Saturday, 28 December 2019
पुस्तक एवं पुस्तकालय कार्यशाला
4-5 जनवरी 2020
नव वर्ष की हार्दिक शुभकामनाएं!
सम्मानित साथियों,
लंबे समय से हम उपरोक्त विषय पर कार्यशाला के लिए प्रयास कर रहे थे। अब यह दो
दिवसीय कार्यशाला 4 जनवरी को सुबह 10ः30 बजे सर्व कर्मचारी संघ भवन,
रोहतक में शुरू हो रही है। इस कार्यशाला में डॉ. मनमोहन आरंभिक
वक्तव्य देगें। हाल के दिनों में पुस्तकालय के प्रति आम जन मानस का विशेष
रूझान दिखाई दिया है और स्वप्रयत्नों से अनेक गावों एवं कस्बों में
पुस्तकालय खोले जा रहे हैं। कार्यशाला में एक सत्र पुस्तकालयों के काम के
अनुभव सुनने का भी रहेगा।
कार्यशाला के दूसरे दिन पुस्तकालय चेतना और अंबेडकर विचार विषय पर
वरिष्ठ पत्रकार एवं चिंतक अनिल चामड़िया संबोधित करेगें।
आपसे गुजारिस है कि चिंतन-ंमनन के इस अवसर पर आप जरूर शामिल हो।
आयोजक-ं
भारत ज्ञान विज्ञान समिति, हरियाणा
एवं
समस्त ज्ञान विज्ञान आंदोलन
नोट- 1. कार्यशाला में भाग ले रहे साथियों से अनुरोध है कि आप
संक्षिप्त अनुभवों के बिंदु लिखकर ले आएगे तो समय का सदुपयोग हो
पाएगा।
2. विस्तृत कार्यक्रम साथ संलग्न है।
4 जनवरी 2020
10ः30 से 11ः00 रजिस्ट्रेशन एवं चाय
11ः 00 से 11ः30 स्वागत एवं कार्यशाला का परिचय डॉ. महावीर
नारवाल
11ः30 से 1ः00 आरंभिक वक्तव्य एवं चर्चा
डॉ. मनमोहन
1ः00 से 2ः00 लंच ब्रेक
2ः00 से 3ः30 पुस्तकालय अनुभव शेयरिंग
3ः30 से 4ः00 ज्ञान विज्ञान आंदोलन और पुस्तक प्रसार
प्रमोद गौरी
4ः00 से 5ः00 विषय चर्चा एवं फिल्म- कथा साहित्य की
5 जनवरी 2020
9ः30 से 11ः00 जनवाचन एवं चर्चा-ं बसरा की लाईब्रेरियन
सतीश चौहान
11ः00 से 12ः00 पुस्तकालय चेतना और अंबेडकर विचार वरिष्ठ
पत्रकार अनिल चामड़िया
12ः00 से 1ः30 पुस्तकालय के लिए आवश्यक पुस्तकें एवं संदर्भ सामग्री
1ः30 से 2ः00 समापन वक्तव्य डॉ. आर. एस.
दहिया
4-5 जनवरी 2020
नव वर्ष की हार्दिक शुभकामनाएं!
सम्मानित साथियों,
लंबे समय से हम उपरोक्त विषय पर कार्यशाला के लिए प्रयास कर रहे थे। अब यह दो
दिवसीय कार्यशाला 4 जनवरी को सुबह 10ः30 बजे सर्व कर्मचारी संघ भवन,
रोहतक में शुरू हो रही है। इस कार्यशाला में डॉ. मनमोहन आरंभिक
वक्तव्य देगें। हाल के दिनों में पुस्तकालय के प्रति आम जन मानस का विशेष
रूझान दिखाई दिया है और स्वप्रयत्नों से अनेक गावों एवं कस्बों में
पुस्तकालय खोले जा रहे हैं। कार्यशाला में एक सत्र पुस्तकालयों के काम के
अनुभव सुनने का भी रहेगा।
कार्यशाला के दूसरे दिन पुस्तकालय चेतना और अंबेडकर विचार विषय पर
वरिष्ठ पत्रकार एवं चिंतक अनिल चामड़िया संबोधित करेगें।
आपसे गुजारिस है कि चिंतन-ंमनन के इस अवसर पर आप जरूर शामिल हो।
आयोजक-ं
भारत ज्ञान विज्ञान समिति, हरियाणा
एवं
समस्त ज्ञान विज्ञान आंदोलन
नोट- 1. कार्यशाला में भाग ले रहे साथियों से अनुरोध है कि आप
संक्षिप्त अनुभवों के बिंदु लिखकर ले आएगे तो समय का सदुपयोग हो
पाएगा।
2. विस्तृत कार्यक्रम साथ संलग्न है।
4 जनवरी 2020
10ः30 से 11ः00 रजिस्ट्रेशन एवं चाय
11ः 00 से 11ः30 स्वागत एवं कार्यशाला का परिचय डॉ. महावीर
नारवाल
11ः30 से 1ः00 आरंभिक वक्तव्य एवं चर्चा
डॉ. मनमोहन
1ः00 से 2ः00 लंच ब्रेक
2ः00 से 3ः30 पुस्तकालय अनुभव शेयरिंग
3ः30 से 4ः00 ज्ञान विज्ञान आंदोलन और पुस्तक प्रसार
प्रमोद गौरी
4ः00 से 5ः00 विषय चर्चा एवं फिल्म- कथा साहित्य की
5 जनवरी 2020
9ः30 से 11ः00 जनवाचन एवं चर्चा-ं बसरा की लाईब्रेरियन
सतीश चौहान
11ः00 से 12ः00 पुस्तकालय चेतना और अंबेडकर विचार वरिष्ठ
पत्रकार अनिल चामड़िया
12ः00 से 1ः30 पुस्तकालय के लिए आवश्यक पुस्तकें एवं संदर्भ सामग्री
1ः30 से 2ः00 समापन वक्तव्य डॉ. आर. एस.
दहिया
Saturday, 6 July 2019
School Education
Part I
School Education
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The Foundation of Learning
45
Chapter 1
Early Childhood Care
and Education: The
Foundation of Learning
Objective: Every child in the age range of 3-6 years has access
to free, safe, high quality, developmentally appropriate care
and education by 2025.
The learning process for a child commences immediately at birth. Evidence
from neuroscience shows that over 85% of a child’s cumulative brain
development occurs prior to the age of 6, indicating the critical importance
of developmentally appropriate care and stimulation of the brain in a child’s
early years to promote sustained and healthy brain development and growth.
Indeed, analysis of brain scans of children who encountered various levels of
neglect or deprivation in their early years revealed unfortunate deficiencies
in the development of critical areas of the brain, and corresponding adverse
effects on cognitive and emotional processing. Excellent care, nurture,
nutrition, physical activity, psycho-social environment, and cognitive and
emotional stimulation during a child’s first six years are thus considered
extremely critical for ensuring proper brain development and, consequently,
desired learning curves over a person’s lifetime.
This evidence from cognitive science is fully borne out by numerous national
and international studies on the learning outcomes of children having
various levels of Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE). A study
conducted by the National Council of Educational Research and Training
(NCERT) titled “The impact of pre-school education on retention in primary
grades” (1992) on 30,000 children illustrated strong and direct correlations
between exposure to pre-school education and retention rates, attendance
National Education Policy 2019
46
rates, and most significantly learning outcomes in primary school and beyond.
Various global studies have also revealed longer-term impacts: quality preschool education is strongly correlated with higher incomes and rates of home
ownership, and lower rates of unemployment, crime, and arrest. In terms of the
growth of the national economy, it has been estimated that the development
of a strong ECCE programme is among the very best investments that India
could make, with an expected return of `10 or more for every `1 invested. In
summary, it is recognised that investment in ECCE gives the best chance for
children to grow up into good, moral, thoughtful, creative, empathetic, and
productive human beings.
Studies tracking student learning outcomes clearly demonstrate that children
who start out behind tend to stay behind throughout their school years. At
the current time, there is a severe learning crisis in India, where children are
enrolled in primary school but are failing to attain even basic skills such as
foundational literacy and numeracy. A major part of this crisis appears to be
occurring well before children even enter Grade 1. Far too many 6+ year olds are
entering Grade 1 with very limited ECCE. Furthermore, far too many children
are enrolling in Grade 1 before the age of 6, due to a lack of any suitable preprimary options; these are often the children that remain the most behind in
primary school and beyond. In fact, during the academic year 2016-17, over 70
lakh children were enrolled in Grade 1 prior to the age of 6 (Unified District
Information System for Education (U-DISE) 2016-17).
This tragic deficiency in grade school-preparedness is particularly marked
between advantaged and disadvantaged groups. This is because students from
more advantaged families have greater access to role models, print awareness,
language fluency in the school language, and strong learning environments
at home, in addition to better nutrition, healthcare, and of course access to
pre-school education. Investment in ECCE has the potential to give all young
children such access in an engaging and holistic way, thereby allowing all
children to participate and flourish in the educational system throughout their
lives. ECCE is perhaps the greatest and most powerful equaliser.
For all these reasons - from brain development to school-preparedness,
improved learning outcomes, equality and justice, employability, and the
prosperity and economic growth of the country - India absolutely must invest
in accessible and quality ECCE for all children.
What does quality ECCE entail? During the ages prior to 3 years, quality ECCE
includes the health and nutrition of both the mother and the child, but also
crucially includes cognitive and emotional stimulation of the infant through
talking, playing, moving, listening to music and sounds, and stimulating all
the other senses particularly sight and touch. Exposure to languages, numbers,
and simple problem-solving is also considered important during this period.
From 3 to 6 years of age, ECCE includes continued healthcare and nutrition,
but also crucially self-help skills (such as “getting ready on one’s own”), motor
skills, cleanliness, the handling of separation anxiety, being comfortable around
one’s peers, moral development (such as knowing the difference between
“right” and “wrong”), physical development through movement and exercise,
expressing and communicating thoughts and feelings to parents and others,
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The Foundation of Learning
47
sitting for longer periods of time in order to work on and complete a task,
and generally forming all-round good habits.
Supervised play-based education, in groups and individually, is considered
particularly important during this age range to naturally build up the child’s
innate abilities and all-important lifelong skills of cooperation, teamwork,
social interaction, compassion, equity, inclusiveness, communication,
cultural appreciation, playfulness, curiosity, creativity, as well as the ability
to successfully and respectfully interact with teachers, fellow students, staff,
and others. ECCE during these years also entails learning about alphabets,
languages, numbers, counting, colours, shapes, drawing/painting, indoor
and outdoor play, puzzles and logical thinking, visual art, craft, drama,
puppetry, music, and movement.
Over 85% of cumulative brain
development occurs prior to the age of six.
How should India best deliver quality ECCE? The most current research in
ECCE shows that children under the age of 8 do not tend to follow the linear,
age-based educational trajectories that are prescribed to them by policy or
by any preset timelines for curriculum; as a result, a large proportion of
children in pre-school and Grades 1 and 2 are not receiving developmentally
appropriate education suited to their needs. It is only at about the age of 8
that children adapt to more prescripted learning.
Therefore, it is important that children of ages 3-8 have access to a flexible,
multifaceted, multilevel, play-based, activity-based, and discovery-based
education. It also becomes natural then to view this period, from up to
three years of pre-school (ages 3-6) to the end of Grade 2 (age 8), as a single
pedagogical unit called the “Foundational Stage”. It is necessary, therefore,
to develop and establish such an integrated foundational curricular and
pedagogical framework, and corresponding teacher preparation, for this
critical Foundational Stage of a child’s development.
At the current time, most early childhood education is delivered in the
form of Anganwadis and private pre-schools, with a very small proportion
coming from pre-schools run by NGOs and other organisations. Where
well supported, the Anganwadi system of pre-primary education, under the
aegis of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), has worked with
great success in many parts of India, especially with respect to healthcare
for mothers and infants. These centres have truly helped support parents
and build communities; they have served to provide critical nutrition and
health awareness, immunisation, basic health check-ups, and referrals and
connections to local public health systems, thus preparing crores of children
for healthy development and therefore far more productive lives. However,
National Education Policy 2019
48
while providing some essential cognitive stimulation, play, and day care, most
Anganwadis have remained relatively light on the educational aspects of ECCE.
Anganwadis are currently quite deficient in supplies and infrastructure for
education; as a result, they tend to contain more children in the 2-4 year age
range and fewer in the educationally critical 4-6 year age range; they also have
few teachers trained in or specially dedicated to early childhood education.
Meanwhile, private and other pre-schools have largely functioned as downward
extensions of primary school. Though providing better infrastructure and
learning supplies for children, they consist primarily of formal teaching
and rote memorisation, with high Pupil Teacher Ratios (PTRs) and limited
developmentally appropriate play-based and activity-based learning; they
too generally contain teachers untrained in early childhood education. They
generally are very limited on the health aspects, and do not usually cater to
younger children in the age range of 0-4 years.
A recent “Early Childhood Education Impact” study (2017) undertaken by
Ambedkar University, Delhi, showed that a significant proportion of children
in India who completed pre-primary education, public or private, did not have
the needed school readiness competencies when they joined primary school.
Thus, in addition to problems of access, quality related deficiencies such as
developementally inappropriate curriculum, the lack of qualified and trained
educators, and less-than-optimal pedagogy have remained major challenges
for many if not most existing early childhood learning programmes.
The Policy therefore focuses on developing an excellent curricular and
pedagogical framework for early childhood education by NCERT in accordance
with the above guidelines, which would be delivered through a significantly
expanded and strengthened system of early childhood educational institutions,
consisting of Anganwadis, pre-primary schools/sections co-located with
existing primary schools, and stand-alone pre-schools, all of which will employ
workers/teachers specially trained in the curriculum and pedagogy of ECCE.
The numerous rich traditions of India over millennia in ECCE, involving art,
stories, poetry, songs, gatherings of relatives, and more, that exist throughout
India must also be incorporated in the curricular and pedagogical framework
of ECCE to impart a sense of local relevance, enjoyment, excitement, culture,
and sense of identity and community. The traditional roles of families in
raising, nurturing, and educating children also must be strongly supported
and integrated. In particular, family leave policies that afford women and men
the ability to tend to their children in their earliest years of life are critical in
enabling families to fulfil these traditional roles.
To reinforce the public system’s commitment to provide quality early childhood
care and education to all children before the age of 6, the Policy suggests that
ECCE be included as an integral part of the RTE Act. The 86th Amendment
of the Constitution in 2002 in fact provided an unambiguous commitment
for universalisation of ECCE by directing the “State to provi de ECCE to all
children until they complete the age of six years”. Section 11 of the RTE Act also
already discussed the possible public provision of early childhood education:
“With a view to prepare children above the age of three years for elementary
education and to provide ECCE for all children until they complete the age of
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The Foundation of Learning
49
six years, the appropriate Government may make necessary arrangement for
providing free pre-school education for such children”. For the sake of the
country and her children, it is time to ensure that these critical commitments
for attaining quality ECCE for all are fulfilled as early as possible.
Specific policy initiatives to attain quality early childhood education for all
by 2025 will be as follows:
Curricular and Pedagogical Framework for Early Childhood Education:
The mandate of the NCERT will be expanded to include the development of
a Curricular and Pedagogical Framework for Early Childhood Education, in
accordance with the above principles and guidelines.
The Framework will consist of two parts:
a. The first part will be a framework of guidelines for 0-3 year olds - intended
for parents as well as Anganwadi teachers/workers - for appropriate
cognitive stimulation of infants and young children in this age range.
The guidelines would include how to make simple low-cost learning aids
(such as baby rattles using a plastic bottle and colorful hard candy; simple
melodic and percussion instruments that can be hit with sticks; hats
and boats made from folding newspaper; etc.); these could form craft
exercises for children in Anganwadis, and also be distributed to parents
in the community.
b. The second part will be an educational framework for 3-8 year olds
(Foundational Stage) - intended for parents as well as for Anganwadis, preprimary schools, and Grades 1 and 2 - consisting of a flexible, multilevel,
play-based, activity-based, and discovery-based system of learning that
aims to teach young children alphabets, numbers, basic communication
in the local language/mother tongue and other languages, colours, shapes,
sounds, movement, games, elements of drawing, painting, music, and
the local arts, as well as various socio-emotional skills such as curiosity,
patience, teamwork, cooperation, interaction, and empathy required for
school-preparedness. The framework would also include suggestions
regarding exercises, puzzles, colouring books, connect-the-dots drawings,
stories, rhymes, songs, games, etc. that would help in developing children
in the Foundational Stage in a holistic way.
Because children learn languages most quickly during the period of
0-3 years and during the Foundational Stage of 3-8 years - and because
learning languages is an extremely important aspect of children’s cognitive
development-a key part of the Framework will be aimed at instilling excellent
multilingual skills in children as early as is possible and developmentally
appropriate.
The National Curriculum Framework (NCF), and State and local variations
of the Framework, will also extensively incorporate the numerous rich
traditions of India with respect to ECCE - including national as well as more
localised arts, songs, stories, rhymes, puzzles, riddles, games, knowledge,
customs, and innovations.
P1.1.
