IV. Conclusion 20

Two Models of change 21

What works for India? 22



Introduction


The role of research in universities in India and elsewhere is inseparable from the aims of research as knowledge creation and from the broader context of knowledge creation in the educational process. The purpose of this chapter is to reflect on the basic purpose of knowledge creation in the university and then examine responsibilities of the university for promoting knowledge creation in a range of fields of investigation and levels of learning, as well as the ethic standards that apply. The conclusion will address the uncertain future of knowledge creation in the university and the alternative models for change.

The premise for this reflection on challenges of knowledge creation for Indian universities was captured on the eve of the March 2013 Jindal Global University conference on ‘the Future of Indian Universities’ (referred to below as the March Conference) in the Hindustan Times, where Vice Chancellor C. Raj Kumar wrote: ‘Because of their indifference to research, [Indian] universities have been unable to provide solutions to social, economic and political problems that affect India. Indian universities ought to become fertile ground for the generation of ideas. Research produces knowledge that offers clarity and a more informed understanding of the subject at hand.’1 These reflections are offered as a contribution to discussion on why and how a research role for Indian universities can be part of their potential for attaining world-class status. We begin with a broader exploration of the purpose of knowledge creation and then focus on the responsibilities of the university for promoting knowledge creation and on some of the uncertainties in the context of the evolving approaches to addressing specific challenges for universities to contribute meaningfully to knowledge creation.


I. The purpose of knowledge creation


The concept of knowledge creation should be a self-evident function of a university. However, that function is ambiguous in at least two ways. First, do we mean creating knowledge in the learner or generating accessible research results? While the quotation above by Raj Kumar underscores the concern with a university’s capacity to produce research, it is also the university’s function to enrich the knowledge of students and faculty through learning. Second are we treating knowledge as an end in itself or a means toward an end? Here also the answer is ‘both’ in the sense that a university is a place where individuals grow intellectually and contribute to knowledge others can access.

A. Types of knowledge and intelligence


Philosophers and psychologists have developed elaborate categories of knowledge. One study enumerates the following distinctions: ‘generic (or general) and domain specific knowledge, concrete and abstract knowledge, formal and informal knowledge, declarative and proceduralized knowledge, conceptual and procedural knowledge, elaborated and compiled knowledge, unstructured and (highly) structured knowledge, tacit or inert knowledge, strategic knowledge, knowledge acquisition knowledge, situated knowledge, and metaknolwledge.’2 These authors prefer the following four types of knowledge:

Situational knowledge: ‘knowledge about situations as they typically appear in a particular domain, [which] enables the solver to sift relevant features out of the problem statement (selective perception) and, if necessary, to supplement information in the statement’;

Conceptual (previously called declarative) knowledge: ‘static knowledge about facts, concepts, and principles that apply within a certain domain, [which] functions as additional information that problem solvers add to the problem and that they use to perform the solution’;

Procedural knowledge: knowledge of ‘actions or manipulations that are valid within a domain [and] helps the problem solver make transitions from one problem state to another’;

Strategic knowledge: ‘a general plan of action in which the sequence of solution activities is laid down [and which] helps students organize their problem-solving process by directing which stages they should go through to reach a solution.’3

They then identify qualities of knowledge (level in terms of deep or superficial, structure in terms of isolated elements or structured knowledge, automation in terms of declarative or compiled knowledge, modality in terms of pictorial or verbal, and generality in terms of general or domain specific) and relate these qualities to each type, generating a matrix of twenty descriptions of knowledge.

In addition to kinds of knowledge there are also kinds of receiving minds or intelligences. Howard Gardner famously listed seven intelligences. His listing was provisional, which may be summarized as follows:4

Linguistic intelligence: ability to learn and use languages;

Logical-mathematical intelligence: capacity to analyze problems logically, detect patterns, reason deductively and think logically;

Musical intelligence: skill in the performance, composition, and appreciation of music;

Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence: using one’s whole body or parts of the body to solve problems;

Spatial intelligence: ability to recognize and use the patterns of wide and narrow space;

Interpersonal intelligence: capacity to understand intentions, motivations and desires of peoples;

Intrapersonal intelligence: capacity to understand oneself, including feelings, fears and motivations;

This understanding of kinds of knowledge and intelligence helps frame the problem of knowledge creation in universities, whether it is in how students learn or how university-based scholars carry out research. However, it is useful to consider whether universities should consider knowledge as an end, a means, or a process.




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