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New Education Policy 2020: On Wednesday, the Union Cabinet cleared a new National Education Policy (NEP) proposing sweeping changes in school and higher education. A look at the takeaways, and their implications for students and institutions of learning:

What purpose does an NEP serve?

An NEP is a comprehensive framework to guide the development of education in the country. The need for a policy was first felt in 1964 when Congress MP Siddheshwar Prasad criticised the then government for lacking a vision and philosophy for education. The same year, a 17-member Education Commission, headed by then UGC Chairperson D S Kothari, was constituted to draft a national and coordinated policy on education. Based on the suggestions of this Commission, Parliament passed the first education policy in 1968.

A new NEP usually comes along every few decades. India has had three to date. The first came in 1968 and the second in 1986, under Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi respectively; the NEP of 1986 was revised in 1992 when P V Narasimha Rao was Prime Minister. The third is the NEP released Wednesday under the Prime Ministership of Narendra Modi.

What are the key takeaways?

The NEP proposes sweeping changes including opening up of Indian higher education to foreign universities, dismantling of the UGC and the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), introduction of a four-year multidisciplinary undergraduate programme with multiple exit options, and discontinuation of the M Phil programme.

In school education, the policy focuses on overhauling the curriculum, “easier” Board exams, a reduction in the syllabus to retain “core essentials” and thrust on “experiential learning and critical thinking”.

In a significant shift from the 1986 policy, which pushed for a 10+2 structure of school education, the new NEP pitches for a “5+3+3+4” design corresponding to the age groups 3-8 years (foundational stage), 8-11 (preparatory), 11-14 (middle), and 14-18 (secondary). This brings early childhood education (also known as pre-school education for children of ages 3 to 5) under the ambit of formal schooling. The mid-day meal programme will be extended to pre-school children. The NEP says students until Class 5 should be taught in their mother tongue or regional language.

The policy also proposes phasing out of all institutions offering single streams and that all universities and colleges must aim to become multidisciplinary by 2040.

Also in Explained | How India’s Education Ministry became ‘HRD Ministry’, and then returned to embrace Education

How will these reforms be implemented?

The NEP only provides a broad direction and is not mandatory to follow. Since education is a concurrent subject (both the Centre and the state governments can make laws on it), the reforms proposed can only be implemented collaboratively by the Centre and the states. This will not happen immediately. The incumbent government has set a target of 2040 to implement the entire policy. Sufficient funding is also crucial; the 1968 NEP was hamstrung by a shortage of funds.

The government plans to set up subject-wise committees with members from relevant ministries at both the central and state levels to develop implementation plans for each aspect of the NEP. The plans will list out actions to be taken by multiple bodies, including the HRD Ministry, state Education Departments, school Boards, NCERT, Central Advisory Board of Education and National Testing Agency, among others. Planning will be followed by a yearly joint review of progress against targets set.

What does the emphasis on mother tongue/regional language mean for English-medium schools?

Such emphasis is not new: Most government schools in the country are doing this already. As for private schools, it’s unlikely that they will be asked to change their medium of instruction. A senior ministry official clarified to The Indian Express that the provision on mother tongue as medium of instruction was not compulsory for states. “Education is a concurrent subject. Which is why the policy clearly states that kids will be taught in their mother tongue or regional language ‘wherever possible’,” the officer said.

What about people in transferable jobs, or children of multilingual parents?

The NEP doesn’t say anything specifically on children of parents with transferable jobs, but acknowledges children living in multilingual families: “Teachers will be encouraged to use a bilingual approach, including bilingual teaching-learning materials, with those students whose home language may be different from the medium of instruction.”

How does the government plan to open up higher education to foreign players?

The document states universities from among the top 100 in the world will be able to set up campuses in India. While it doesn’t elaborate the parameters to define the top 100, the incumbent government may use the ‘QS World University Rankings’ as it has relied on these in the past while selecting universities for the ‘Institute of Eminence’ status. However, none of this can start unless the HRD Ministry brings in a new law that includes details of how foreign universities will operate in India.

It is not clear if a new law would enthuse the best universities abroad to set up campuses in India. In 2013, at the time the UPA-II was trying to push a similar Bill, The Indian Express had reported that the top 20 global universities, including Yale, Cambridge, MIT and Stanford, University of Edinburgh and Bristol, had shown no interest in entering the Indian market.