National Education Policy 2019
50
Significant expansion and strengthening of facilities for early childhood
education: The new Curricular and Pedagogical Framework for Early
Childhood Education will be delivered to children up to the age of 6 via a fourpronged approach:
a. Strengthening and expansion of the Anganwadi system to include
a robust education component: Anganwadi Centres will be heavily
built up to deal with the educational needs of children up to the age of
6. In particular, Anganwadi workers trained in techniques of cognitive
stimulation for infants and of play-based and multilevel education for
3-6 year olds will be stationed across the country, so that there is at least
one such worker at every Anganwadi. Each Anganwadi will be provided
with excellent educational material as per the curricular and pedagogical
framework for early childhood education. Additional quality centres will
also be built around the country as needed to ensure that every mother
and child has free and easy access to Anganwadi Centres. Anganwadis will
aim to become outstanding educational centres that also contain a strong
health and nutrition component.
b. Co-locating Angawadis with primary schools: When possible, co-locating
Anganwadis with existing primary schools will provide further benefits to
parents and children, both from the comprehensive services provided by
the Anganwadi and the improved opportunity for children to learn in a
cohesive educational environment with their siblings and peers at primary
schools. Co-location of Anganwadis and primary schools will be considered
a high priority during location planning for new Anganwadis and primary
schools, as this will help to build better and stronger school communities.
c. Co-locating pre-schools with primary schools where possible:
Alternatively, up to three years of quality pre-school for ages 3-6 will be
added to existing or new primary schools. Such composite schools will also
be supported by a package of health, nutrition, and growth-monitoring
services, especially for the pre-school students. The care and educational
requirements of 0-3 year olds in the region would continue to be handled
by neighborhood Anganwadis in such cases.
d. Building stand-alone pre-schools: High quality stand-alone pre-schools
will be built in areas where existing Anganwadis and primary schools are
not able to take on the educational requirements of children in the age
range of 3-6 years. Such pre-schools would again be supported by the health,
nutrition, and growth-monitoring services as required for children in this
age range.
All four of the above approaches will be implemented in accordance with local
needs and feasibility of geography and infrastructure. Overall, the goal will be
to ensure that every child of 0-6 years has free and easy access to quality ECCE.
This will require suitable monitoring of quality and outcomes for each of the
four methods and in each State.
Due to the equalising nature of ECCE, special attention and high priority will
be given to those districts or locations that are particularly socio-economically
disadvantaged.
P1.2.
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The Foundation of Learning
51
Because of the multi-level, play-based nature of the curriculum and pedagogy
framework for early childhood education in the age range 3-8 years, no hard
separation of ages in this range would be required for Anganwadis and preschools (including when they are co-located with primary schools), except as
needed for social reasons or due to limitations of institutional infrastructure.
All Anganwadi Centres and pre-primary schools will be linked, if not
physically then formally/pedagogically, to a primary school in the area, as
the lowest rung in the School Complex (see P7.3.1).
Universal access to quality early
childhood education is perhaps the best
investment that India can make for our
children’s and our nation’s future.
Oversight of Early Childhood Education by the Ministry of Human
Resource Development: All aspects of early childhood education will
come under the purview of the Ministry of Human Resource Development
(MHRD), in order to ensure continuity of curriculum and pedagogy from preprimary school to primary school, and to ensure due attention nationwide
to the foundational aspects of education.
A detailed plan outlining the operational and financial implications of the
integration of early childhood education with the school education system
will be developed in consultation with the Ministry of Women and Child
Development (MWCD) and the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
(MHFW). This plan will be finalised by the end of 2019 by a special task force
jointly constituted by the MWCD, MHFW, and MHRD.
At the current time, Anganwadis are under the purview of the MWCD.
Regardless of which ministry is officially in charge of running the Anganwadis
(which will be decided jointly by the ministries and the joint task force),
the Policy stresses that the responsibility for planning and implementation
of all ECCE curriculum and pedagogy in Anganwadis and all pre-schools
lie with the MHRD - just as health services in ICDS lie with the MHFW.
This transition would greatly help in optimising and smoothly integrating
the delivery of quality early childhood and foundational education by the
MHRD across Anganwadis, pre-schools, and primary schools.
P1.3.
National Education Policy 2019
52
P1.6.
Design of learning-friendly environments: Anganwadis, pre-schools, and
primary schools will all have high quality physical infrastructure that is
conducive to learning. A committee of cognitive scientists, early childhood
education experts, artists, and architects will be formed in each State (or
locality) to design spaces, within the funding allocations, that are truly inviting
and inspiring places to spend time and learn.
The physical environments for early childhood education will be welcoming
and stimulating, with accessible infrastructure, drinking water, and toilets;
they will be safe, clean, and brightly lit. Classrooms will allow flexible seating
arrangements; learning materials will be safe, stimulating, developmentally
appropriate, low cost, and preferably created using environmentally-friendly
and locally-sourced materials. While the teacher/educator will be involved
in the selection and development of learning materials, children could also
participate. Some examples of learning materials are picture cards, puzzles,
dominoes, picture story books, blocks, simple musical instruments, number
towers and rods, puppets, materials for arts and crafts, and colouring books.
Posters, graphics, and art containing alphabets, words, numbers, shapes,
colours, etc. will be placed on walls at the eye levels of children for high quality
stimulation and engagement.
Professionalisation of high quality educators for early childhood education:
State Governments will prepare cadres of professionally qualified educators
for early childhood education, through stage-specific professional training,
mentoring mechanisms, and career mapping. Necessary facilities will also be
created for the initial professional preparation of these educators and their
Continuous Professional Development (CPD).
Current Anganwadi workers and educators handling the pre-school education
component of the ICDS will be given the opportunity to participate in a
6-month special training programme to enable them to carry out effective
early childhood teaching-learning practices.
Access for children aged 3 - 8 years to a
flexible, multifaceted, multilevel, playbased and activity-based education is of
utmost importance.
Instituting an effective and quality regulatory system for ECCE: An effective
quality regulation or accreditation system for ECCE will be instituted as
recommended in the National ECCE Policy (2013). This regulatory system will
cover all pre-school education - private, public, and philanthropic - in order to
ensure compliance with essential quality standards.
P1.4.
P1.5.
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The Foundation of Learning
53
Generating demand from stakeholders for early childhood education:
In order to generate demand for ECCE, all stakeholders, including policy
makers, parents, teachers, and community members must be well-informed
on how a young child’s needs are so different from what formal education
provides, and why fulfilling these needs is so important for a child’s lifelong
learning and development. Large-scale advocacy through public service
messages and media campaigns, direct communication between pre-primary
education programmes and parents, and wide-scale dissemination of simple
methods and materials to enable parents to actively support their children’s
early learning needs will be prioritised and proactively supported.
The mandate of the NCERT will be
expanded to include the development
of a Curricular and Pedagogical
Framework for Early Childhood
Education.
Extension of the RTE Act to include early childhood education: Given
the necessity and importance of developmentally-appropriate learning
during a child’s most critical phase of brain development, the availability
of free and compulsory quality pre-primary education for all 3-6 year olds
will be included as an integral part of the RTE Act (see P8.4.1). Here, by
‘compulsory’, it is meant that it will be obligatory for the public system to
provide appropriate and quality educational infrastructure, facilities, and
educators to all children in the age group 3-6 years, with a special emphasis
on reaching the most socio-economically disadvantaged children through
ECCE services.
P1.8.
P1.7.
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54
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy
55
Chapter 2
Foundational Literacy
and Numeracy
Objective: By 2025, every student in Grade 5 and beyond has
achieved foundational literacy and numeracy.
The ability to read and write, and to perform basic operations with
numbers, is a necessary foundation and indispensable prerequisite for all
future school and lifelong learning. However, various governmental as well
as non-governmental surveys clearly indicate that, at the current time, we
are in a severe learning crisis with respect to these most basic skills: a large
proportion of students currently in elementary school - perhaps over 5 crore
in number - have not attained foundational literacy and numeracy, i.e., the
ability to read and comprehend basic text and the ability to carry out basic
addition and subtraction with Indian numerals.
Numerous studies show that, in the current educational system, once
students fall behind on foundational literacy and numeracy, they tend to
maintain flat learning curves for years, perpetually unable to catch up. So
many capable students have found themselves in this unfortunate black
hole, unable to emerge. For many students, this has become a major reason
for not attending school, or for dropping out altogether. At the same time,
teachers have explained the extreme difficulty they currently face - due to
the sheer size of the problem today - in covering the mandated curriculum
while also simultaneously paying attention to the large numbers of students
who have fallen vastly (often several years) behind.
It is imperative to address this crisis head on and immediately so that basic
learning can be accomplished in schools, and so that all students may
thereby gain the opportunity to obtain an education of quality. If action is
not taken soon, over the next few years the country could lose 10 crore or
National Education Policy 2019
56
more students - the size of a large country - from the learning system and to
illiteracy. The country simply cannot allow that to happen - the cost is far too
great - to crores of individuals, and to the nation.
Attaining foundational literacy and numeracy for all children must become
an immediate national mission. Students, along with their schools, teachers,
parents, and communities, must be urgently supported and encouraged in
every way possible to help carry out this all-important target and mission,
which indeed forms the basis of all future learning.
What are the primary causes of the learning crisis? A large proportion of
students that fall behind during their elementary school years in fact fall
behind already during the first few weeks of Grade 1.
Thus a major cause of the current learning crisis is a lack of school-preparedness,
i.e., the background early childhood care and learning (including pre-literacy
and pre-numeracy) that is required for a child to engage in more formal grade
school education. The problem most acutely afflicts first-generation learners,
and children who have not had access to pre-primary education; it hence affects
large numbers of children from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds.
Schooling in the early years also lays too little curricular emphasis on
foundational literacy and numeracy and, in general, on the reading, writing,
and speaking of languages and on mathematical ideas and thinking. Indeed,
the curriculum in early grades moves very quickly towards rote learning and
more mechanical academic skills, while not giving foundational material its
proper due. The principle must be that: if students are given a solid foundation
in reading, writing, speaking, counting, arithmetic, mathematical and logical
thinking, problem-solving, and in being creative, then all other future lifelong
learning will become that much easier, faster, more enjoyable, and more
individualised; all curriculum and pedagogy in early grade school must be
designed with this principle in mind.
Teacher capacity also plays a central role in the attainment of foundational
skills. Currently, few teachers have had the opportunity to be trained in a
multilevel, play-based, student-centred style of learning that, according to
extensive ECCE research (see P1.5), is so important for students in early grade
school, particularly in Grades 1 and 2. Children naturally learn at different
levels and paces during their early school years; however, because the current
formal system assumes from the very beginning a common level and pace for
all, many students start to fall behind almost immediately.
A further factor in the crisis in many areas relates to teacher deployment.
One aspect of teacher deployment (or lack thereof) - which sometimes forms a
barrier to play-based, multilevel, and individualised learning - is the PTR, which
in some disadvantaged areas, often exceeds 30:1, making learning for all much
more difficult in these areas. Another aspect of deployment contributing to
students falling behind involves the language barriers that often exist between
teachers and students when teachers are not from the local area. When
children struggle to understand the language in which they are being taught,
it becomes very difficult for them to grasp concepts in that language, and their
attention wanes. It is well-established that students learn best, especially in
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy
57
their early years, when they are taught in the language in which they are
most comfortable.
One significant further factor in the learning crisis that cannot be overlooked
relates to the health and nutrition of children. It is well documented that
nutrition plays a very significant role in learning, especially in the early years;
however, too many of our children simply do not receive the nutrition (both
quality and quantity) necessary to enable learning. Hunger and malnutrition
indeed prevent too many children from being able to pay proper attention in
school - for many students, the midday meal provided in school is the only
meal that they eat.
What can be done to reverse this crisis, and urgently? ECCE - while being
an extremely important stage in a child’s development on its own - is also
a key method to ensure grade-school-preparedness. Once access to ECCE
is instituted across the country (as described in Chapter 1), the problem
of school-preparedness - and of students falling behind so quickly in
grade school - will be greatly mitigated for future generations of students.
However, for all those students who are already in grade school, and who
remain currently at the centre of this crisis, a mission-mode dedication to
remediation and enabling all students who have fallen vastly behind to catch
up will be required most urgently and on a national scale.
Because of the depth and severity of the problem, teachers cannot be asked
to go at this alone - a large scale nationwide effort and dedication will truly
be required, which will involve the community as well. Students themselves
can be a first major resource in this regard. Studies around the world show
one-on-one peer tutoring to be extremely effective for learning - not just for
the learner, but also for the tutor. An old Indian saying incisively states that
“Knowledge is the only quantity that increases for oneself when one gives it
away to others”; indeed, one-on-one peer tutoring by senior students was one
of the key successful hallmarks of the ancient gurukula system. Prestigious
peer-tutoring positions will be instituted, not just for foundational literacy
and numeracy, but across all school subjects, in order to improve learning
outcomes for all.
A further help must come from the local community. Educated members
of the local community who are also passionate about teaching - and aiding
in this crisis - will help by holding remedial classes, with students grouped
according to level, during or after school, under the guidance and advice of
teachers. Such local community members would also, in particular, be able
to help bridge the language divide between students and teachers when it
exists. These local remedial instructors would be true local heroes; the aim
would be for many if not most to be women and mothers in order to help
ensure and encourage maximal girls’ participation.
It will also be important to make it easier for volunteers - both from the
local community and beyond - to participate in this large-scale mission
of the schooling system. Qualified community members who wish to
volunteer as remedial instructors or as one-on-one tutors - as a service to
their communities and to the nation - will be welcomed to teach particular
National Education Policy 2019
58
aspects of foundational literacy and numeracy, as needed, under the guidance
and coordination of teachers. If every literate member of the community could
commit to teaching one student/person how to read, it would change the country’s
landscape very quickly; this mission will be highly encouraged and supported.
Teacher vacancies will be filled as soon as possible, especially in disadvantaged
areas and areas with large Pupil Teacher Ratios or high rates of illiteracy,
with special attention given to employing local teachers and female teachers.
Current and future teachers will be trained in the relevant aspects of ECCE
as is urgently required in Grades 1 and 2 - such as play-based and multilevel
learning - so that students of varying levels will be able to keep learning.
On the curricular side, it will be extremely vital to introduce an increased focus
on foundational literacy and numeracy - and generally on reading, writing,
speaking, counting, arithmetic, and mathematical thinking - throughout the
primary school curriculum. The dedication of specific hours daily, and regular
events over the year, to activities involving these subjects has been found to be
a successful method in exciting students to pursue these areas.
Finally, the nutrition and health (including mental health) of children will
be seriously addressed, through healthy meals and the introduction of
counsellors and social workers into the schooling system, as well as through
various continuing measures for addressing poverty that may lie beyond
the education system. Research shows that the hours of the morning after a
nutritious breakfast can be particularly productive for the study of subjects that
are cognitively more demanding; these hours may be leveraged by providing a
simple but energising breakfast in addition to midday meals.
Specific and urgent measures for this national mission, designed to help
students at all levels achieve foundational literacy and numeracy as quickly as
possible, will include the following:
Expansion of midday meal programme: Both a nutritious breakfast (e.g.
even just some milk and a banana) and a midday meal will be served to preprimary and primary school students. This will help make the hours between
breakfast and lunch significantly more productive, especially for students from
disadvantaged backgrounds. Expenditure on the morning and midday meal
programmes will be linked to food costs and inflation in order to ensure the
quality of food served.
We are in a severe learning crisis: a large
proportion of students in elementary
school has not attained foundational
literacy and numeracy.
P2.1.
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy
59
Increased focus in school on foundational literacy and numeracy: The
school and classroom curriculum and schedules for Grades 1-5 will be redesigned to focus on foundational literacy and numeracy, and to build a love
for reading and mathematics among students. Illustratively, initiatives in
this direction would include:
a. Dedicated mathematics and reading hours every day for Grades 1, 2 and
3, and an additional writing hour for Grades 4 and 5. The hours between
breakfast and lunch may be the most effective time periods for these
subjects.
b. Designated “language weeks” and “mathematics weeks” during the
school year, where children will participate in a variety of activities and
projects around languages and mathematics.
c. Regular “language melas” and “mathematics melas”, where children can
participate and demonstrate their abilities in both of these subjects;
this could become a community event involving parents, teachers,
community members, and neighbouring schools.
d. Weekly language and mathematics-focused school assemblies;
celebrations of writers’ and mathematicians’ anniversaries through
language- and mathematics-related activities.
e. Weekly activities around the library, such as story-telling, theatre,
group reading, writing, and display of original writings and other art by
children.
f. Weekly fun puzzle-solving sessions that naturally inculcate logical and
mathematical thinking.
g. Regular activities that explore connections between “classroom
mathematics” and “real-life mathematics.”
If action is not taken soon, over the next
few years the country could lose 10 crore
or more students from the learning
system and to illiteracy.
Workbooks on language and mathematics: Every child in Grades 1-5 will
have a workbook for languages and mathematics in addition to the school
textbook. This will ensure that grade-appropriate, creative, and engaging
practice opportunities are available for each child to work at his/her own
pace. This would supplement the textbook, build on lessons with a variety of
P2.2.
P2.3.
National Education Policy 2019
60
exercises/examples, save teachers’ time, help teachers identify what each child
can do and, therefore, help individualise instruction.
Attaining foundational literacy and
numeracy for all children must become
an immediate national mission and an
indispensable, non-negotiable part of the
curriculum.
National repository of language and mathematics resources: The National
Teacher’s Portal (DIKSHA) will have a special section of high quality resources
on foundational literacy and numeracy. These resources will be collated
from across the country and will be used, in particular, for the two initiatives
outlined below.
National Tutors Programme: A National Tutors Programme (NTP) will be
instituted, where the best performers in each school will be drawn in the
programme for up to five hours a week as tutors during the school for fellow
(generally younger) students who need help. Selecting tutors from URGs
whenever possible will be particularly encouraged.
