This is in continuation with my earlier article Degree is the Usher at the Door, Only Skill keeps you in the Room which related to huge amount of unspent funds budgeted for Skill Development in India. You can click on the link to read the same. Thanks to Ms Sheila for capturing the entire 4 hour talk delivered yesterday for a particular Skill Development Institution and sharing it with me. The content is mostly unedited and shared directly. This part was focussed on Remedies to the problem. Here we go…
While the government focuses on outlay (money) and enrollment (numbers), the quality of delivery—the actual human interaction between trainer and student—is where the system often collapses. I call these factors the Silent Killers of the Indian skilling ecosystem.
A sharp look at the structural decay that is described above and how it’s being (or not being) addressed:
In many ITIs and other skill training centers, instructors are permanent employees or long-term staff who haven’t stepped onto a factory floor in 10–15 years. They are teaching Industry 2.0 concepts (even that, theoretical) to a generation that needs to work in Industry 4.0. A Certified Trainer is often just someone who passed a 10-day Training of Trainers (ToT) program. As noted earlier, they may have the certificate, but they lack the muscle memory of the trade. Author suggests to strongly push for Dual System of Training (DST) and Flexi-MoUs, where industry experts are invited to teach, and trainers are sent back to factories for refresher stints.
It would be incomplete if we don’t address the elephant in the room. The Leadership with Topline vs. Pedagogy approach
Many private Training Institutions operate like factories. Their Topline is the number of enrollments they can claim fees for or for government subsidies; their Bottom line is the cost-cutting on equipment and low trainer salaries. As a result, Training becomes a rote exercise for compliance rather than an educational one. If the leadership doesn’t understand pedagogy (the how of teaching), they view simulators and modern labs as unnecessary expenses rather than essential tools.
Though The NCVET (National Council for Vocational Education and Training) has started de-linking and de-affiliating thousands of non-performing affiliated centers (over 400 ITIs recently), there is a long way to go in attaining targeted results. Pertinent to note here that even NCVET also is a body of academics from the existing system who refuse to see beyond the academic box.
Coming to the Assessors, the other important cog in the wheel, most often the person training and the person assessing were often “friendly” to a detrimental level. While being friendly is a great characteristic to have in a training context, I am emphasizing this trait leading to inflated pass percentages that didn’t reflect actual skill. Same issue of lack of industrial exposure persists with Assessors too. In my personal experience, have witnessed assessors coming in to assess trainees who underwent high precision manufacturing and assessor who was seeing a CNC for the first time and had no clue about what the trainees were doing. He had no abilities to create real assessment criteria (like tampering the code and getting trainee to fix it). In the end, it was easy to steam roll him into “submission” Unless assessor have the ability to ensure that a student can actually do what the certificate says, this again is an exercise in futility.
In the Indian community, a Guru is traditionally respected, but in skilling, they are often underpaid and undervalued. Until the Trainer is treated with the same prestige as a Professor, the quality will remain a detail that everyone ignores.
Here is a Pedagogy-First model designed to ensure that a skilling institute transforms from a certificate factory to a center of excellence. This addresses the issue by forcing leadership to value the craft as much as the cash flow.
A blueprint for pedagogical excellence begins with shattering the stale trainer syndrome. To keep technical expertise sharp, institutes must move away from static, lifetime roles. This starts with Mandatory Sabbaticals, requiring every trainer to spend thirty days every two years on a live industry floor to refresh their technical muscle memory. This is bolstered by the 70:30 Rule, where thirty percent of curriculum delivery is handed over to active visiting practitioners. By bringing current shop-floor language into the classroom, the institute ensures that students aren’t learning yesterday’s news. To drive this home, trainer incentives should be decoupled from seniority and instead linked directly to the placement retention rates of their graduates.
The heart of this model lies in Radical Pedagogy, summarized by the “Show, Don’t Tell” rule. Leadership must shift focus from PowerPoint decks to practical mastery, enforcing a strict 20:80 ratio—twenty percent theory and eighty percent hands-on workshop time. Assessment undergoes a similar revolution; written exams are replaced by Job Simulations. In this environment, a student does not pass by merely describing a motor; they pass by fixing a broken one under the pressure of a timer. Furthermore, peer-to-peer learning integrates leadership training into the technical grind, as senior batches mentor juniors to sharpen their communication and soft skills.
True institutional change, however, requires Leadership Accountability that looks beyond the balance sheet. Governance must treat financial health as a byproduct of quality, not cost-cutting. This means the Board of Directors must review Employer Satisfaction Scores with the same scrutiny as financial statements seriously. To prevent a disconnect from the ground reality, leadership should conduct Shadow Student Audits, spending one day a month in the labs to experience the quality of equipment and instruction firsthand. Financially, this commitment is solidified by legally earmarking some percent of annual revenue for equipment upgrades to stop obsolescence in its tracks. Finally, the system is secured by a rigorous Assessor Integrity Protocol. To eliminate the possibility of grace marks or bias, external assessors must have zero prior contact with training staff. Every final practical assessment is then backed by Video-Log Evidence, ensuring each skill was actually demonstrated and digitally archived for audit. Through these layers of industry immersion, practical obsession, and administrative transparency, an institute transforms from a mere school into a powerhouse of employability.
This approach would help an institute in more ways that one. Topline will naturally grow because the Brand Equity of their graduates will become the best marketing tool. When a Skill Certificate from a particular institute guarantees a Salary premium (higher starting salary compared to other graduates), the Aspirational Value takes care of itself.