Participation of foreign universities in India is currently limited to them entering into collaborative twinning programmes, sharing faculty with partnering institutions and offering distance education. Over 650 foreign education providers have such arrangements in India.

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How will the four-year multidisciplinary bachelor’s programme work?

This pitch, interestingly, comes six years after Delhi University was forced to scrap such a four-year undergraduate programme at the incumbent government’s behest. Under the four-year programme proposed in the new NEP, students can exit after one year with a certificate, after two years with a diploma, and after three years with a bachelor’s degree.

“Four-year bachelor’s programmes generally include a certain amount of research work and the student will get deeper knowledge in the subject he or she decides to major in. After four years, a BA student should be able to enter a research degree programme directly depending on how well he or she has performed… However, master’s degree programmes will continue to function as they do, following which student may choose to carry on for a PhD programme,” said scientist and former UGC chairman V S Chauhan.

What impact will doing away with the M Phil programme have?

Chauhan said this should not affect the higher education trajectory at all. “In normal course, after a master’s degree a student can register for a PhD programme. This is the current practice almost all over the world. In most universities, including those in the UK (Oxford, Cambridge and others), M Phil was a middle research degree between a master’s and a PhD. Those who have entered MPhil, more often than not ended their studies with a PhD degree. MPhil degrees have slowly been phased out in favour of a direct PhD programme.”

Will the focus on multiple disciplines not dilute the character of single-stream institutions, such as IITs?

The IITs are already moving in that direction. IIT-Delhi has a humanities department and set up a public policy department recently. IIT-Kharagpur has a School of Medical Science and Technology. Asked about multiple disciplines, IIT-Delhi director V Ramgopal Rao said, “Some of the best universities in the US such as MIT have very strong humanities departments. Take the case of a civil engineer. Knowing how to build a dam is not going to solve a problem. He needs to know the environmental and social impact of building the dam. Many engineers are also becoming entrepreneurs. Should they not know something about economics? A lot more factors go into anything related to engineering today.”

https://indianexpress.com/article/e...cation-policy-india-schools-colleges-6531603/
 
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I will comment on this later. I have quite a few reservations on this NEP.
 
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Honestly it is disappointing they are mostly just re-arranging a few things within the same larger system...though there are some welcome moves there.

They really need a breakout reform to increase the overall supply (esp qualitatively) of education, only a free market (run under good standards the govt puts for public interest) can provide that.

The hypocrisy that mr. gupta mentions of the argument that govt run education is "not for profit" and thus has to remain as status quo (as though it has some proven track record of not for profit in large sense) is very crucial point he makes.

This administration has been sorely lacking on crucial reforms.
 
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Honestly it is disappointing they are mostly just re-arranging a few things within the same larger system...though there are some welcome moves there.

They really need a breakout reform to increase the overall supply (esp qualitatively) of education, only a free market (run under good standards the govt puts for public interest) can provide that.

The hypocrisy that mr. gupta mentions of the argument that govt run education is "not for profit" and thus has to remain as status quo (as though it has some proven track record of not for profit in large sense) is very crucial point he makes.

This administration has been sorely lacking on crucial reforms.
The language policy is debatable. But what do I like?

1) Students having options to choose a variety of subjects. For example, I may love history and programming, so I can choose both during my course.
2) Degree certificates, diploma certificates being handed as students complete their degree, etc. So if an unfortunate student drops out of engineering, he'll at least have a certificate which says that he has completed 1s year, diploma, etc.
3) Focus on research in the final year (which was lacking till now).
4) Mr Shekhar Gupta gave a good example of how an American could immediately repair his bike in Delhi. It basically means that Indians need to have an all round development of themselves.
5) Mid-day meal program being extended for kids from 3 years of age. It means students in rural areas will send their kids to school from quite early which means that students won't be stressed to cope up when they are suddenly sent to 1st standard or something.
6) Opening up higher education for foreign players and encouraging them to set up universities in India.
7) Less stress on students for 10th and 12th Board exams. It won't be some sort of a do or die situation (unfortunately some students commit suicide because of cut-throat competition).
 
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The language policy is debatable. But what do I like?