Being selected as a peer tutor will be considered a prestigious position,
earning a certificate from the State each year that indicates the hours of
service.
Remedial Instructional Aides Programme: A Remedial Instructional Aides
Programme (RIAP) will be instituted initially as a temporary 10-year project
to draw instructors - especially women - from local communities to formally
help students who have fallen behind and bring them back into the fold. These
instructional aides would hold special remediation classes during school hours,
after school hours, and during the summer for those children who have fallen
so behind that they cannot catch up without an intervention; when possible,
these children would be grouped by level and pace.
The instructional aides would be true local heroes - bringing back students
who might otherwise drop out, not attend, or never catch up. The IAs would be
drawn from among those in the local communities who have graduated from
Grade 12 (or the highest grade in school that was available in their region at their
time) and who have been among the good performers in their schools. Drawing
P2.4.
P2.5.
P2.6.
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy
61
IAs from socially and economically disadvantaged groups will be particularly
encouraged, to ensure a truly diverse collection of these local role models.
Ensuring that most IAs are women would help empower women and allow
more women to be employed and be a part of the educational systems of
their local communities; it would also greatly help in the enrollment and
retention of girls in the schooling system. Training for these positions
would concentrate specifically on the teaching of foundational literacy and
numeracy.
Should the instructional aides choose to complete a B.Ed. and become
teachers, they will be given suitable credit for their years of IA service upon
employment. Instructional aides will also make for excellent candidates to
be trained to become early childhood education teachers in Anganwadis and
pre-schools.
Two key factors that will determine the effectiveness of this initiative will be
ensuring that IAs are selected on merit and without nepotism, and that they
are provided the necessary workbooks and learning materials for their work
with children.
Encouragement of large-scale community and volunteer involvement:
Qualified volunteers (such as retired teachers and army officers, excellent
students from neighboring schools, and passionate socially-conscious
college graduates from across the country) will also be drawn on a large
scale to join the NTP and the RIAP on an unpaid basis, during the academic
year as well as in the summer, as a service to their communities and to
the country. Thus the NTP and RIAP programmes will each have two
modes: Conventional (consisting of peer tutors, and paid IAs from the local
community) and Volunteer; both modes will be highly encouraged for the
benefit of these programmes. Volunteers will also be awarded certificates
from the State government or Government of India (GOI), honoring their
invaluable contribution to the State and to the nation, and indicating the
hours served as a tutor or IA.
Management of the NTP and RIAP programmes: It will be the responsibility
of the teachers to assess the learning levels of each student in class, and to
identify those students who would make excellent tutors, as well as those
students who could benefit from NTP tutors and RIAP remedial sessions.
Teachers will also work together with principals to recruit IAs, and consider
interested volunteers for both the NTP and RIAP programmes.
Teachers will manage and continually work with tutors and IAs to monitor
each child’s progress and ensure that each child catches up with the average
class level at the earliest.
Regular adaptive assessment: A robust system of adaptive assessment will be
developed and implemented at all levels in schools, in order to help teachers
regularly evaluate each student’s progress, and identify where each student
is on the learning-ladder continuum, and thus provide accurate feedback
P2.7.
P2.8.
P2.9.
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62
and individualised learning plans for students. Adaptive assessments will also
help minimise the importance of rote memory in examinations.
Computer-based adaptive assessment may first be implemented in secondary
schools and, eventually, by 2023, with computers or tablets available in all
schools, extended to cover every student in every school at the basic level and
beyond as needed (see P4.9.3).
Piloting other technological interventions as aids to teachers: Various
technological interventions will be made available to teachers, especially as
computers, tablets, smartphones, and the relevant software will become widely
available. Such interventions will include apps and games on smartphones and
tablets in various regional languages that teach literacy, numeracy, and other
foundational and curriculum material, and carry out adaptive assessments and
other personalised learning. Such technological interventions will never be
viewed as substitutes for teachers, but will be piloted and/or used by teachers
and students as learning aids.
School preparation module for all Grade 1 students: As evidence shows that a
large number of students start to fall behind within the first couple of months
of Grade 1, starting in 2019, all Grade 1 students will begin with a three-monthslong “school preparation module”, which will help ensure that students have the
required learning readiness and prerequisite learning levels prior to starting the
usual Grade 1 syllabus. NCERT will develop a curriculum framework, syllabus
and pedagogical strategy for this school preparation module, which will be
distributed to all Grade 1 teachers and will eventually be incorporated into the
Grade 1 curriculum framework and in related workbooks and other learning
materials. Students will help each other during this module to develop skills
of empathy and helpfulness towards fellow students. This will ensure a solid
foundation, and develop enthusiasm and comradery for early school learning,
for all learners. The module would concentrate on play with alphabets, words,
colours, shapes, and numbers, and would actively involve parents, including
take-home worksheets and interactive activities to be done at home together
with parents to help develop parental involvement in their child’s schoolwork.
A prestigious National Tutors Programme
will be instituted across the country to
enable high-quality peer tutoring among
students.
P2.10.
P2.11.
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy
63
The importance of parental participation: Research evidence points to
the significant impact that home environment has on children’s academic
learning. Collaboration with parents is an essential ingredient in optimising
learning, regardless of parents’ literacy, numeracy, or educational status.
Parents will be asked to meet with their children’s teachers at least twice
every year, and even more often if they wish to do so, or as needed, in order
to help track, encourage, and optimise their children’s learning. Teachers
will also regularly give take-home worksheets, activities, or assignments
to be completed in collaboration with parents to further develop parental
involvement in children’s schoolwork, learning, and progress.
Redesign of teacher education for foundational literacy and numeracy:
Teacher education and development, both pre-service and in-service, will
have a renewed emphasis on the teaching of foundational literacy and
numeracy, including the school preparation module, ECCE, and multilevel
activity-based learning; this emphasis will be particularly relevant for
teachers of Grades 1 and 2.
Teacher education and development at all levels will also include strategies
for: more interactive classrooms with less rote learning; adaptive and
formative assessment; and how best to use tutors, remedial instructors, and
technology (such as apps for smartphones or tablets) in developing optimal
individualised learning plans for students.
All Grade 1 teachers will have the opportunity to go through a 5-day capacity
development workshop for integrating the three-month long “school
preparation module”.
Ensuring proper teacher deployment and teacher conditions, and a Pupil
Teacher Ratio under 30 : 1 at every school: All the measures for strong
foundational literacy and numeracy will require that the PTR be less than
30 : 1. Teacher vacancies will be filled urgently so that this PTR is ensured
not merely at a cluster or block level but in every school; strong preference
will be given to teachers from local areas to help bridge the language
divide. Teacher attendance is key to ensuring proper PTR in the classroom;
conditions for teachers will be such that near-100% teacher attendance is
attained; in particular, teachers must be able to spend the vast majority of
their working time with their students rather than on administrative or
other tasks (see P5.2.3).
A Remedial Instructional Aides
Programme will be instituted to recruit
qualified community members to help
students learn.
P2.13.
P2.12.
P2.14.
National Education Policy 2019
64
Expansion of public and school libraries and building a culture of reading and
communication: To create a culture of reading, public and school libraries will
be expanded across the country, and will contain books - particularly children’s
books - in local and regional languages. Schools and school complexes will also
have a large selection of books in local languages, and teachers will actively
encourage children to take books home to read.Students will be asked to read
excerpts from their favourite books/stories and present oral summaries and
their own thoughts each week or month in front of their class, to encourage
reading as well as develop communication skills. As students learn more
languages, these readings and presentations could then be carried out in
additional languages.
Role of social workers and counsellors: Social workers and counsellors will be
hired to school complexes (see P3.8) to work with students - and their parents,
teachers, tutors, IAs, and community members - to help ensure the retention
in school and the mental health of all children.
Mobilisation of the local community and of volunteers: Teachers, parents,
students, community members, and the public must and will be made aware
of this urgent national mission to end the learning crisis, and of the resulting
opportunities available for community and volunteer involvement. Large-scale
public service announcements, media campaigns, and direct communications
between schools and their communities in this direction will be prioritised
to maximise involvement of passionate citizens across the country; this will
also help recruit community members and volunteers for the NTP and RIAP
programmes. Last but not least, the principle that every literate citizen commit
to teaching at least one child (or adult) how to read will be highly publicised,
encouraged, facilitated, and supported (see also Chapter 21).
To repeat, our highest priority must be to achieve universal foundational
literacy and numeracy in primary school and beyond by 2025. The rest of the
Policy will be largely irrelevant for such a large portion of our students if this
most basic learning (reading, writing, and arithmetic at the foundational level)
is not first achieved.
P2.15.
P2.16.
P2.17.
3. Reintegrating Dropouts and Ensuring Universal Access to Education
65
Chapter 3
Reintegrating Dropouts
and Ensuring Universal
Access to Education
Objective: Achieve access and participation in free and
compulsory quality school education for all children in the
age group of 3-18 years by 2030.
One of the primary goals of the schooling system must be to ensure that
children are actually enrolled in and attending school. Through initiatives
such as the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and the RTE Act, India has made
remarkable strides in recent years in attaining near-universal enrollment in
primary school: according to U-DISE data, the Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER)
in 2016-17 for Grades 1-5 was at 95.1%. However, the data for later grades
indicates some serious issues in retaining children in the schooling system.
The GER for Grades 6-8 was 90.7%, while for Grades 9-10 and 11-12 it was
only 79.3% and 51.3%, respectively - indicating that a significant proportion
of enrolled students begin to drop out after Grade 5 and especially after
Grade 8. In absolute numbers, an estimated 6.2 crore children of school age
(between 6 and 18 years) were out of school in 2015.
It must be a top priority of the country to bring these children back into the
educational fold as early as possible, and to prevent further students from
dropping out.
What causes such large numbers of students to drop out? One key reason
has already been mentioned in Chapters 1 and 2: so many students find
themselves falling increasingly behind in school as time passes by - many
not even attaining foundational literacy and numeracy by Grade 5 or even by
Grade 8 - that it becomes a waste of their time to attend school.
National Education Policy 2019
66
The problem of access to schools also remains a major concern. While the
problem of access has been largely solved for primary and even upper primary
schools - the vast majority of children in 2016-17 had a primary and upper
primary school within close proximity - access to secondary schools and
upper secondary schools remains a very serious issue. In 2016-17, for every 100
primary schools/sections in India, there were about 50 upper primary schools/
sections, 20 secondary schools/sections, and only about 9 higher secondary
schools/sections. For many children, this means that the closest secondary and
higher secondary schools are at prohibitively large distances - too far to walk,
with no safe and practical conveyances available to reach school.
Bringing children who have dropped out
back into the educational fold as early
as possible, and preventing others from
dropping out is top priority.
Socio-cultural and economic issues also play a significant role in dropout rates.
For example, some children and adolescents are not sent to secondary school
because of harmful practices relating to early or child marriage, perceived
roles of gender or caste, or child labour and pressure on children/adolescents
to work and earn. Often the need to care for siblings prevents older children
from attending school. In regions with poor hygienic conditions, lack of good
sanitation and unhealthy food habits unfortunately make children prone to
chronic illnesses, thereby preventing them from attending classes consistently
or at all.
There also remain serious issues of inadequate infrastructure and lack
of safety. Many children, especially girls, drop out due to lack of working
toilet facilities; others - particularly girls and children from various other
Underrepresented Groups (URGs) - drop out due to problems with harassment
and safety. Sometimes students’ bicycles are stolen while at school, and they
are forced to drop out.
Finally, some children and adolescents report dropping out, not because of any
of the above reasons, but simply because they do not find school interesting
or useful.
What can be done to bring children who have dropped out back to school
and to prevent further children from dropping out? There are two basic
initiatives that must be undertaken.
The first is to provide effective and sufficient infrastructure so that all
students have access to safe and engaging school education at all levels from
3. Reintegrating Dropouts and Ensuring Universal Access to Education
67
pre-primary school through Grade 12. This will be attained by upgrading
and enlarging the schools that already exist, building additional quality
schools in areas where they do not exist, and providing safe and practical
conveyances and/or hostels to children as needed so that all children have
the opportunity to attend a quality school of the appropriate level.
The second is to achieve universal participation in school by carefully
tracking students, as well as their learning levels in school, in order
to continually work towards ensuring that they a) are enrolled in and
attending school, and b) have suitable opportunities for remediation and reentry to catch up in case they have fallen behind or dropped out. The “free
and compulsory” aspect of the RTE Act must be enforced, and extended
through Grade 12 and to all children up to the age of 18. Social workers and
counsellors recruited to school complexes will continuously work with
students, parents, teachers, and communities to ensure that all school-age
children are attending and learning in school.
Access will be increased, especially for
Grades 9-12, to achieve 100% GER across
school stages.
Once infrastructure and participation are in place, ensuring quality across
the board is indeed key in retaining students, so that students and parents
do not lose interest in attending school. This will require a strong channel
for the best teachers to be deployed to areas where dropout rates are
particularly high, as well as an overhaul of the curriculum to make it more
engaging, dynamic, and useful; these last two points will be addressed in
more detail in the next two chapters, respectively.
The current chapter will therefore focus on these two basic issues of creating
effective school infrastructure and then ensuring participation.
Creating effective school infrastructure
Addressing access gaps in infrastructure: The number and coverage of
schools/sections will be increased at all levels, especially Grades 9-12, in
order to work towards achieving 100% GER from the Foundational Stage
through Grade 12 for all children by 2030.
P3.1.
National Education Policy 2019
68
The strategy will consist of:
a. Increasing the intake capacity of existing schools in areas where many
students are out of school;
b. Building new educational facilities in under-served or un-served locations;
and
c. Consolidating existing stand-alone primary, upper primary, secondary,
and higher secondary schools - especially those that may have too low an
attendance to be sustainable on their own - into composite schools/school
complex whenever possible.
Note that composite schools/school complexes containing a wider range of
grade levels have a number of advantages, including the sharing of material
and human resources, a wider range of classes and opportunities for students,
and the ability of siblings and neighbors of differing ages to travel together to
and attend the same school.
Appropriate norms for the expansion, establishment, and consolidation of
schools will be developed for each region/State/district based on the local reality,
with the understanding that proximate access in the early years is critical. The
current rigid norms for school access (based solely on distance from habitations
of residence) will be made flexible to meet local geographic and demographic
needs, without compromising on access, quality, equity, and safety.
Social workers will help track student
attendance and work towards bringing
dropouts back into school; programmes
like the NTP and RIAP will enable this.
Supporting transport facilities: School rationalisation as in P3.1 will take
place alongside efforts to enhance roads and transport facilities to schools.
Bicycles will be provided to older children, especially girls, as necessary in
order to enable educational access (with appropriate measures for security of
the bicycles at the school), with arrangements made for travel in groups to the
maximal extent possible.
Other transport facilities, such as school buses, organised walking groups, paid
walking escorts, or a transport allowance, will also be provided as appropriate,
especially for younger children, girls, and Children With Special Needs (CWSN)
to ensure safe transport; in rural areas or where the routes to school are not
safely or feasibly walkable, cycle rickshaws could also be provided to local
community members (such as a parent of a child in the school), who would
P3.2.
3. Reintegrating Dropouts and Ensuring Universal Access to Education
69
be hired and paid a stipend for ensuring the safe transport to school of 2-4
young children each.
Supporting hostel facilities: Free room and board facilities in the form of
hostels will be built - matching the standard of Navodaya Vidyalayas - in
school locations where students may have to come from particularly far,
and/or for students who come from disadvantaged economic backgrounds,
with suitable arrangements for the safety of all children, especially girls
(e.g. girls’ hostels would be separate and have female wardens and security
guards). In particular, the Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas (KGBV) will be
strengthened and expanded to increase the participation in quality schools
(up to Grade 12) of girls from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
Ensuring security: Appropriate measures will be taken at all schools at all
levels to ensure the safety of students (particularly girls and other URGs) by
building safe infrastructure (including roads and conveyances for transport),
hiring security guards (especially female security guards) according to
needs, maintaining connections with local police, and arranging credible
mechanisms for students to report harassment or other transgressions, and
for appropriate reviews and actions to be taken in an expedited manner. A
zero-tolerance policy towards breaches of child rights will be adopted to
ensure physical and emotional safety of children.
To avoid instances of girls and other children dropping out due to facing
harassment on the way to, or within the school, school principals, social
workers and local law enforcement will work together to identify the
miscreants and discipline them, and take legal action if needed. A 24 x 7
helpline number will also be communicated among the public. The local
police will work with the social workers to instruct parents and students
on identifying and reporting incidences of harassment, both within and
outside the school. Areas where harassment is one of the major reasons for
high dropout rates will be given special attention.
Ensuring participation and learning
Monitoring students’ attendance in school: Transparent and reliable
systems for tracking attendance of all students will be set up at the local
level in collaboration with teachers and SMCs. Parents will be contacted to
inquire as to the reasons for the absence of any student. Effective strategies
will be put in place for boosting attendance, such as the provision of both
morning and midday meals, and recognition of and awards to students
having 100% or near-100% attendance.
Monitoring students who may be falling behind: Teachers will consistently
monitor learning outcomes of students through adaptive assessments in
order to identify students who may be falling behind, and work to set up
personalised learning strategies for these students in consultation with
P3.3.
P3.4.
P3.5.
P3.6.
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70
parents to help them catch up, including connecting them to remediation
programmes such as the NTP and RIAP; see P2.5 and P2.6.
