1. “ Higher education today is the ‘sick child’ of education , and is not serving the cause of young people of India.” Arjun Singh Minister of HRD Government of India
3. “ Out of every 100 Indians, 70 completed primary school and only 7 (15-60 years) completed graduation or beyond.” 5 Nov, 2007 Times News Network
4. “ Universal literacy and access to education for all is a fundamental requirement for a nation to be truly developed.” Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam - Former President of India
5. “ India, a relatively smaller economy with a far bigger workforce, faces a crisis perhaps far deeper than any other nation in the world today.” 5 Nov, 2007 Times News Network
6. “ No more than 17 million have received tertiary education in India with a population of 1.12 billion.” P. Chidambaram - Finance Minister of India
7. “ India battling an unskilled workforce - 90% of jobs require vocational skills, but 90% of Indian colleges impart mostly bookish knowledge.” 5 Nov, 2007 Times News Network
8. “ India at 60 is a nation of young people. The time has come for us to pay special attention to education and skill development.” Dr. Manmohan Singh - Prime Minister of India
9. “ India leading exporter of students to the United States 83,333 students enrolled in 2006-’07.” Open Doors: Report on International Educational Exchange
10. “ Many brighter students are moving away and we need to bring them back” Kiran Karnik - President, NASSCOM
11. “ No Indian varsity including the prestigious IIT among the world's top 200 universities.” 12 Nov 2007 Press Trust of India
12. “ It is my dream to see that India has universities such as Yale, Harvard and Cambridge.” P. Chidambaram - Finance Minister of India
13. “ Higher education syllabus outdated. A low gross enrolment ratio, challenges to maintain quality, and academic reforms are the problem areas.” 15 Oct, 2007 Times News Network
14. “ The quality of higher education has to be improved. It's a major next generation reform.” Montek Singh Ahluwalia - Dy. Chairman, Planning Commission
15. “ Whereas, most nations in the World are working towards loosening of statutory control over higher education, India is moving in reverse direction” The Economist 2005
16. “ Higher education in India needs to go through a complete shift.” Sam Pitroda - Chairman, National Knowledge Commission