1) Students having options to choose a variety of subjects. For example, I may love history and programming, so I can choose both during my course.
2) Degree certificates, diploma certificates being handed as students complete their degree, etc. So if an unfortunate student drops out of engineering, he'll at least have a certificate which says that he has completed 1s year, diploma, etc.
3) Focus on research in the final year (which was lacking till now).
4) Mr Shekhar Gupta gave a good example of how an American could immediately repair his bike in Delhi. It basically means that Indians need to have an all round development of themselves.
5) Mid-day meal program being extended for kids from 3 years of age. It means students in rural areas will send their kids to school from quite early which means that students won't be stressed to cope up when they are suddenly sent to 1st standard or something.
6) Opening up higher education for foreign players and encouraging them to set up universities in India.
7) Less stress on students for 10th and 12th Board exams. It won't be some sort of a do or die situation (unfortunately some students commit suicide because of cut-throat competition).

Yes there are many good things (done within the confines), it was a very sound analysis by Mr. Gupta.

This NEP should have been done in first term of modi, as first thing. They had excellent mandate in 1st term to do it....and work soundly with NGOs like ASER centre to formulate the best delivery approach and measuring of it (since ASER already commited a good rigorous framework to measure this).

But there needs to be a huge breakout to increase quality supply...that should have been this term if say this NEP was done first term. Hopefully it will happen at some point like Mr. Gupta says, that will be the true gamechanger to treat education like any other sector of economy and let it really provide quality supply to the huge demand for it...and govt simply sets standards and enforces that....and provides subsidies directly to students (if its determined market price is too high given education is merit/public good etc). This provides the competition and innovation as well to produce the best results....right now everything is too inelastic and operating in the phase 1 mode of providing basic govt ramp supply infra (which was definitely a good model starting out after independence, but we must evolve and improve drastically now).
 
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But there needs to be a huge breakout to increase quality supply...that should have been this term if say this NEP was done first term.
Won't these measures increase quality supply? Didn't really understand what you meant there.

If you want a UG certificate, you'll need to immerse yourself in 1 year of research, so that's 1 move towards quality supply. Another one is the option to choose different subjects and not being one-dimensional. The third one is about hands-on learning instead of just theoretical learning which means that more weightage will be given to Practicals.
 
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Won't these measures increase quality supply? Didn't really understand what you meant there.

There will be some changes to it, but pay attention to bit Mr Gupta talks about the spending + fiscal pressure govt would have to do to ramp up things even for the 50% GER mark (i.e about a doubling) for higher education supply.

Just think what the fiscal imprint will be on top to increase quality supply (by way of govt sector and all its bureaucrats) for primary and secondary education too....as these are very much needed goals too.

So what I am saying is private sector needs to be allowed (Mr. Gupta references this a cpl times) to freely operate and provide funding + investment and to take revenue at profit like any other industry....for provision of education services to all ages (kindergarten, primary, secondary, tertiary).

The govt should be the regulator and standard creator (standards like provision of midday meal, common testing, standardized core curriculum format etc).

If you want the education to be free for all kids up to some age (a worthy goal)...you simply fund that directly to the student (use say aadhar)....the parent can also have choice of schools this way (esp say in urban setting)...and schools have to innovate and compete to attract student body....quality increases over time. In rural setting there probably needs to be more govt role retained given purchasing power there is low and population density often merits just one school in vicinity etc...but maybe private franchise model can be explored here too. Important thing is to keep close watch on standards and results. Something like PISA test can be developed and optimised for Indian setting at secondary level and maybe one for primary too to track things.

The hypocrisy of saying "not for profit" and thus only govt should run the bulk of it..... but then layering huge grandiose corruption and restricted supply and all kind of burdensome costs (monetary and non-monetary) anyway....is again put quite well by Mr. Gupta analysis....and you get a really bad quality at the end of it overall too....because its not very results oriented, but political propaganda/control/bureaucrat-friendly (like all things govt) oriented instead.
 
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So what I am saying is private sector needs to be allowed (Mr. Gupta references this a cpl times) to freely operate and provide funding + investment and to take revenue at profit like any other industry....for provision of education services to all ages (kindergarten, primary, secondary, tertiary).
I agree to that. It's ok to treat education like any other business(it's already being treated btw, but it needs to be officially acknowledged now lol).

Ok, now I get where you were going.
 
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@Joe Shearer

Mr. professor you did promise your evaluation of the NEP (as a whole) somewhere iirc.