Tracking out-of-school children: An appropriate area-specific and locally
relevant mechanism will be put in place, in collaboration with social workers,
principals, community members, and SMCs, for tracking down and forming
a database of all dropouts and out-of-school children. In most cases, social
workers appointed to the school complex will take charge of managing the
database, interfacing with the community, and ensuring that every child in the
database is cared for and helped to return to school.
Role of social workers and counsellors: In cases of a) enrolled students having
lengthy absences beyond a few days, b) enrolled students falling vastly behind,
or c) children who have never enrolled or who have dropped out, social workers
appointed to the school complex will pro-actively meet with such children
and their parents to understand why they are not attending or enrolled, or
why they are falling behind, and will work with them (in collaboration with
counsellors) to help ensure attendance/enrolment, and (in consultation with
teachers) connect them to remedial programmes such as NTP and RIAP or
alternative learning programmes. Social workers will also help in identifying
and managing CWSN to ensure that they are fully engaged with the education
system.
Role of schools in children’s health: In areas where poor sanitary conditions,
unhygienic food practices, and lack of appropriate precautions cause diseases
among school age children, subsequently causing them to drop out, schools,
social workers, counsellors, and/or health workers will help instruct parents,
students, and the community-at-large on good health, hygiene, cleanliness,
and timely vaccination practices, and will connect them to the appropriate
health services so that children may return to school as soon as possible.
Hiring of health workers to school complexes will be prioritised in areas with
widespread malnutrition, disease, and lack of sanitation in order to ensure the
well-being of children and as a consequence their attendance and progress in
school.
Second-chance education programmes for long-term out-of-school
adolescents: In cases of children or adolescents who have been out of school
for multiple years, sustained programmatic initiatives will be undertaken
to provide them meaningful education and training opportunities. Access
to second-chance education programmes will be enhanced by establishing
equivalency and bridging programmes, recognised and accredited by the
school education system, wherever remedial programmes such NTP and RIAP
are insufficient.
Strengthening of institutional capacity for expanding second-chance
educational opportunities will be accorded priority, including vocational
P3.7.
P3.8.
P3.9.
P3.10.
3. Reintegrating Dropouts and Ensuring Universal Access to Education
71
education and skills development opportunities (e.g. market-driven courses
to make them rapidly employable).
Dropouts aged 15 and above, who have fallen too far behind or are nearly
illiterate, will be given the alternative option to attend adult literacy
programmes (see Chapter 21) to gain foundational and functional literacy,
and then, if desired, enrol in vocational training programmes conducted for
adult neo-literates. Such decisions, regarding the optimal solution for each
student, will be made in consultation with the students themselves, their
parents, school teachers, and social workers.
Enabling multiple pathways to learning: To facilitate learning for all
students, including CWSN or children of migrant workers, the scope of
school education will be broadened to facilitate multiple pathways to
learning involving formal and non-formal education modes. One of the
thrusts would be to develop and utilise innovative educational platforms
involving the use of technology, including the development and sharing of
e-resources and promotion of e-learning, and introduction of assessment
on demand. Open and Distance Learning (ODL) Programmes offered by
the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) will be expanded and
strengthened for meeting the learning needs of young people in India who
are not able to attend a physical school. Keeping in view the diversified needs
of the target groups, NIOS will continue to offer Open Basic Education for
learners aged above 14 years, including adolescents and adults. In addition,
the following programmes will be offered: education at A, B and C levels that
are equivalent to Grades 3, 5, and 8 of the formal school system; secondary
education programmes that are equivalent to Grades 10 and 12; vocational
education courses/programmes; and adult literacy and life-enrichment
programmes. States will be encouraged to develop State analogues of these
offerings in regional languages by establishing State Institutes of Open
Schooling (SIOS).
Allowing multiple models for schools, and loosening the input restrictions
of the RTE Act: To make it easier for both governments as well as nongovernmental philanthropic organisations to build schools, to encourage
local variations on account of culture, geography, and demographics, and
to allow alternative models of education such as gurukulas, paathshaalas,
madrasas, and home schooling, the RTE Act requirements for schools will
be made substantially less restrictive. The focus will be to have less emphasis
on input and greater emphasis on output potential with respect to desired
learning outcomes. Regulations on inputs will be limited to ensuring safety
of children (both physical and psychological), access and inclusion, the nonprofit nature of schools, and minimum standards for learning outcomes.
Enabling the construction of quality schools by all parties with greater
flexibility will create greater educational choices for students and healthy
competition among schools, leading to enhanced access to more and higherquality schools (including higher-quality government schools). Other models
for schools will also be piloted, such as philanthropic-public partnerships.
P3.11.
P3.12.
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72
Extension of the RTE Act to include secondary education: The availability of
free and compulsory quality secondary education (Grades 9-12; typically ages
14-18) will be included as an integral part of the RTE Act to ensure that, by
2030, all students enrol and participate in quality school education through
Grade 12 (see P8.4.1).
P3.13.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
73
Chapter 4
Curriculum and
Pedagogy in Schools
Objective: Curriculum and pedagogy are transformed by 2022
in order to minimise rote learning and instead encourage
holistic development and 21st century skills such as critical
thinking, creativity, scientific temper, communication,
collaboration, multilingualism, problem solving, ethics,
social responsibility, and digital literacy.
4.1. A new curricular and pedagogical
structure for school education
One of the most well-known legacies of the National Policy on Education
1968 is the “10+2” structure of the school education system - an extremely
important and influential recommendation for the time which helped to
standardise and uniformise the structure of school education across the
country. In many parts of the country, the 12 years of the 10+2 system have
been referred to as Grades / Classes 1-12, with Grades 1-5 the primary stage,
Grades 6-8 the upper primary stage, Grades 9-10 the secondary stage, and
Grades 11-12 the higher secondary, pre-university, intermediate, or junior
college stage.
While the 10+2 system of school education has served the country well over
the past 50 years - and has been an important step forward in uniformising
the school education structure in India - modern times and needs with
respect to employment and beyond, together with advances and discoveries
in cognitive science, have also made clear that a new structure for the
National Education Policy 2019
74
educational system is required in order to deliver the vision of education
enunciated in this Policy and to prepare our students optimally in the 21st
century.
The restructuring of school education mentioned in this Policy is based, in
particular, on the cognitive importance of play-based ECCE starting at age
3, together with the modern necessity of providing free and compulsory
education for all students through Grade 12 - as was already discussed in
the first three chapters. Furthermore, within this school-age range of 3 to 18
years, there must be periodic changes in curricular and pedagogical delivery
and styles, designed to be in sync with a child’s natural cognitive, emotional,
and physical development. For example, as already mentioned in Chapter 1,
studies in cognitive science demonstrate that children prior to the age of 8
learn best through play-based, activity-based, and discovery-based multilevel
flexible styles of learning and interaction, whereas around the age of 8 children
naturally begin to adapt to a more prescripted style of learning, indicating that
teaching-learning processes in Grade 3 may also begin to transition to a more
formal style of learning, e.g. by incorporating some basic textbooks, while still
maintaining a strong play- and discovery-based approach.
Meanwhile, by the age of 11, children begin to develop the capacity for
abstraction. At this stage, i.e., around Grade 6, it therefore becomes beneficial
for students to begin to have specialised subject teachers in the classroom,
where students’ discussion of higher-level concepts within each subject area
becomes possible and indeed desirable. By the age of 14, i.e., Grade 9, adolescents
begin to think about their life plans; schooling at this stage must therefore
build on the styles of previous stages, while also incorporating preparation
for university, for the world of work, and for life. Students at this stage must
have flexibility of subject options for their differing talents, interests, goals, and
ambitions, including access to vocational and arts courses. A semester-based
system, which allows exposure to a multitude of subjects at differing levels, can
be of great benefit to students at this stage.
Based on these natural cognitive and practical considerations regarding the
optimal holistic development of students, the following new curricular and
pedagogical structure for school education will therefore be of immense value in
truly revolutionising, and thereby making more effective, our school education
system (it must be noted that the physical infrastructure of schools need not
necessarily be aligned with this pedagogical and curricular organisation):
A new developmentally appropriate
curriculum and pedagogical structure for
school education: 5 + 3 + 3 + 4 design.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
75
Restructuring school curriculum and pedagogy in a new 5+3+3+4 design:
The curricular and pedagogical structure of school education will be
reconfigured to make them responsive and relevant to the developmental
needs and interests of learners at different stages of their development,
corresponding to the age ranges of 3-8, 8-11, 11-14, and 14-18 years, respectively.
The curricular and pedagogical structure and the curricular framework for
school education will therefore be guided by a 5+3+3+4 design:
• 5 years of the Foundational Stage: 3 years of pre-primary school
and Grades 1, 2.
• 3 years of the Preparatory (or Latter Primary) Stage: Grades 3, 4, 5.
• 3 years of the Middle (or Upper Primary) Stage: Grades 6, 7, 8.
• 4 years of the High (or Secondary) Stage: Grades 9, 10, 11, 12.
a. The Foundational Stage will comprise five years of flexible, multilevel,
play-based, activity-based, and discovery-based learning, continuously
incorporating the latest research in ECCE as well as the various timetested Indian traditions for cognitive and emotional stimulation of
children.
b. The Preparatory Stage will comprise three years of education, building on
the play-, discovery-, and activity-based pedagogical and curricular style
of the Foundational Stage, but also gradually beginning to incorporate
textbooks as well as aspects of more formal classroom learning. There
would mostly be generalist teachers during this stage, with the possible
exception of some specialist language and art teachers (who may be
shared across the school or school complex). The aim of this stage will be
to lay the general groundwork across subjects, including reading, writing,
speaking, physical education, art, languages, science, and mathematics,
so that students are prepared to delve deeper into learning areas through
specialised subjects and subject teachers in the stages that follow.
c. The Middle Stage will comprise three years of education, building on the
more formal pedagogical and curricular style of the Elementary Stage,
but will see the introduction of subject teachers for learning/discussion
of the more abstract concepts in each subject that students will be ready
for at this stage across the sciences, mathematics, arts, social sciences, and
humanities. Experiential learning within each subject, and explorations
of relations among different subjects, will be encouraged and emphasised
despite the introduction of more specialised subjects and subject teachers.
d. The Secondary Stage will comprise four years of multidisciplinary study,
and will build on the subject-oriented pedagogical and curricular style
of the Middle stage, but with greater depth, greater critical thinking,
greater attention to life aspirations, and greater flexibility and student
choice. Each year of the Secondary Stage will be divided into 2 semesters,
for a total of 8 semesters. Each student would take 5 to 6 subjects each
semester. There will be some essential common subjects for all, while
simultaneously there will be a great flexibility in selecting elective courses
(including in the arts, vocational subjects, and physical education) so
P4.1.1.
National Education Policy 2019
76
that all students can expand their horizons as they see fit and explore their
individual interests and talents. A system of modular Board Examinations
- restructured to test only core concepts, principles, critical thinking,
and other higher-order skills in each subject - will help to pin down the
common courses, while great flexibility will be offered for remaining
courses (see P4.9.5). The notions of “higher secondary” or “junior college”
will be eliminated; Grades 11 and 12 will be considered an integral part of the
secondary stage.
All stages will heavily incorporate Indian and local traditions, as well as ethical
reasoning, socio-emotional learning, quantitative and logical reasoning,
computational thinking and digital literacy, scientific temper, languages, and
communication skills, in a manner that is developmentally appropriate and in
the curricular/pedagogical style that is optimal for each stage.
The above-described stages are purely curricular and pedagogical, designed to
optimise learning for students based on cognitive development of children;
they will inform the development of National and State curricula and teachinglearning strategies at each stage, but it will not be necessary to make parallel
changes to physical infrastructure.
Interactive and fun classrooms, where
questions are encouraged, with creative,
collaborative, and exploratory activities
for deeper and more experiential
learning.
4.2. Holistic development of learners
The key overall thrust of curriculum and pedagogy reform across all stages
will be to move the education system towards real understanding and learning
how to learn - and away from the culture of rote learning present today. The
goal will be to create holistic and complete individuals equipped with key 21st
century skills. All aspects of curriculum and pedagogy will be reoriented and
revamped in order to attain these critical goals.
Reorientation of the content and process of school education: The entire
school education curriculum will be reoriented to develop holistic learners and
develop in learners higher order skills of critical thinking, creativity, logical
deduction, collaboration/teamwork, social responsibility, multilingualism,
quantitative reasoning, and digital literacy. Learning will thus move away from
rote memorisation; if and when rote learning is used, it will always be preP4.2.1.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
77
accompanied by context and motivation, and post-accompanied by analysis,
discussion, and application.
The curriculum will aim at enabling learners to attain learning outcomes
relating to all curricular areas, including sports, science, art, language,
literature, and ethics education, thereby ensuring that all children and youth
receive an education that helps realise their potential, in all realms, to the
fullest.
4.3. Reduce curriculum content to
enhance essential learning and critical
thinking
The Policy recognises, from inputs of teachers, students, scientists, and
educators, that the curriculum content is currently severely overloaded.
Both the 1993 MHRD Yashpal Committee report 1993 “Learning Without
Burden” and the NCF 2005 highlighted the great need for reducing our
overcrowded curriculum content load in favour of a more engaging, holistic,
experiential, and analysis-based form of learning. Those well-researched
recommendations have never been more relevant than today. Indeed, today,
the rush in classrooms to finish and rush through all the mandated curricular
material via rote memorisation continues to prevent opportunities for
critical thinking and discovery-based, discussion-based, and analysis-based
learning - and thus true understanding - from taking place.
Reduce curriculum load in each subject to its essential core content, in
order to make space for more holistic, experiential, discussion-based,
and analysis-based learning: The mandated contents in the curriculum
will be reduced, in each subject area, to its core, focussing on key concepts
and essential ideas. This will thereby yield more space for discussion and
nuanced understanding, analysis, and application of key concepts. Teaching
and learning will strive to be conducted in a more interactive manner;
questions will be encouraged, and classroom sessions will regularly contain
more fun, creative, collaborative, and exploratory activities for students for
deeper and more experiential learning.
Students will be given increased
flexibility and choice of subjects to study
across the arts, humanities, sciences,
sports, and vocational subjects.
P4.3.1.
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78
4.4. Empower students through
flexibility in course choices
Reducing the curriculum content load - in addition to allowing greater room for
nuanced understanding, analysis, and discussion in mandated curriculum - will
also enable students to explore subjects beyond the current usual curriculum.
Learners must be empowered to have more flexibility in the courses that they
take, especially in secondary school, so that they may make the best use of their
time in school; in particular, they must be given the time and the options to
experiment with different subjects in a more hands-on and experiential way
in order to decide what they enjoy, and so that they can gradually assess what
they may want to do with their lives. Specialisation should be delayed, so that
students’ choices are not dictated simply by parents or society, but rather via
their own experiences, interests, and self-reflections.
All fields of human endeavor, including arts, crafts, and sports, are valuable to
both human and societal advancement, and so should be actively pursued by
students in their curricula to achieve holistic development. In particular, there
should be no extra-curricular and co-curricular activities; all such activities
must also be considered curricular. A holistic approach to education must
come hand-in-hand with student empowerment and choice, and all subjects
should carry importance within the curriculum for each student according to
his/her choices and inclinations.
Increased flexibility in choice of subjects: Students will be given an increased
flexibility and choice of subjects to study, particularly in secondary school -
including subjects in physical education, the arts, and vocational crafts - so that
they may be free to design their own paths of study and life plans. Continuing
holistic development and a wide choice of subjects and courses year to year will
be the new distinguishing feature of secondary school education.
No hard separation of content in terms of curricular, extra-curricular, or
co-curricular areas: All school subjects will be considered curricular rather
than extra-curricular or co-curricular, including sports, yoga, dance, music,
drawing, painting, sculpting, pottery making, woodworking, gardening, and
electric work. NCERT will prepare syllabi and textbooks as per the National
Curriculum Framework, to incorporate these subjects into the national
curriculum, which the State Councils of Educational Research and Training
(SCERTs) in States may edit, supplement, and rewrite as per States’ needs.
Subjects such as physical education, the arts, and vocational crafts will be
seriously incorporated throughout the school curriculum, with a consideration
for what is interesting and safe at each age.
No hard separation of arts and sciences: All students will have the opportunity
to engage deeply in the arts and humanities as well as in the study of the
sciences and social sciences. Such a separation will be discouraged in higher
education as well; see Section 11.2.
P4.4.2.
P4.4.3.
P4.4.1.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
79
No hard separation of “vocational” and “academic” streams: The curricula
for elementary and secondary education will ensure that there will be no
hard separation of “vocational” and “academic” streams as all students will
have the opportunity of developing both kinds of capacities. With the rapidly
changing economic scenarios, fundamental capacities have become even
more important than specific skills. Pre-vocational orientation - exposure
to different vocations - will begin during the elementary stage, and will be
available to every child. Learning will primarily be experiential and will aim at
fostering respect for a variety of professions. All students will take vocational
courses which will be an integral part of the formal curriculum, and will
give learners in-depth exposure to areas such as agriculture, electronics,
local trades and crafts, etc. The areas of emphasis will be identified by
careful planning at the district level, and schools will be provided adequate
infrastructure and resources to deliver rigorous vocational education in
these areas. During the school years, students will be exposed to different
careers, and will be kept abreast of the ever-changing world of employment
and the corresponding curricular choices available to them.
There will be no hard separation
between ‘arts’ and ‘science’ streams, or
between ‘academic’ and ‘vocational’
streams.
