The draft NEP has made a bold move to address this binary of research and teaching—one which aims to reform it, while also acknowledging that a complete dissolution of this opposition is neither possible nor desirable. This move is outlined in its plan of three different kinds of institutions for the new landscape of Indian higher education: research universities, teaching universities, and colleges. The research universities, the draft states, will “focus equally on research and teaching”. They will have the explicit goal of producing world-class research across the disciplines, but they will also be mindful of the unfortunate historical exclusion of undergraduate learning from the leading research institutes across India. They will include undergraduate programmes along with masters and doctoral programmes. From the description, the model of the research university seems to approximate the Research-I University in the National Research Council classification in the US. “It is expected,” states the draft, “that over a period of two decades, a couple of hundred institutions, say 150–300, will belong to the Type 1 category, and each will aim for on-campus enrolments between 5,000 to 25,000 or more students”.