Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 18th May 2026, 5:04 PM
Education serves as the primary gateway from knowledge to livelihood, transforming individual aspirations into tangible competencies. In Bangladesh, thousands of young citizens harbour ambitions of becoming doctors, engineers, academics, administrators, or researchers. However, a stark socio-economic reality persists: a significant portion of these ambitions remains confined within the frames of academic certificates, failing to translate into sustainable employment. Although university graduates possess formal degrees, a critical deficit in practical skills renders them ill-equipped for the contemporary job market, turning higher education achievements into unfulfilled promises.
Historically, universities operated as centres for intellectual exploration and critical thinking rather than mere pipelines to employment. In the modern global economy, however, the correlation between academic learning and professional survival has intensified. Driven by rapid advancements in automation, artificial intelligence, and international competition, the global market demands practical capability over rote memorisation. To thrive, individuals require digital literacy, communication skills, innovative thinking, and problem-solving capacities. Consequently, the foremost challenge confronting the Bangladeshi higher education sector is aligning traditional curricula with practical, market-driven requirements.
Currently, a paradoxical situation exists in Bangladesh. While thousands of graduates struggle with prolonged unemployment, domestic and international employers across banking, healthcare, technology, and manufacturing sectors consistently report a shortage of skilled personnel. Data from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics and various global research bodies indicate that the rate of educated unemployment among the youth remains high.
| Key Deficiencies in Traditional Higher Education |
| Theory-Centric Learning: Over-reliance on memorising textbook definitions rather than analysing real-world scenarios. |
| Examination-Driven Evaluation: Assessment metrics that prioritise marks over practical application. |
| Lack of Industry Alignment: Academic syllabi designed independently of the evolving needs of the modern corporate sector. |
This systemic mismatch creates considerable frustration among graduates, families, and wider society, as traditional degrees often fail to bridge the gap to financial independence. A major factor contributing to this crisis is the historical isolation of universities from the industrial sector. In developed economies, academic institutions maintain structured partnerships with corporate entities to co-design curricula, facilitate regular student internships, and connect laboratory research with industrial production. Conversely, many academic departments in Bangladesh offer courses that bear little relevance to current economic demands.
While disciplines such as data science, cyber security, biotechnology, robotics, digital marketing, and renewable energy technologies are reshaping global industries, the adaptation rate within domestic universities remains slow.
Practical education does not merely imply vocational training; rather, it represents a comprehensive pedagogical approach that equips students to navigate modern challenges, generate economic value, and foster entrepreneurship. Restructuring the higher education framework requires systemic reforms, shifting evaluations from written examinations to project-based learning, laboratory work, and field research.
Key Institutional Interventions:
Mandatory Internships: Incorporating compulsory professional placements into undergraduate programmes to develop time management, workplace communication, and operational discipline.
Career Counselling and Skill Centres: Establishing dedicated campus units to guide students in career planning, resume writing, interview preparation, and language proficiency.
Support for Entrepreneurship: Creating startup incubation centres and research funds to encourage graduates to become job creators rather than job seekers.
Furthermore, the research infrastructure within Bangladeshi universities requires substantial strengthening to support a knowledge-based economy. Higher education institutions must evolve from degree-granting bodies into hubs for innovation, addressing national challenges in agriculture, environmental sustainability, public health, and urban planning.
The role of the academic faculty is equally vital. Instructors require continuous professional development and direct exposure to industry trends to ensure their teaching methodologies remain relevant. On a macro level, sustained state investment is essential. Developed countries allocate a significant portion of their national budgets to research and development; similarly, Bangladesh must prioritise human capital development over physical infrastructure alone.
Addressing these institutional gaps is also critical to mitigating the ongoing “brain drain,” where qualified students emigrate in search of better research facilities and employment prospects. By elevating domestic education to international standards—incorporating robust technical training alongside essential humanities such as literature, philosophy, and history—the nation can cultivate analytical, skilled, and socially responsible citizens capable of driving long-term national progress.
Author: Vice-Chancellor,Naogaon University
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