4.5.Education in the local language/
mother tongue; multilingualism and
the power of language
The issues regarding language are most fundamental to education. Language
is a medium of expression of the individual, society and its collective
continuity in culture, in addition to being a tool for communication.
Language has a direct bearing as the mediator in all cognitive and social
capacities, including in knowledge acquisition and production. The science
of child development and language acquisition suggests that young children
become literate in (as a language) and learn best through (as a medium of
instruction) their “local language” i.e. the language spoken at home.
Children between the ages of 2 and 8 also have an extremely flexible
capacity to learn multiple languages, which is a crucial social capacity that
must be harnessed, in addition to the well-established cognitive benefits of
multilingualism.
P4.4.4.
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80
Since children learn languages
most quickly between 2-8 years, and
multilingualism has great cognitive
benefits for students, children will be
immersed in three languages early on,
from the Foundational Stage.
Education in the home language/mother tongue
It is well-understood that young children learn and grasp nontrivial concepts
most quickly in their home language/mother tongue. The Policy further
recognises the large numbers of students going to school to classes that are
being conducted in a language that they do not understand, causing them
to fall behind before they even start learning. Thus there is a strong need for
classes in early years to be conducted in students’ local languages. On the other
hand, textbooks (especially science textbooks) written in India’s vernaculars at
the current time are generally not nearly of the same quality as those written
in English. It is important that local languages, including tribal languages, are
respected and that excellent textbooks are developed in local languages, when
possible, and outstanding teachers are deployed to teach in these languages.
Home language/mother tongue as medium of instruction: When possible,
the medium of instruction - at least until Grade 5 but preferably till at least
Grade 8 - will be the home language/mother tongue/local language. Thereafter,
the home/local language shall continue to be taught as a language wherever
possible. High quality textbooks, including in science, will be made available in
home languages as is needed and feasible, e.g. via the Indian Translation and
Interpretation Mission (see P4.8.4) or its State counterparts. In cases where
such textbook material is not available, the language of transaction between
teachers and students will still remain the home language when possible, even
if textbooks are, e.g. in the State/regional language.
The school education system will make its best effort to use the regionally
preponderant home language as the medium of instruction. However, the
system should also make full efforts to establish an adequate number of schools
having medium of instruction catering to significant linguistic minorities in
that region.
Bilingual approach for those whose language is different from the primary
medium of instruction: The curriculum will encourage a flexible language
approach in the classroom. 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 to
ensure smoother transition from the home language to the medium of
instruction.
P4.5.1.
P4.5.2.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
81
Exposure to three or more languages in schools: To leverage the enhanced
language-learning abilities of young children, all students from pre-school
and Grade 1 onwards will be exposed to three or more languages with the
aim of developing speaking proficiency and interaction, and the ability to
recognise scripts and read basic text, in all three languages by Grade 3. In
terms of writing, students will begin writing primarily in the medium of
instruction until Grade 3, after which writing with additional scripts will
also be introduced gradually.
Standardising sign language: Indian Sign Language (ISL) will be standardised
across the country, and National and State curriculum materials developed,
for use by students with hearing impairment. Local sign languages will be
respected and taught as well where possible and relevant.
Multilingualism and the power of language
Multilinguism is a necessity of India (as of much of the developed world), and
must be considered a boon and an opportunity for learning and expanding
one’s horizons rather than a burden. Children learn languages extremely
quickly when immersed early, and multilingual children in studies around
the world have also been found to learn faster and be placed better later in life
than those who are unilingual. It enriches them intellectually and culturally,
and allows them, throughout their lives, to think in more than one way, by
being equipped with the structures of expression, vocabulary, idioms, and
literature of more than one language. A multilingual India is better educated
and also better nationally integrated. Moreover, India’s languages are some
of the richest, most scientific, and most expressive in the world, with a huge
body of ancient as well as modern literature that help form India’s national
identity.
Despite the rich, expressive and scientific nature of Indian languages, there
has been an unfortunate trend in schools and society towards English as a
medium of instruction and as a medium of conversation. Logically speaking,
of course, English has no advantage over other languages in expressing
thoughts; on the contrary, Indian languages have been specifically developed
over centuries and generations to express thoughts in the Indian scenario,
climate, and culture. Moreover, Indian languages are very scientifically
structured, and do not have unphonetic, complicated spellings of words
and numerous grammatical exceptions; they also have a vast and highly
sophisticated ancient, medieval, and modern literature in the Indian context;
as a consequence, they have a certain home-feel and “apnaapan” quality in
the Indian context, making them easier, more relatable, and more relevant
for children and adults alike to learn and speak, and with which to learn and
express deep concepts across school subjects.
What then is the reason that English is being pursued by so many in
India as a medium of instruction and of conversation, when most other
technologically advanced countries of the world have naturally kept their
P4.5.3.
P4.5.4.
National Education Policy 2019
82
own native languages for these purposes? The answer, of course, is that, since
Independence, the economic elite of India have adopted English as their
language; only about 15% of the country speaks English, and this population
almost entirely coincides with the economic elite (compared with, e.g. 54% of
Indians who speak Hindi). Furthermore, the elite often use English (whether
deliberately or inadvertently) as a test for entry into the elite class and for the
jobs that they control: English is regularly used by the elite as a criterion to
determine whether someone is “educated”, and perhaps most unfortunately
of all, as a prerequisite for jobs - even in cases of jobs where knowledge of
English is entirely irrelevant. This sad scenario and attitude (again, it may well
be inadvertent) has resulted in the marginalisation of large sections of society
based on language, keeping them out of higher-paying jobs and the higher
socio-economic strata.
This attitude has kept the elite class and the jobs they control segregated from
the economically weaker sections of society, which of course contain many
hardworking, smart, high quality, highly skilled, and educated people who
happen not to speak the language of the colonists and current elite. It has
created an unnatural aspiration of parents for their children to concentrate on
learning and speaking languages that are not their own.
For true equity and inclusion in society, and in the education and employment
systems across the country, this power structure of language must be stopped
at the earliest. A major effort in this direction must be taken by the elite and
the educated to make increased use of languages native to India, and give
these languages the space and respect that they deserve (particularly in hiring,
societal events, and in schools and all educational institutions, as well as in
daily conversation wherever possible). An importance and prominence must
be returned to Indian languages that has been lost in recent years. Language
teaching jobs must be created in schools and universities across the country to
help connect together Indians from differing geographical areas as well as from
differing socio-economic strata.
In particular, taking into account the enhanced abilities of young children to
learn languages, and to help break the current divide between the economic
elite and the rest of the country, in addition to teaching languages native to
India, English must also be available and taught in a high quality manner at
all government and non-government schools. The emphasis should be on
functionality and fluency. Meanwhile the medium of instruction, and the
depth of study of literature, arts, and culture in the Indian context should be
conducted and explored to the extent possible through the local language/
mother tongue and other Indian languages.
We further observe that English has not become the international language that
it was expected to become back in the 1960s. As already noted, most advanced
countries use their own native languages as the languages of interaction and
transaction, and it is suggested that India works towards the same, or its rich
language and cultural heritage, along with the rich power of expression, may
slowly be lost. It is also strongly recommended that interactions between people
within India be conducted in languages native to India; thus Indian languages
must be heavily promoted again and with new vigour (see Chapter 22).
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
83
Of course, English has become an international common language in certain
realms such as science and technology research, e.g. most high level scientific
journals around the world at the current time publish predominantly in
English. For this reason, it is also important for children (especially those
who intend to pursue scientific subjects at a postgraduate level) to become
bilingual in science and to be able to communicate science fluently both in
their home/local language and in English. This is in concurrence with the
practice in all technologically advanced countries.
Continuation of the three language formula in schools: The three language
formula, followed since the adoption of the National Policy on Education
1968, and endorsed in the National Policy on Education 1986/1992 as well
as the NCF 2005, will be continued, keeping in mind the Constitutional
provisions and aspirations of the people, regions, and the Union.
However, because research now clearly shows that children pick up
languages extremely quickly between the ages of 2 and 8, and moreover that
multilingualism has great cognitive benefits to students, children will now
be immersed in three languages early on, starting from the Foundational
Stage onwards.
Implementation of the three-language formula: The three-language
formula will need to be implemented in its spirit throughout the country,
promoting multilingual communicative abilities for a multilingual country.
However, it must be better implemented in certain States, particularly Hindispeaking States; for purposes of national integration, schools in Hindispeaking areas should also offer and teach Indian languages from other
parts of India. This would help raise the status of all Indian languages, the
teachers of such languages, and the literature of such languages, and would
open positions and increase opportunities for language teachers across the
country; it would of course also truly expand horizons and enlarge the range
of opportunities for graduating students.
There will be a major effort from both the Central and State governments to
invest in large numbers of language teachers in all regional languages around
the country, and in particular all Schedule 8 languages. States, especially
States from different regions of India, may enter bilateral agreements to
hire teachers in large numbers from each other other, in order to satisfy the
three-language formula in their respective States, and also to encourage the
study of Indian languages across the country.
Recruitment of teachers for language teaching: In localities where there
is a shortage of teachers who speak a given language, special efforts will be
made, and special schemes rolled out, to recruit teachers (including retired
teachers) to that locality who speak that language. There will be a major
nationwide effort and initiative for the development of teachers of Indian
languages.
P4.5.5.
P4.5.6.
P4.5.7.
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Learning science bilingually: Students whose medium of instruction is the
local/home language will begin to learn science bilingually in Grade 8 or earlier,
so that by the end of Grade 10 they can speak about science both in their home
language and English.
This will enable students to think about scientific concepts in more than one
way, and enable future scientists to talk about their work and about science to
their families and to local news channels, write about their work for regional
newspapers, and speak to children about their work in their home States and
towns to help inspire the next generation.
Being science-bilingual in this way is indeed a boon; most Nobel Prize winners
in science indeed report being able to think and speak about science in
more than one language. In the current Indian system, many scientists have
complained about their inability to think and speak about their subject in their
mother tongue, and how this has hindered both their own thinking and their
outreach capabilities in their communities.
Flexibility in the choice of languages: In keeping with the principle of
flexibility, students who wish to change one of the three languages they
are studying may do so in Grade 6, so long as the study of three languages
by students in the Hindi-speaking states would continue to include Hindi
and English and one of the modern Indian languages from other parts of
India, while the study of languages by students in the non-Hindi-speaking
states would include the regional language, Hindi and English. The change
in language choice by students in the middle school will be subject to the
condition that they would still require to demonstrate the expected level of
proficiency in three languages (one language at the literature level) in their
modular Board Examinations some time during secondary school (see P4.9.5).
Since the modular Board Examinations for language proficiency will indeed test
only for basic proficiency in each language, and since it is possible to achieve
basic proficiency in a language in a span of about four years, such a change in
language choice in Grade 6 would certainly be feasible if the student so desires
and would in such cases be supported by teachers and the schooling system.
Additional choices of languages would therefore be offered in middle school
for facilitating flexibility in the study of languages within the three language
formula.
Foreign language offerings in secondary school: A choice of foreign
language(s) (e.g. French, German, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese) would be offered
and available to interested students to choose as elective(s) during secondary
school. Such an elective would indeed be an elective and not in lieu of the
three-language formula. Because of the need for excellent translators in the
country, one aspect of teaching foreign languages will include translation
exercises between Indian and foreign languages.
Approach to language learning and teaching: During the Foundational stage
of education (pre-primary school to Grade 2), languages will be taught in a
P4.5.8.
P4.5.9.
P4.5.10.
P4.5.11.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
85
fun and interactive style with an emphasis on functionality and interaction
(Samskrita Bharati and Alliance Francaise, which are organisations in India
that teach Sanskrit and French, respectively, may serve as excellent models
for such language teaching, and which may be adapted to other languages if
desired). Language teaching would consist primarily of conversation (with a
knowledge of alphabets and reading basic words) in the Foundational stage.
It would move on to more sophisticated reading and basic writing abilities in
each language’s script in the Preparatory stage. Writing will be incorporated
more extensively during the middle stage. Language teaching at all stages
will include extensive speaking exercises (especially in the home/local
language in the beginning) to increase students’ power of expression in each
language.
In addition, the home/local language and/or second language will be
enhanced with the reading of and analysis of uplifting literature from the
Indian subcontinent, ancient to modern, and by authors from all walks
of life (see also P4.5.12-P4.5.16.); these languages will also be enhanced
through other arts, such as by playing and discussing music or film excerpts,
or engaging in theatre in these languages. The incorporation of literature
and other arts relating to language will be incorporated at all stages as
appropriate, but particularly in depth during the secondary stage.
When teaching the State language and its literature, other forms of the
language and other languages predominant in the region or variations thereof
may also receive suitable attention for inclusivity, interest, enjoyment, and
enrichment (e.g. excerpts from the rich traditions of Khariboli, Awadhi,
Maithili, Braj, and Urdu literature may be included in Hindi courses for
inclusivity and enrichment).
Exposure to Languages of India: Modern and
Classical
As so many developed countries around the world have amply demonstrated,
being well educated in one’s language, culture, and traditions is not a
detriment but indeed a huge benefit to educational, social, and technological
advancement. For this reason, it is strongly recommended that India’s
languages, art, and culture be given a prominence again that has been lost in
recent years. These cultural resources of one’s country help make the people
human beings equipped with cultural values, identity, and expression, which
is necessary to work efficiently, creatively, and with happiness.
India’s languages are among the richest, most scientific, most beautiful, and
most expressive in the world, with a huge body of ancient as well as modern
literature (both prose and poetry), along with films, and music that help form
India’s national identity and wealth. For purposes of cultural enrichment as
well as national integration, all young Indians should be aware of the rich
and vast array of languages of their country, and the treasures that they and
their literatures contain.
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Course on the Languages of India: Every student in the country will take a fun
course on “The Languages of India” sometime in Grades 6-8. In this course,
students will learn about the remarkable unity of most of the major Indian
languages, starting with their common phonetic and scientifically-arranged
alphabets and scripts, their common grammatical structures, their origins
and sources of vocabularies from Sanskrit and other classical languages, as
well as their rich inter-influences and differences. They will also learn what
geographical areas speak which languages, get a sense of the nature and
structure of tribal languages. They will learn to say a few lines in every major
language of India (greetings and other useful or fun phrases), and a bit about
the literature (e.g. simple poetry or major uplifting works from a representative
and diverse set of authors) of each. Such a class would give them both a sense of
the unity and the beautiful cultural heritage and diversity of India, and would
be a wonderful icebreaker their entire lives as they meet people from other
parts of India.
NCERT, together with SCERTs and language experts from across the country,
will be tasked with designing this important course.
Incorporation of relevant excerpts from great works of Indian literature
throughout the curriculum: Excerpts from works of great Indian authors,
classical and modern, in all Indian languages, suitably translated into the
medium of instruction, will be incorporated as relevant throughout the
curriculum across all subjects in order to expose students to great inspirational
writings of India (e.g. suitable excerpts from works of Shri Rabindranath Tagore
may be incorporated in classes on philosophy, writing, ethics, or history, etc.).
See also P4.5.14-P4.5.15.
Classical languages and literatures of India. The importance, relevance,
and beauty of the classical languages and literature of India cannot
be overlooked. Sanskrit, while also an important modern (Schedule 8)
language, possesses a classical literature that is greater in volume than that
of Latin and Greek put together, containing vast treasures of mathematics,
philosophy, grammar, music, politics, medicine, architecture, metallurgy,
drama, poetry, storytelling, and more, written by people of various religions
as well as non-religious people, and by people from all walks of life and
a wide range of socio-economic backgrounds over thousands of years.
India also has an extremely rich literature in other classical languages, including
classical Tamil, as well as classical Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, and Odia,
in addition to Pali, Persian, and Prakrit; these classical languages and their
literatures too must be preserved for their richness and for the pleasure and
enrichment of posterity. When India becomes a fully developed country, the
next generation will want to be able to partake in and be enriched as humans
by India’s extensive and beautiful classical literature which contain great
intellectual and cultural treasures.
P4.5.13.
P4.5.12.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
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Study of Sanskrit and knowledge of its extensive literature: Sanskrit has
been a great repository of knowledge pertaining to numerous subjects
including science, mathematics, medicine, mathematics, law, economics,
politics, music, linguistics, drama, storytelling, architecture, and more, by
authors from all walks of life. Sanskrit (and Prakrit) has played a great role in
the Indian tradition of the quest for knowledge, including the study of the
64 kalas or liberal arts.
Considering the special importance of Sanskrit to the growth and
development of Indian languages, and its unique contribution to knowledge
development in as well as the cultural unity of the country, facilities for the
study of Sanskrit, its scientific nature, and including samplings of diverse
ancient and medieval writings in Sanskrit from a diverse set of authors (e.g.
the plays of Kalidasa and Bhasa), will be made widely available in schools and
higher educational institutions.
Where relevant, history-changing Sanskrit writings will be integrated suitably
in various school subjects as well as in literature and writing classes (e.g.
Bhaskara’s poems on mathematics and puzzles that help to make the study
of mathematics more engaging, the incorporation of relevant Panchatantra
stories in ethics classes, etc.).
Sanskrit will be offered at all levels of school and higher education as one
of the optional languages on par with all Schedule 8 languages. Sanskrit
textbooks at the Foundational and Middle school level may be rewritten in
Simple Standard Sanskrit (SSS) in order to teach Sanskrit through Sanskrit
(STS) and make its study truly enjoyable.