Please do tag me when you get around to it (if not here)...would like to see what your thoughts are on it. Take your time of course, there is 100 different things taking your attention these days heh.

This thread is probably a good a one as any for it (since I put and expanded on some of my thoughts on it) when you would like to present it.

@aakash_2410 wondering if this field is something you are interested in.

Let me tag @sms @jamahir @meghdut @KhanBaba2 @Krptonite @Dustom999 @Syama Ayas @jbgt90 if they would like to share their thoughts on the matter if interested...or just to observe if they prefer
 
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@Joe Shearer

Mr. professor you did promise your evaluation of the NEP (as a whole) somewhere iirc.

Please do tag me when you get around to it (if not here)...would like to see what your thoughts are on it. Take your time of course, there is 100 different things taking your attention these days heh.

This thread is probably a good a one as any for it (since I put and expanded on some of my thoughts on it) when you would like to present it.

I'll take a day more, perhaps. There are some articles promised and delayed, that I have to finish, and there is also some careful nursing of funds going on.

One of my quandaries is what I actually think of this policy. I have been swinging between approval and rejection since it came out. It still isn't settled in my mind.
 
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The article completely MISSED the most Relevant and Important decision taken during the new education policy.

Govt has now approved plan to boost state spending on education to 6% of GDP.

Its too late but not too little.


China spends 4.11 % of its GDP on Education.

US spends 6.2 % of its GDP on Education.


Rest of the Policy is irrelevant because the devil is in the details and IMPLEMENTATION and that is yet to come.
 
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@Joe Shearer

Mr. professor you did promise your evaluation of the NEP (as a whole) somewhere iirc.

Please do tag me when you get around to it (if not here)...would like to see what your thoughts are on it. Take your time of course, there is 100 different things taking your attention these days heh.

This thread is probably a good a one as any for it (since I put and expanded on some of my thoughts on it) when you would like to present it.

@aakash_2410 wondering if this field is something you are interested in.

Let me tag @sms @jamahir @meghdut @KhanBaba2 @Krptonite @Dustom999 @Syama Ayas @jbgt90 if they would like to share their thoughts on the matter if interested...or just to observe if they prefer

There is not place for backbencher like me to comment or interrupt when professor and his comrade are going in full flow. I'd like to hear from you guys and will add my thoughts or question your line on thinking ?
 
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There is not place for backbencher like me to comment or interrupt when professor and his comrade are going in full flow. I'd like to hear from you guys and will add my thoughts or question your line on thinking ?

Yup lot of time I tag, its just to watch etc...you can reply in thread like you have or hit "watch thread" etc if it interests you...and you get alerts later when activity arrives (from say main enthusiasts)...or read whats already been posted to get an idea if subject interests you etc.

Then you can respond/enquire as you see need to as any convo progresses (lot of damp squibs happen too).

It doesnt need immediate large response from anyone I tagged, coz I dont really know most ppl precise cup of tea etc...I just do a basic quick guess on larger tagging in general. It is all left to you. You will notice I tag different kind of members sometimes to different kind of threads etc for this very reason (calculated guessing).
 
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@Joe Shearer

Mr. professor you did promise your evaluation of the NEP (as a whole) somewhere iirc.

Please do tag me when you get around to it (if not here)...would like to see what your thoughts are on it. Take your time of course, there is 100 different things taking your attention these days heh.

This thread is probably a good a one as any for it (since I put and expanded on some of my thoughts on it) when you would like to present it.

@aakash_2410 wondering if this field is something you are interested in.

Let me tag @sms @jamahir @meghdut @KhanBaba2 @Krptonite @Dustom999 @Syama Ayas @jbgt90 if they would like to share their thoughts on the matter if interested...or just to observe if they prefer

I haven't had the chance to digest all the changes, but I do like the change about teaching early primary students in their local languages.

The vast majority of people in the state where my family originates from (Gujarat) tend to think Hindi is the national language. When in reality India doesn't have a national language. There are official languages, but then English is as much of an official language as Hindi.

Plus my cousin's children studying in an English medium CBSE school don't have the option to learn Gujarati as a secondary language. They can select Hindi or Sanskrit (a dead language), but not their mother tongue. So, I do defo think it's a welcome change from that perspective.

Changes like these make the Union of India stronger. 'Unity in Diversity' is supposed to be one of our mottos anyway.
 
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