Make available courses on all classical languages of India: In addition
to Sanskrit, the teaching of other classical languages and literatures of
India, including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Pali, Persian,
and Prakrit, will also be widely available in schools, to ensure that these
languages and literatures stay alive and vibrant, especially in States where
they may be best taught and nurtured. Classical writings in these and other
languages across India from diverse sets of authors will also be studied and
suitably incorporated throughout the curriculum and in literature and
writing classes to inspire students with the rich long-standing traditions and
writings of India (e.g. Sangam poetry in classical Tamil, the Jataka tales in
Pali, the works of Sarala Dasa in classical Odia, excepts from Raghavanka’s
epic Harishchandra Kavya in Kannada, Amir Khusro’s works in Persian, and
Kabir’s poems in Hindi, etc.).
A two-year relevant course on a classical language: For the enrichment
of our children, and for the preservation of these rich languages and their
artistic treasures, all students in all schools, public or private, will take at
least two years of a classical language of India in Grades 6-8, with the option
to continue through secondary education and university. In order to make
such courses in classical languages more enjoyable and relevant, relevant
great works of literature that are easy to read, enjoyable, and relatable, and
P4.5.15.
P4.5.16.
P4.5.14.
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written by authors from diverse sections of society, will be read, and their
connection to the phonetics and etymology of, and their influence on, modern
languages will be discussed.
Students who may have opted for Sanskrit as one of their chosen languages in
the three-language formula may instead take an additional modern or classical
Indian language or literature class for two years in lieu of the classical language
requirement. For example, students in Hindi-speaking States who are taking
Hindi, Sanskrit, and English as their three languages could take two years of a
language from another part of India (e.g. Tamil) in order to satisfy this language
requirement.
4.6.Curricular integration of essential
subjects and skills
While students must have a large amount of flexibility in choosing their
individual curricula, at the same time this Policy envisions that certain subjects
and skills should be learned by all students in order to become good, successful,
innovative, adaptable, and productive human beings in today’s rapidlychanging world. In addition to proficiency in languages, these skills include:
scientific temper; sense of aesthetics and art; languages; communication;
ethical reasoning; digital literacy; knowledge of India; and knowledge of
critical issues facing local communities, States, the country, and the world.
Young children learn and grasp nontrivial
concepts most quickly in their home
language/mother tongue.
4.6.1. Scientific temper
Inculcate scientific temper and encourage evidence-based thinking
throughout the curriculum: Evidence-based reasoning and the scientific
method will be incorporated throughout the school curriculum - in science as
well as in traditionally “non-science” subjects - in order to encourage rational,
analytical, logical, and quantitive thinking in all aspects of the curriculum.
P4.6.1.1.
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For example, in history, one could ask, “What are the possible historical
scenarios consistent with the known archaeological and literary evidences?”
In music/physics, one could ask, “What frequencies of notes should be used
in musical scales, given that notes with resonant frequencies are the ones
that sound good together to the ear?” In ethics, one could ask, “What are
the positive benefits to society if every individual always acts according to
certain ethical principles?”
Evidence-based and scientific thinking throughout the curriculum will
lead naturally to rational, ethical, and compassionate individuals who can
make good, logical, and sound decisions throughout their lives. Evidencebased thinking and a scientific temper is also considered a key ingredient in
teaching students to “learn how to learn”, to adapt to new situations, and to
establish themselves as lifelong learners.
4.6.2. Art and aesthetics
Any education emphasising creativity and innovation must include the arts.
It is well established that people (including engineers and scientists) who are
well educated in the arts as children tend to be more productive, creative,
and innovative in their lives as adults.
Music, in particular, has been shown to build in children emotional well being
and the ability to focus, be creative, and collaborate. Wide-scale research also
clearly demonstrates that children who practice music score substantially
higher reading and math scores; schools that have music programmes also
have significantly higher graduation rates; and people who learned music as
children had far lower rates of substance abuse as adolescents and adults.
A survey of Nobel Prize winners in all fields revealed them to be six times
more likely to be practicing musicians or have a musical hobby than general
adults.
These studies make it clear that including art - particularly music - from an
early age and throughout school can be extremely beneficial for children’s
education and for their lives. India has extremely rich traditions in the arts,
including and especially in music, and every student at every level must have
the opportunity to partake in these character-building creative activities.
Thus specific Policy actions are:
Music and art experiences in the early years: Every student from the
Foundational stage onwards will have basic exposure to the notes, scales,
ragas, and rhythms of classical Indian music (Carnatic and/or Hindustani)
through vocal exercises, singing, and clapping, as well as in local folk music,
art, and craft in a hands-on way; they will have exposure to both vocal and
instrumental music. Simple, inexpensive hand instruments such as shakers
and xylophones would be available in pre-schools and schools, especially for
young children, in order for them to learn, make, and experience music.
P4.6.2.1.
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Arts experiences will also include theatre, poetry, painting, drawing, and
sculpture, and vocational arts such as carpentry and embroidery/sewing/
clothes-making.
The methodology of teaching will aim to be age appropriate and safe.
Instruction will be imparted throughout the school years by general teachers,
as well as through trained art teachers and professional artists/musicians hired
at the school and school complex level.
The aim, over time, will be to create a strong community of music and art
educators. Community musicians and artists will also be recruited and trained
to teach as special instructors in schools and school complexes.
These initiatives for music and art would also help preserve local artistic
traditions and cultural heritage.
Taking up at least one art for deeper study: In addition to spending sufficient
time experimenting with and learning the basics of the arts, be it through an
instrument, singing, sculpting, drawing, painting, or a vocational craft, students
will be strongly encouraged to take up at least one such art more deeply - even
if they plan to specialise in science or engineering in the future. Experience
with the arts will help bring out the creative and innovative side of the brain
regardless of specialisation.
Technology use for bringing the arts to more students: Technology will be
used to bring the arts to more students. For example, professionally recorded
classes/demonstrations by great, famous artists of the country could be played
on video screens or projectors, and students and teachers could follow along
together in the exercises. This has been found to be a fun way to learn.
Interaction with local artists: Local artists and crafts-persons will be recruited
and utilised in schools - from short demonstrations to full-fledged classes - in
order to ensure that local arts are enjoyed, well represented, and nurtured in
each community.
A more holistic, artistic, interactive, fun, collaborative, and cross-disciplinary
education will be key in unlocking the creativity, innovation, and humanity of
students.
4.6.3. Oral and written communication
Communication skills - both verbal and written - have become increasingly
important in the modern world. People spend much of their daily lives
communicating messages, requests, questions, opinions, feedback, anecdotes,
and more - both in person and in written or digital form. Numerous surveys of
employers around the world reveal that verbal communication skills are ranked
first among potential job candidate’s “must-have” skills and qualities. The ability
to speak, listen, question, discuss, and write with clarity and conciseness - and
with confidence, eloquence, friendliness, and open-mindedness - is considered
a truly essential skill for all managers and leaders.
P4.6.2.2.
P4.6.2.3.
P4.6.2.4.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
91
The Policy therefore recognises the importance of schooling systems
developing excellent communicators. As students learn languages, they
must have regular practice in using these languages to speak, write, and
communicate with their teachers and their peers. A core principle here
will be that every student must have the opportunity to speak freely and
creatively in front of their peers on topics of interest to them for at least a
few minutes every week, starting in the very foundational years. Some of the
key initiatives will be the following:
“Show and tell” sessions in the Foundational and Preparatory years:
The concept of “Show and tell” (“Dikhao, batao” in Hindi with similar
translations in other languages) has been a great success in India and around
the world in developing public speaking and listening skills and promoting
communication and interaction among children early on. All students in
primary school, starting in Grade 1, will have the opportunity (along with
their teachers) to participate in an enjoyable “show and tell” session at least
once every week. This will involve students and teachers bringing in their
favourite toys, games, family photos, flowers, children’s books, original short
stories, and personal anecdotes (about family members, friends, festivals,
experiences, holidays, favourite lessons that week, favorite subjects, etc.),
and speaking for a few minutes about them in front of the class. These “show
and tell” sessions would initially be in the children’s home languages, but
eventually would also be held in other languages that students are learning
within their language classes. Students and teachers would also ask questions
and give comments during or at the end of each presentation to make the
sessions more fun and interactive. Teachers would lead the way with their
own presentations to set an example, and would participate throughout,
encouraging discussion, in order for teachers to truly bond with students
and for students to bond with each other.
In middle school, such show-and-tell sessions would still continue but
be limited to a one-period-per-week course, and would discuss more
sophisticated matters. Students would again source their own material,
talking about anything that is important or of interest to them, such as news
items, science trivia, recent technological gadgets, local art events, or their
own artwork, poems, stories, humour, etc.
Incorporation of communication in every subject in the Middle and
Secondary years: In the Middle and Secondary stages, communication in
front of one’s peers will continue, with the aim to discuss more sophisticated
and course-specific topics. For example, in science class, students may be
asked to explain a creative solution to a problem at the board, or in ethics
class, explain their own perspective on an ethical dilemma or discuss
examples from their own lives. Teachers will constantly assess where the
talents and interests of each student lie, and will ask her/him to speak on
topics and problems, and at the level, in which they will do very well, so that
each student’s confidence is built up and fellow students are inspired, all
while their collective communication skills are improved.
P4.6.3.1.
P4.6.3.2.
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At the Middle and Secondary stages, students will also formally learn to talk
about social, scientific, technological, agricultural, medical, and environmental
problems facing India and the world (see P4.6.10.1 and P4.6.10.2). These aspects
would naturally have important implications for students’ future contributions
to the country and to the global community.
School education will develop scientific
temper, aesthetic sense, communication,
ethical reasoning, digital literacy,
knowledge of India, knowledge of critical
issues facing the community and the world.
4.6.4. Physical education, wellness, and sports
Physical education is important for both physical and mental health and
development. It helps improve a child’s muscular and cardiovascular strength,
flexibility, endurance, motor skills, and mind-body connection and wellness. It
gives children the opportunity to set and strive for personal
and achievable goals. Moreover, playing sports also helps students develop the
qualities of teamwork, cooperation, problem-solving, discipline, perseverance,
and responsibility. In general, physical activity is well established to be among
the best releases for tension and anxiety, and facilitates emotional stability
and resilience. All of these qualities and benefits are also relevant to success in
the classroom; studies show that students who stay physically active are more
successful with other school work as well. Finally, people who are physically
active as young people tend to stay more fit as adults as well, leading them to
lead longer, healthier, and more productive lives.
The following measures will therefore be taken:
Incorporating physical education, mind-and-body wellness, and sports
into the curriculum starting at the Foundational stage: All students at all
levels of school will have regular periods and opportunities to participate
in physical activity and exercise, including sports, games, yoga, martial arts,
dance, gardening, and more, in accordance with local availability of teachers
and facilities. Playgrounds and sports fields will be available - if not on the
school grounds, then within the school complex region, with suitable transport
provided if needed - so that all students have the opportunity to participate
and excel in sports. Joint sports activities and competitions between schools
within the school complex and across school complexes will be fostered and
encouraged.
P4.6.4.1.
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4.6.5. Problem-solving and logical reasoning
Just as exercising the body is important to keep it fit and healthy, so too
is exercising the mind. Games of strategy, logic and word puzzles, and
recreational mathematics are the best way to excite children about
mathematics, and to develop the logical skills that are so critical throughout
their school years and indeed throughout life.
Jigsaw puzzles, playing with blocks, and solving mazes help to develop a
child’s spatial reasoning; games of strategy (such as tic-tac-toe, and leading
up to deeper games like chess) develop strategic thinking and problemsolving skills.
Word and logic puzzles (including grid-process-of-elimination puzzles) are
a fun way to teach deductive reasoning. Simple puzzles can help develop in
students skills of logical and creative thinking in an enjoyable manner. For
example:
• If a drawer in a very dark room has 10 red socks and 10 blue socks, how
many socks does one need to remove from the drawer to ensure that one
has two socks of the same colour?
• A farmer traveling with a fox, a goat, and a head of cabbage needs to cross
a river by boat. Alas, the boat only fits the farmer and one of the fox, goat,
or cabbage, and the farmer cannot leave the fox with the goat on either
bank of the river unsupervised (or the fox may try to eat the goat), and
similarly she cannot leave the goat with the cabbage unsupervised. How
can the farmer successfully bring the fox, goat, and cabbage across the
river?
• A domino consists of two squares, 1x2, and covers two adjacent squares
of the chessboard. Can 32 dominoes be used to perfectly cover an 8x8
chessboard? (Of course.) Can 31 dominoes be used to perfectly cover an
8x8 chessboard with 2 diagonally-opposite corners of the chessboard
removed? Why or why not? (The answer is one sentence!)
The puzzles can get more challenging, and incorporate arithmetic and other
elements, as students get older.
Language puzzles teach students to think linguistically - e.g. in North and
South Indian languages, competitions asking students to write a paragraph
about some chosen topic, in which no labial sounds (“p”, “ph”, “b”, “bh”, and
“m”) are used - or in English, where the letter “e” is not used - can be fun ways
for students to understand and play with language.
Arithmetic puzzles and games can help develop a comfort with numbers and
develop quantitative reasoning, e.g.:
• Take your favorite single digit number and multiply it by 9. Then multiply
the result by 12345679. What happens? Why?
• Would you prefer to receive: (a) 1 crore rupees today, or (b) 1 rupee today,
2 rupees tomorrow, 4 rupees the day after, etc., doubling the amount
received each day, for 30 days?
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For instance, the last puzzle above - which has its origins in Indian writings
(in a famous story about a king agreeing to grant rice on each square of a
chessboard, in this doubling fashion, to the poor but brilliant citizen who
invented chess) - teaches students about the powers of 2, exponential growth,
and large numbers.
Given the extensive need and use for large numbers in the world today, in
science, mathematics, finance, and beyond, it will be important to familiarise
students, and enable students to be comfortable, with large numbers. At the
moment, students generally only learn how to count up to 1 crore, which is
hardly sufficient in today’s world. In order to talk about the numbers needed
for life and work in modern times, students must be taught the first several
powers of 10: one, ten, hundred, thousand, 10 thousand, lakh, 10 lakh, crore, 10
crore, arab, 10 arab, kharab, 10 kharab, neel, 10 neel, padma, 10 padma, shank, 10
shank, mahashank, so that they can understand and speak about larger numbers
early on and throughout their lives. These numbers can be incorporated across
subjects to enhance learning. Interesting examples, from biology, astronomy,
finance, and geology, could include: the number of brain cells in a human - and
the number of stars in our galaxy - is each about one kharab; the GDP of India
is approximately �20 neels; and the number of grains of sand on Earth is about
one mahashank!
India has a long tradition of riddles and mathematical puzzles - often written
in the form of poetry, e.g. as in Bhaskara II’s works - that would also be similarly
enjoyable, enlightening, and beneficial to students. Making learning enjoyable
through fun exercises, games, and puzzles across subjects will be a key aspect in
ensuring that students stay engaged in school and at the same develop strong
mental capacity and creativity.
Seriously incorporating games, puzzles, and problem-solving activities into
the curriculum: Games, puzzles, and problem-solving activities, including
word puzzles such as those illustrated above, that involve spatial reasoning,
wordplay, strategy, logic, arithmetic, and play with large numbers, will
be seriously incorporated throughout the curriculum, particularly in the
mathematics curriculum, in order to develop a love for thinking, logical
deduction, quantitative reasoning, and creativity. Examples relevant to India,
and which incorporate India’s rich traditions of problem-solving and riddles,
will also be extensively incorporated. In particular, chess (which also has its
origins in India) will be seriously promoted as a mental sport.
4.6.6. Vocational exposure and skills
Vocational education is extremely vital for our country to run efficiently
and properly, and thus it is beneficial to increasingly incorporate elements
of vocational education into the school curriculum to expose children to its
utility and its value as art. Indeed, some exposure to practical vocational-style
training is always fun for young students, and for many students it may offer
a glimpse of future professions while for others it would at the very least help
teach and reinforce the dignity of all labour.
P4.6.5.1.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
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Vocational exposure: The importance of and a basic knowledge of various
livelihoods and life-skills (such as gardening, pottery, wood-work, electric
work, and many others) will be taught at the Foundational and Elementary
level, as early as the safety of children allows, so that students are well aware
of, and may become interested in, these professions well before finishing
high school. Some vocational arts, such as gardening or work with clay, will
even be introduced in the foundational years (ages 3-8), so that experiential
learning through working with one’s hands is completely integrated.
Schools may choose a subset of livelihoods and related skills that are of value
to the local community. Artisans and practitioners will be hired as tutors by
schools or school complexes for teaching each of these skills, and tutors may
be shared across multiple schools in the school complex as needed.
Survey course on vocational skills and crafts in Grades 6, 7, or 8: Every
student will take a fun year-long course, during Grades 6-8, that gives a survey
and hands-on experience of a sampling of important vocational crafts such
as carpentry, electric work, metal work, gardening, pottery making, etc., as
decided by States and local communities and as mapped by local skilling
needs.
Include ample vocational course options for all in secondary school
curriculum: Vocational courses in addition to more traditional academic
courses will be offered in Grades 9-12 in secondary school and all children
will have access to all courses on offer. Students will have plenty of choice
regarding the curriculum, being allowed to mix and match academics with
skills education, with sports and arts, and with soft skills training.
4.6.7. Digital literacy and computational
thinking
Integration of digital literacy: The new curriculum will also integrate
digital literacy for all learners at the basic level, with hands-on assessments
and worksheets keeping in mind the available digital infrastructure on the
ground.
At a more advanced level, curricula will be developed for:
a. Computational thinking (the thought processes involved in formulating
problems and solutions in ways that computers can effectively execute), a
fundamental skill in the digital age;
b. Programming and other computer-based activities.
Appropriate learning outcomes will be formulated as part of the National
Curricular Framework in these subjects, and they will be extensively offered
as courses in upper primary and secondary schools with adequate computing
and teacher resources.
P4.6.6.2.
P4.6.6.3.
P4.6.7.1.
P4.6.6.1.
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4.6.8. Ethical and moral reasoning
Introducing an “ethics” component to the curriculum early on and throughout
the years of school is also considered extremely important in helping students
to build character, grow up into moral and good human beings, lead productive
and happy lives, and contribute positively to society. Major initiatives will
include:
Incorporation of basic ethical and moral reasoning throughout the school
curriculum: Students will be taught at a young age the importance of “doing
what’s right”, and will be given a logical framework for making ethical decisions:
“Will this hurt somebody? Is that a good thing to do?” In later years, this would
then be expanded along themes of cheating, violence, plagiarism, tolerance,
equality, empathy, etc., with a view to enabling children to embrace moral/
ethical values in conducting one’s life; formulate a position/argument about an
ethical issue from multiple perspectives; and use ethical practices in all work.
Incorporation of ethical and moral awareness and reasoning in the curriculum
will be promoted through direct as well as indirect methods. In the direct
method there will be classroom activities, discussions and readings specifically
designed to address ethical and moral awareness and reasoning. In the indirect
method, the contents of languages, literature, history, and the social sciences
will incorporate discussions particularly aimed at addressing ethical and moral
principles and values such as patriotism, sacrifice, nonviolence, truth, honesty,
peace, forgiveness, tolerance, mercy, sympathy, equality and fraternity.
Incorporation of ethical and moral principles and values: As consequences of
basic ethical reasoning as in P4.6.8.1, traditional Indian values of seva, ahimsa,
swacchata, satya, nishkam karma, tolerance, honest hard work, respect for
women, respect for elders, respect for all people and their inherent capabilities
regardless of background, respect for environment, etc. will be inculcated in
students. Scientifically speaking, these qualities are extremely important for
society’s and India’s progress. Using dustbins, using toilets and leaving toilets
clean after use, standing in queues properly and patiently, helping the less
fortunate and conducting charity work, being punctual, and always being
courteous and helpful to those around you in general even when you do not
know them, are basic values of social responsibility that will be taught and
inculcated in students early and throughout their school years.
Development of Constitutional values: The process and the content of
education at all levels will also aim to develop Constitutional values in all
students, and the capacities for their practice. This goal will inform the
curriculum as well as the overall culture and environment of every school.
Some of these Constitutional values are: democratic outlook and commitment
to liberty and freedom; equality, justice, and fairness; embracing diversity,
plurality, and inclusion; humaneness and fraternal spirit; social responsibility
and the spirit of service; ethics of integrity and honesty; scientific temper and
commitment to rational and public dialogue; peace; social action through
P4.6.8.1.
P4.6.8.2.
P4.6.8.3.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
97
Constitutional means; unity and integrity of the nation, and a true rootedness
and pride in India with a forward-looking spirit to continuously improve as
a nation.
Development of ideas of personal freedom and responsibility among
students: At the same time, ideas of personal freedom and responsibility
will be important to develop as well: the idea that India is a free society, but
that freedom comes with responsibility for all citizens, in order for society to
truly function and prosper.
Students will be taught not to cave into peer or societal pressure, and aim
to pursue what they are most passionate about; it is best for the individual
and for society if everyone attempts to do what they are best at and enjoy
the most. In this regard, the school system will also help the individual by
allowing students more freedom and empowerment to choose their own
path, and a longer time period over which to do so.
Basic health and safety training, as a service to oneself and to those around
us: Basic training in health, including preventative health, mental health,
nutrition, personal and public hygiene, and first-aid will also be included
in the curriculum, as will be scientific explanations of the detrimental and
damaging effects of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs. Sex education will
also be included in secondary school for future judgment surrounding
consent, harassment, respect for women, safety, family planning, and STD
prevention.
Socio-emotional learning: Recent research drawing from a large number of
scientifically rigorous cross-sectional and longitudinal studies demonstrates
that introduction of
socio-emotional learning (SEL) in schools can lead to improved cognitive
and emotional resilience and promote constructive social engagement.
Examples of activities that inculcate socio-emotional learning include:
carrying out work or tasks in teams/groups, organising get-togethers
and games across different grades, role-playing and conflict resolution,
discussing stories of kindness, and reflective writing, speaking, and art.
Explicit training in socio-emotional skills ensures higher levels of attention
and emotional and cognitive regulation that are necessary not only for wellbeing, empathy towards others, and lower stress, but also leads to increased
academic success.
Inspiring lessons from the literature and people of India: India has a long
history and tradition of people and stories that beautifully teach us about
so many of the above-mentioned core values and socio-emotional skills.
Children will have the opportunity to read and learn from the original stories
of the Panchatantra, Jataka, Hitopadesh, and other fun fables and inspiring
tales from the Indian tradition. Excerpts from the Indian Constitution will
also be considered essential reading for students, for the values of Equality,
P4.6.8.4.
P4.6.8.5.
P4.6.8.6.
P4.6.8.7.
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Liberty, and Fraternity that it espouses. Highlights from the lives of great
Indians of history will also be an excellent way to inspire and introduce core
values in India’s young people - such Indian heroes including but not limited to
Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, Swami Vivekananda, Guru Nanak,
Mahavira Acharya, Gautam Buddha, Sri Aurobindo, Babasaheb Ambedkar, Shri
Rabindranath Tagore, Dr. MS Subbulakshmi, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Dr. C.V.
Raman, and Dr. Homi Bhabha, and indeed all Bharat Ratna awardees. Heroes
from all over the world in various disciplines will also be studied to further
inspire our youth, such as Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Nelson
Mandela.
Courses on ethical and moral reasoning: In addition to incorporating
P4.6.8.1-P4.6.8.7 throughout the school curriculum, a one-year course on
ethical and moral reasoning will be required for all students sometime in Grades
6-8, where the subject of ethics as already described above will be discussed
in a more sophisticated and deeper manner, with full class participation, and
drawing from arguments of India’s and the world’s great philosophers and
leaders. Subjects such as seva, swacchata, nonviolence, respect and safety for
women, cheating, helpfulness, tolerance, equality, fraternity, etc. will again
be discussed in this context. More advanced semester courses on philosophy,
ethics, and moral reasoning will be available in high school as well.
4.6.9. Knowledge of India
Indian literature and traditions contain deep knowledge in a variety of
disciplines, including mathematics, philosophy, art, logic, grammar, law,
poetry, drama, astronomy, chemistry, metallurgy, botany, zoology, ecology,
environmental conservation, medicine, architecture, water management,
agriculture, music, dance, yoga, psychology, politics, fables, and education.
These knowledge systems, which occur in ancient as well as more recent
Indian literature, folk arts, and local oral and tribal traditions, serve to impart
culture as well as valuable knowledge - yet much of this knowledge remains
better known outside India than in India.
For example, in mathematics, the so-called Pythagorean theorem, Fibonacci
numbers, and Pascal’s triangle were first discovered and mathematically
described in history (in very artistic and fascinating ways) by Baudhayana,
Virahanka, and Pingala, respectively. The concept of zero and its use in the place
value system that the world uses to write all numbers today - without which
computers and modern technology would not be possible - also originated
in India, over 2000 years ago; the use of this place value system for scientific
computations was first demonstrated, extensively, by Aryabhata. The negative
numbers - and the algebraic rules governing zero and negative numbers - were
first introduced and used by Brahmagupta in Rajasthan, while the seeds of
calculus were first laid down by Bhaskara II and Madhava in Karnataka and
Kerala, respectively - among numerous other such fundamental contributions
throughout mathematics and other fields. Such basic historical facts are not
currently taught in India - perhaps a remnant of an earlier colonial time.
P4.6.8.8.
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99
Indian contributions to knowledge and the contexts in which they were
discovered must be incorporated into the school curriculum not just for
reasons of historical accuracy (which is sufficient reason on its own), but
also for the often more holistic nature of the traditional Indian approach
which leads to a deeper understanding, as well as for reasons of increased
relatability due to geographic location, national pride, inspiration, and selfesteem.
There are a number of excellent, truly scientific, and learned scholars in
India who are experts in traditional knowledge systems of India in various
subjects, including in tribal knowledge. We must get their help to accurately
and scientifically bring the most enlightening and relevant aspects of Indian
knowledge systems to the appropriate grade levels in the school curriculum.
Specific initiatives will include:
Incorporation of Indian knowledge systems into the curriculum: Indian
contributions to knowledge - and the historical contexts that led to them -
will be incorporated in an accurate and engaging manner, wherever relevant,
into the existing school curriculum and textbooks. Topics will include
Indian contributions to mathematics, astronomy, philosophy, psychology,
yoga, architecture, medicine, as well as governance, polity, society, and
conservation.
Inclusion of local and tribal knowledge systems in the curriculum and
textbooks: Local and tribal knowledge systems will also be included in more
detail in regions where such knowledge systems may hold a greater relevance
with respect to local needs and customs.
Course on Indian knowledge systems: A course on Indian knowledge
systems (one such has already previously been designed by NCERT) will be
available as an elective to students in secondary school who may wish to
delve deeper into the subject.
4.6.10. Current affairs
The knowledge that schools impart to students is not an end in itself, but a
means to a better and more meaningful and purposeful life in the future. In
particular, since possible future endeavors and occupations to be taken up
after school or university are dictated by the realities of the evolving world
around us, we must encourage a constant connect between the classroom
and the real world, and not isolate the two.
Much of the material in the school curriculum - though fundamental - is
also “static”. Indeed, compiling knowledge into “textbook” format freezes
it, often for decades! Thus it it logical and critical to have at least one
subject that can focus purely on “dynamic” content - especially when it is
the dynamic content that will eventually serve as the bridge between school
lessons in theory and their real world applications in practice.
P4.6.9.1.
P4.6.9.2.
P4.6.9.3.
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Dynamic content would involve talking about the current economic scenario,
recent scientific inventions, advances in medicine, geopolitical power equations
around the world, trends in art and music, gender issues, environmental
concerns, etc. - all topics that would have a direct bearing in the future on
students’ lives and their livelihoods.
Any education emphasising creativity and
innovation must include the arts.
Course on critical issues facing the community, the country, and the world
for all students in Grades 7-8: All students in Grades 7 and 8 will take a course
(one period per week, for one session) on Critical Issues facing humans in
their communities and around the world. In this class, students would learn
about current issues that they will likely need to face and hopefully address
in their futures as adults, including those surrounding climate change,
sanitation, water, Swacch Bharat, gender equality, social justice, science and
its interaction with society, universal education, and, e.g. problems with this
national education policy. The focus would be on content that is slightly
dynamic but still introductory in nature in order to get students acquainted
with the issues, and their potential solutions, that require awareness and
attention from society. This course would also encourage communication, and
serve as a discussion group where students would speak a few sentences to the
class about their viewpoints, concerns, experiences, and aspirations relating to
the topics in question.
Course on current affairs for all students in Grades 9-12: Having become
aware of some of the key issues, in Grades 9-12 the course in P4.6.10.1 would
be continued in a more advanced manner, to be held during one period each
week, and be sourced from current newspapers, journals/magazines, books,
and even films. This will encourage reading and awareness about current affairs
and foster critical thinking. The article will be assigned or read by the teacher
in class, and the students will be asked to discuss and debate it, as individuals
or in groups.
Teachers of current affairs within the same geographical region may gather
or consult with each other periodically to discuss what will be taught in the
forthcoming month’s current affairs classes. This will allow the content to
remain current and well-sourced, and also include a healthy amount of regional
literature to encourage discussions over articles by regional authors as well.
This local flavour will help in gaining relevance and relatability with respect to
students’ lives and experiences.
P4.6.10.1.
P4.6.10.2.
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The job of the teacher will be primarily to help simplify ideas and communicate
the content of the article to the students, until students themselves develop
the skill of reading, digesting, and analyzing complex information. The
teacher will nudge the discussions in the right direction and ask questions
when required, but otherwise must mostly stay out of voicing her/his own
opinions. It will be necessary to include a wide variety of material in this
class ranging from science, technology and medicine to art, literature, and
music. Articles addressing social issues such as patriarchy and racism will be
included as well.
4.7. National Curriculum Framework
Revision of the National Curriculum Framework: The NCF 2005 outlines
many excellent strategies that are still relevant for accomplishing a more
constructivist type of learning. This document will be revisited and updated
by the end of 2020, taking into account the changing context of education
today and, in particular, all the above Policy points, and will be made available
in all regional languages.
4.8. National textbooks with local
content and flavour
The reduction in, and increased flexibility of, school curriculum content -
and the renewed emphasis on constructivist rather than rote learning - must
be accompanied by parallel changes in school textbooks. All textbooks shall
aim to contain the essential core material (together with discussion, analysis,
examples, and applications) deemed important on a national level, but at
the same time contain any desired nuances and supplementary material in
accordance with local contexts and needs. Where possible, teachers will also
have choices in the textbooks they employ - from among a set of textbooks
that contain the requisite national and local material - so that they may
teach in a manner that is best suited to their own desired teaching styles and
to the needs of the students and communities.
The aim will be to provide such quality textbooks at the lowest possible cost
- namely, the cost of production/printing - in order to remove the burdens
of textbook prices on the students and on the education system. This may be
accomplished by using high quality textbook materials developed by NCERT
in conjunction with the SCERTs; additional textbook materials would be
funded by public private partnerships and crowdsourcing that incentivise
experts to write such at-cost-priced high quality textbooks. States will
prepare their own curricula (which may be based on the NCERT Curriculum
Framework) and prepare textbooks (which may be based on the NCERT
P4.7.1.
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P4.8.4.
textbook materials) having State flavour. The availability of such textbooks in
all regional languages must be a top priority, so that all students have access to
high quality learning.
Revision of NCERT textbooks: Following the shrinking of the curriculum
content in each subject to its core (see Section 4.3), NCERT textbooks will be
revised to first contain only the essential core material in each subject, keeping
in mind a constructivist, discovery-based, analysis-based, engaging, and
enjoyable style of learning in accordance with the revised NCF as in Section 4.7.
In certain subjects, in addition to this core material, NCERT may also prepare
a few supplementary units that may be used to enhance the core material in
various States.
Preparation of textbooks at the State level: In order to have a national
curriculum which also allows local variations, the SCERTs in each State will be
encouraged to prepare textbooks that contain:
a. NCERT core material;
b. Any NCERT supplementary material deemed of interest to the State; and
c. Any other material and edits prepared by SCERT or local districts that add
local relevance and flavor as needed or desired. The goal, overall, will still be
to have textbooks that contain far less content load than they do now, but
that are written in a more constructivist, analysis-based, and enjoyable style
emphasising 21st century skills.
Textbooks will aim to contain only correct, relevant material; when unproven
hypotheses or guesses are included, this will be explicitly stated.
After review, SCERTs may simply adopt NCERT textbook material, consisting
of core national material, and supplementary material as chosen by the State,
when no further modifications are necessary for the local context; if NCERT
does not include certain material relevant in the local context, this may be
added by SCERTs. For example, the NCERT core material in music may
contain primarily the fundamentals of Hindustani and Carnatic music, while
additional State material in Maharashtra may include information regarding
abhangs, lavanis, and other varieties of folk and local musical traditions. Such
textbooks will be finalised by SCERTs and then printed and made available at
minimal cost, i.e., at the cost of production/printing.
Textbooks and materials for additional subjects: With the new flexibility in the
school curriculum, NCERT/SCERT textbooks and teaching-learning materials
will be developed for additional subjects as well, e.g. computer science, music,
and literature. All textbooks will aim to have a national and Indian flavor, as
well as a local flavor where possible/desirable.
High quality translations: An Indian Institute of Translation and Interpretation
(IITI) will be established as a constituent unit of one of the existing nationalP4.8.1.
P4.8.2.
P4.8.3.
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103
level institutions or in a Central University, in collaboration with States, to
carry out high quality translations of materials of importance between various
Indian languages as well between foreign languages and Indian languages.
The IITI will be equipped with state of the art equipment to enable it to use
latest processes and adopt modern approaches to translation of materials
into different languages. The IITI will have multilingual language experts
from across the country, which will help to promote all Indian languages. In
particular, through the IITI, all NCERT-developed textbooks and nationally
recommended teaching-learning materials (with collaboration from
SCERTs) will be made available in all major Indian languages.
Innovative textbook development for increased choice of textbooks in
schools: To encourage innovative new school textbooks in all States and
in all regional languages, and to give teachers choice in the textbooks and
pedagogical styles that they use, both public and private schemes will be
developed to give incentives or prizes to authors for excellent textbooks for
given subjects, levels, and regional languages.
Such textbooks will be approved by an autonomous body of experts nationally
and in each State. Textbooks will be approved on the basis of containing:
a. The national core curricular material and, where relevant, any local
material deemed necessary by States;
b. Innovative, creative, and engaging presentation; and
c. Correctness and accuracy.
Such textbooks would also be available to teachers and students at minimal
cost, i.e., at the cost of printing. The exact model for how to pay, incentivise,
recognise, or crowdsource authors would be set separately for each such
public or private philanthropic scheme.
Every student has innate talents, which
must be discovered, nurtured, fostered,
and developed.
P4.8.5.
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4.9.Transforming assessment for student
development
The changes in curriculum described in Section 4.2-Section 4.8 must be
accompanied by parallel changes in assessment procedures and mechanisms.
The very aim of assessment in the culture of our schooling system must shift
from one that primarily tests rote memorisation skills to one that is more
formative, promotes learning and development for our students, and tests
higher-order skills such as analysis, critical thinking, and conceptual clarity.The
primary purpose of assessment should indeed be for learning - it should help
the teacher and student - and the entire schooling system - continuously revise
teaching-learning processes in order to optimise learning and development for
all students.
The approach must be to focus on formative and developmental assessment
throughout the school years. Learning assessment must shift towards testing
only the understanding of core concepts and knowledge, along with higherorder capacities such as critical thinking, analysis, and application; this
approach must be used throughout the educational system and throughout
all subjects, including on school examinations, Board Examinations, entrance
examinations for universities, university examinations, and examinations for
employment.
Unfortunately, the current nature of examinations - and the resulting coaching
culture of today - are doing much harm, especially at the secondary school
level, replacing valuable time for true learning with excessive examination
coaching and preparation.
While the rigour of and the importance placed upon the Grade 10 and 12 Board
Examinations do force students to study, and have been important resources
with which to assess students for university admissions and employment, the
current structure of the Board Examinations have also systematically prevented
optimal learning from taking place in a number of ways:
• First and foremost, the Grade 10 and 12 Board Examinations place an
enormous amount of pressure on students over just a few days of their
lives. The harmful coaching culture results from the fact that students’
lives depend so heavily on their performance over these few days, that all
other considerations in a students’ life become secondary. In particular, real
understanding, thinking, analysing, doing, and learning takes a secondary
seat to mugging, rote learning, and obtaining coaching for performing on
these life-altering examinations.
• Second, the current structure of Board Examinations force students to
concentrate only on a few subjects at the expense of others, preventing a
truly holistic development. Specialisation is forced upon students early on,
and an unnatural and early streaming and partitioning of students into
science, arts, or commerce is the result. The desired flexibility for students
to choose a wide range of courses across fields throughout secondary school
and beyond is prevented by such early specialisation. Moreover, when
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certain necessary areas, such as sciences, mathematics, arts, humanities,
languages, and vocational skills are simply not assessed at all for some
students, depending on their specialisations, such students simply never
learn those areas well, as there is little incentive for them to do so. For
example, science students in the country rarely study the arts, vocational
subjects, or sports after grade 8, and vice versa, due to the nature of these
all-important examinations, and this strongly prevents students from
learning in the desired multidisciplinary manner in accordance with
their interests.
• Third, if life-determining Board Examinations are given on only
two occasions, in Grade 10 and 12, then it is inevitable that these
examinations will be mostly summative and not formative, which is a
wasted opportunity. Examinations should also be learning experiences,
from which one can learn and improve in the future; the current Board
Examination system does not line up with these goals.
These various negative effects of the current Board Examination system
are also seen in the current university entrance examination system - in
particular, there is a corresponding harmful coaching culture and further
incentives for early specialisation and rote learning. To make matters
worse, many universities give their own entrance examinations despite
offering similar programmes, rendering 12th Grade for many students as
a year of mugging and obtaining coaching for various different entrance
examinations, rather than actually learning in school and pursuing their
individual talents. Students often have to travel across the country for taking
these examinations to enter select institutes.
Furthermore, many of these examinations happen only on one given day
during the year - if a student misses a test, he/she has to wait a full year to try
again. The financial load of taking multiple examinations with inflexibility
in terms of timing, location, and content represents a tremendous burden on
students. Entrance to postgraduate programmes suffers from similar issues.
In order to break these harmful effects of Board and entrance examinations
during secondary school, it is necessary that Board and entrance
examinations be restructured to encourage holistic development, flexible
and individualised curricula, and formative assessment. For these aims, the
solution that emerges is that:
• Board Examinations should be given in a range of subjects to encourage
holistic development;
• Students should be able to choose many of the subjects in which they
take Board Examinations, depending on their individualised interests;
• Board Examinations must also be made “easier”, in the sense that they
test primarily core capacities rather than months of coaching and
memorisation; any student who has been going to and making a basic
effort in a school class should be able to pass the corresponding subject
Board Examination without much additional effort;
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• Students should be able to take a Board examination in a given subject
in whichever semester they take the corresponding class in school, i.e.,
whenever they feel most ready; and they should be able to take any such
subject Board Examination again if they feel they can study and do better.
• Board Examinations in each subject may replace the in-school final
examinations for semester or year-long courses, whenever possible, so as
not to increase the examination load on students.
Such a system is used by many countries, where coaching cultures for Board
Examinations have not developed due to their structure.
The principles for university entrance examinations must be similar; the
National Testing Agency (NTA) (see P4.9.6) will work to offer high quality
common modular entrance examinations multiple times each year in various
subjects, from logic, quantitative reasoning, and languages, to more specialised
subject examinations in the sciences, arts, and vocational subjects, so that most
universities may use these common entrance examinations, rather than having
hundreds of universities devising their own examinations - thereby reducing
the burden on both students and universities and colleges. The advantage of
such a system is that students will be able to choose the range of subjects that
they are interested in, and each university will be able to see each student’s
individual subject portfolio, and admit students into their programmes based
on individual interests and talents.
It is thus of high importance that the NTA serve as a premiere, expert,
autonomous testing organisation to conduct entrance examinations for
admissions and fellowships in higher educational institutions. The NTA will
be entrusted with the responsibility of assessing competence at scale in an
efficient, transparent, and rigorous manner, using state-of-the-art methods
in test preparation, test delivery, and test analysis. It will use the best subject
experts, psychometricians, and IT-delivery and security professionals to ensure
high quality assessment across the board.
Finally, all examinations such as Board and entrance examinations will not
be as “high stakes”, by allowing students best of multiple (i.e., at least two)
attempts.
A new paradigm of assessment for learning and development: Guidelines
will be prepared by NCERT, and teachers prepared, for a transformation in the
assessment system by 2022, to align with the NCF 2020. The focus will be on
formative assessment, i.e., assessment for learning.
In this transformation, assessment will be redesigned to primarily test core
concepts and skills along with higher order capacities such as critical thinking,
analysis, and conceptual clarity rather than rote memorisation. This approach
will be used across all examinations - from schools to “entrance examinations”
to National or State-level achievement surveys to university examinations
and examinations for employment. Examinations will not be as “high-stakes”
- the psychological burden on students will be significantly reduced through
mechanisms such as best of multiple attempts.
P4.9.1.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
107
Formative assessment to continually improve teaching-learning
processes: At the school level, such developmental assessment of learning
will be carried out periodically, and at least once a month, in all domains, to
help both teachers and students continuously reassess and optimise learning
plans. Over time, online question banks of higher order questions will be
made available to teachers and students for this purpose. Since assessment
will be formative and will test primarily higher order skills and applications
of essential concepts, open book examinations may be used as well, and
portfolios may be used in the Secondary Stage.
Teachers will prepare their own quizzes, examinations, and portfolio
assessments in this spirit to track students’ progress and revise personalised
lesson plans accordingly for each student as needed.
These quizzes, examinations, and portfolios will also help teachers identify
students who may make excellent candidates for participation in local
subject-specific clubs and circles, who may make for excellent peer tutors
in given subjects, and who may benefit from, e.g. the NTP and RIAP
programmes in given subjects.
The culture of assessment must shift
from one that primarily tests rote
memorisation to one that is more
formative, promotes learning, and tests
higher-order skills.
Piloting adaptive computerised testing: Once internet and computers are
standard in schools, assessment at all levels - especially during the Middle
and Secondary stages - may also be conducted in an adaptive computerassisted manner, so that students could regularly monitor their own progress
and formulate, with the help of their teachers, revised personalised learning
plans and goals. Formal official assessments, such as Board and entrance
examinations, could eventually be conducted in this manner also, with
students thereby being easily able to take such tests on more than one or
two occasions to improve.
Census examinations in Grades 3, 5, and 8: To track students’ progress
throughout their school experience, and not just at the end in Grade
10 and 12 - for the benefit of students, parents, teachers, principals, and
school management committees in planning improvements to schools and
teaching-learning processes - all students will take State census examinations
in Grades 3, 5, and 8 in addition to the Board Examinations in Grades 10 and
P4.9.2.
P4.9.3.
P4.9.4.
National Education Policy 2019
108
12. Again, these examinations would test core concepts and knowledge from
the national and local curricula, along with relevant higher order skills gained
during the respective levels of education, rather than rote memorisation. The
Grade 3 census examination, in particular, would test basic literacy, numeracy,
and other foundational skills.
Restructuring of Board Examinations: Board Examinations will be significantly
restructured to test only core concepts, skills, and higher order capacities in
a range of required subjects and a range of elective subjects of the student’s
choice. The goal will be to be flexible, like the curriculum, and to design the
Board Examinations so that any student attending classes in their chosen
subjects and making basic efforts in these classes will be able to comfortably
pass their Board Examinations - without any necessity for coaching, cramming,
or other major outside-of-usual-schoolwork efforts. Board Examinations will
thus be used as a check for basic learning, skills, and analysis. To eliminate the
“high stakes” aspect of Board Examinations, all students will be allowed to take
Board Examinations on up to two occasions during any given school year.
Eventually, when computerised adaptive testing becomes widely available,
multiple attempts for Board Examinations could be allowed.
To achieve such flexibility, reduce stress, lessen the examination burden on
students by replacing in-class final examinations with Board Examinations,
and allowing students to take the Board Examination in each subject at the end
of the semester in which they take that subject, the Policy envisions shifting, as
soon as is possible, to a “modular Board Examinations” approach, where Board
examinations are offered each semester in a range of subjects.
As a suggested model, each student over the duration of secondary school would
be required to take at least two semester Board Examinations in mathematics,
two in science, one in Indian history, one in world history, one in knowledge
of contemporary India, one in ethics and philosophy, one in economics, one
in business/commerce, one in digital literacy / computational thinking, one in
art, one in physical education, and two in vocational subjects. In addition, each
student would be required to take three basic language Board Examinations
that assess basic proficiency in the three-language formula, and at least one
additional Board Examination in a language of India at the literature level.
Additional Board Examinations in various other subjects, including more
advanced subjects in mathematics, statistics, science, computer programming,
history, art, language, and vocational subjects, will be available. Students
will be expected to take a total of at least 24 subject Board Examinations, or
on average three a semester, and these examinations would be in lieu of inschool final examinations so as not to be any additional burden on students or
teachers. Practical portions of certain Board Examinations would be assessed
locally according to a pre-set State paradigm, and grades for the written and
practical portions would be listed separately on a student’s assessment report.
Recall that students will be taking 40+ semester courses during secondary
school, so 15 or more semester courses could be decided completely locally by
the student and assessed locally by the school, including subjects that would
traditionally have been considered co-curricular or extra-curricular.
P4.9.5.
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
109
National Testing Agency strengthened to conduct college and university
entrance examinations: The autonomous NTA will comprise of numerous
academic, educational, and psychometric experts, and from 2020 onwards
will administer aptitude tests and tests in specific subjects that can be taken
on multiple occasions during the year in order to reduce the intense and
unnecessary pressures of the university entrance examinations system. The
NTA tests will aim to assess essential concepts, knowledge, and higher order
skills from the national common curriculum as per the NCF in each subject,
for the purpose of aiding colleges and universities in their admissions
decisions.
While admissions to institutions of higher learning will be based on criteria
that higher educational institutions choose to set, most educational
institutions and many employers will be encouraged to use these NTA tests
rather than their own examinations to ease the burden on students and
on themselves. This will help to eliminate the intensity, stressfulness, and
wasted time of the Grade 12 examination season faced by students every
year as well as by so many higher educational institutions and employers.
The NTA will institute processes which would ease admissions into higher
education programmes (e.g. directly sending scores to the institution). It
could also institute processes which would connect it directly to the bodies
offering scholarships to students.
The NTA will establish test centres across the country and have rigorous
processes to enable their effective functioning. Tests will be offered in
as many languages as possible. In the long run, tests will be offered in all
mediums of instruction offered by higher education institutions (HEIs) in
the country, and the NTA will institute processes for reliable translations
of test material into multiple languages. The preferred modality will be
computer-based testing (with the exception of assessment of practical skills),
e.g. at ICT-equipped adult-education centres and schools; where this is not
possible, paper-pencil tests will be used till such time the transition can be
made.
The NTA will develop strategies for ensuring validity and reliability of its
assessments, and to create credibility of its tests for admissions to universities
and colleges across India as well as other countries. The NTA may also
partner with institutions in the country and across the world to build up
its capability. It will work in close collaboration with school systems, HEIs,
Professional Standard Setting Bodies (PSSBs) (See P18.3.1) and all other
relevant institutions in the education system. It may constitute an Advisory
Board with representatives from such institutions which would ensure that
its work remains relevant and forward-looking.
Due to its large-scale work, the NTA may also serve as a storehouse for
assessment data in the country, which it may use and make available to
external academics for educational research purposes and to policymakers
within appropriate ethical considerations. Through assessment, data
collection, and other initiatives towards research and assessment-literacy
among all stakeholders, and building of capacity for formative assessment,
the NTA will be committed to improving education quality and access across
the country.
P4.9.6.
National Education Policy 2019
110
4.10. Support of students with singular
interests and talents
Every student has innate talents, which must be discovered, nurtured, fostered,
and developed. These talents may express themselves in the form of varying
interests, dispositions, and capacities. Those that show particularly strong
interests and capacities in a given realm must be encouraged to pursue that
realm beyond the general school curriculum.
The current curricular transaction arrangements involve a “One-size-fits-all”
approach to education with little variation or modification from student to
student. All students in a given course receive the same type of instruction,
same assignments, same learning assessments and pre-fixed assessment
schedules. The Policy recognises the need to strongly support students who
exhibit ‘singular interests’ and or ‘talents’ beyond what is ordinarily available
to them in the school curriculum.
Some approaches to supporting students who exhibit singular interests and
or talents will include: making individual interests and talents an important
consideration in instructional approaches; designing a variety of learning
experiences and academic support strategies, such as themes or topic-centered
learning activities; project-based learning; etc. that are intended to respond to
the distinct interests, talents and dispositions of individual students.
In mathematics, the idea of a “Mathematics Circle” has been a highly successful
method (in Bulgaria, Russia, and more recently the United States) of enriching
the mathematical horizons of young students who exhibit unusual inclinations
and talents in mathematics - many of the world’s great mathematicians have
come through this system. The idea is to use school or university infrastructure,
generally on weekends or evenings when school is not in session, to gather
interested students (typically from Grade 6 and up) and their teachers, from
around the neighborhood, to engage in enjoyable enrichment activities that go
beyond the school curriculum. These activities may include creative problemsolving competitions (team or individual) interspersed with inspiring lectures
by local mathematicians or math teachers, or other play-based activities that
stimulate the mind. A Math Circle generally meets once every week or two,
and is organised jointly by enthusiastic local teachers and talented university
or high school students. It is an opportunity for students and teachers with
common interests to explore a topic together in more depth and at a high
level. These Math Circles, to add prestige, may be named after donors or after
eminent mathematicians from the local area.
In a similar manner, topic-centred and project-based Clubs and Circles in
localities in all subjects where there is such interest from students are highly
encouraged to be set up in this manner at the levels of schools, school complexes,
districts, and beyond. Examples include Science Circles, Music Performance
Circles, Chess Circles, Poetry Circles, Language Circles, Debate Circles, and
so on. Funds should be made available for transportation for teachers to
4. Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools
111
take their students to these circles or clubs when not taking place at their
schools. Along these lines, national residential summer programmes for
secondary school students in these various subjects will also be funded, with
a rigorous merit-based admissions process to attract the very best students
and teachers to these programmes. Teachers may also encourage students
with singular interests and/or talents in the classroom, or groups of these
students in a school setting, by giving them supplementary enrichment
material and guidance and encouragement. Key initiatives will include:
Identify and foster singular interests and talents: Teachers will aim to
identify students with singular interests and talents and help support such
students through supplementary enrichment material, projects, guidance,
and encouragement. Project-based teaching in general will be encouraged
at all levels so that a diversity of talents, interests, and dispositions may be
fostered. Such students will be selected to help lead, along with the support
and participation of teachers, topic-centered and project-based clubs at the
school, school complex, block, and district levels.
Establish topic-centered and project-based clubs at the school, school
complex, block, and district levels: A system of Topic-centered and
Project-based Clubs and Circles in Mathematics, Science, Music, Chess,
Poetry, Language, Literature, Debate, Sports, etc. will be set up and funded
in accordance with student needs in various localities, in order to foster
singular interests and talents of students across the country. Teachers along
with students would be encouraged to apply for such clubs where sufficient
interest is present; further funding would be based on attendance levels
achieved and the transportation and educational material needs of the circle
or club.
Establish a system of centrally funded topic-based residential summer
programmes across the country in various subjects for students with
singular interests and talents: New centrally-funded national residential
summer programmes with rigorous merit-based subject-dependent
admissions processes will be set up in various subjects, to be held once a
year at institutions offering to host such programmes. The various clubs and
circles mentioned in P4.10.2 may naturally lead up to participation in these
national programmes.
Olympiads and competitions: Olympiads and competitions in various
subjects will be strengthened across the country, with clear coordination
and progression from school to local to State to national levels. The very best
performers in India would be funded to attend International Olympiads in
various subjects. Public and private universities would be permitted and
indeed encouraged to use results from Regional, National, and International
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