New National Educational Policy 2020
By-Satyavir Singh
RATIONAL
INTRODUCTION: The global education development agenda reflected in the goal-4,
(SDG4) of the 2030, Seeks to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality
education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” by 2030.
Goal of new education policy-
• To bring more than 2 crore out of school children into the
mainstream.
• To achieve 100% GER (Gross enrollment ratio) from pre-
school to secondary by the end of 2030.
• To make India a “global knowledge superpower” through
this NEP 2020,
• To make education system for schools and colleges more
flexible, holistic, and multi-disciplinary.
Vision of New National Education Policy
“The NEP 2020 envisions, an India Centered education
system that directly contributes to the evolution of our
nation enduring into an equitable and vibrant knowledge
society by giving them a top-class quality of education.”
Structural Provisions for Implementation
• Part-I, School Education
• PART II. HIGHER EDUCATION
• PART III. OTHER KEY AREAS OF FOCUS
&
• PART IV. MAKING IT HAPPEN
Part-I, School Education
1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The foundation of
Learning
The new 5+3+3+4 structure, includes a strong base of Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) from
age 3
Delivery of ECCE
Institutions consisting of
(a) Stand-alone Aanganwadi
(b) Aanganwadi co-located with primary
schools;
(c) pre-primary schools/sections
covering at least age 5 to 6 years co-
located with existing primary schools;
and
(d) Stand-alone pre-schools - all of which
would recruit workers/teachers specially
trained in the curriculum and pedagogy
of ECCE
Initial cadre of high-quality ECCE
teachers,
Current Aanganwadi workers/teachers
will be trained through a systematic
effort in accordance with the
curricular/pedagogical framework
developed by NCERT
Criticism- Aanganwadi workers, (six month or one year training programme)
2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy: An
Urgent & Prerequisite to Learning
Learning crisis: a large proportion of students currently in elementary school -
estimated to be 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.
Policy aims that the children who are in the age group of 3 to 6 year has access to
free, safe, high quality, developmentally appropriate care, and education by 2025.
• A National Curricular and Pedagogical Framework- for Early Childhood
Care and Education (NCPFECCE) will be developed by NCERT,
 a sub-framework for 0–3-year-olds,
a sub-framework for 3–8-year-olds,
• Including art, stories, poetry, games, songs, and more,.
• The framework will serve as a guide both for parents and for early
childhood care and education institutions.
The planning and implementation-
1. Jointly by the ministries of HRD, women and child development (WCD),
health and family welfare (HFW), and tribal affairs.
2. A special joint task force will be constituted for continuous guidance of
the smooth integration of early childhood care and education into school
education
1) National Mission on Foundational Literacy and Numeracy will be set up by the Ministry of
Human Resource Development (MHRD) on priority.
2) State/UT governments will prepare an implementation plan for attaining universal
foundational literacy and numeracy in all primary schools, by identifying stage-wise targets
and goals to be achieved by 2025,
3) Teacher’s vacancies will be filled at the earliest, in a time-bound manner
4) Special attention will be given to employing local teachers
5) A pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) of under 30:1
6) High-quality resources on foundational literacy and numeracy will be made available on the
Digital Infrastructure for Knowledge Sharing (DIKSHA)
Steps to be taken
 Public and school libraries will be significantly expanded to build a culture of reading
across the country.
 Digital libraries will also be established,
 School libraries will be set up - particularly in villages - to serve the community during
non-school hours
 Book clubs, in public/school libraries to further facilitate and promote widespread reading.
 A National Book Promotion Policy will be formulated,
 Nutrition and health (including mental health) of children will be addressed, through
healthy meals and by well-trained social workers, counsellors, and community
involvement
All school children shall undergo regular health check-ups especially for 100% immunization
in schools and health cards will be issued to monitor the same.
Curtailing Dropout Rates and Ensuring Universal Access to Education at All Levels.
a) It will be a top priority to bring these children back into the educational fold as early as possible, and to
prevent further dropping out, with a goal to achieve 100% Gross Enrolment Ratio in preschool to secondary level
by 2030.
Infrastructure, trained teachers, tracking learning outcomes and ensuring, enrolled students are attending
schools,
(b) Have suitable opportunities to catch up and re-enter school in case they have fallen behind or dropped out.
c) Alternative and innovative education Centres- will be put in place in cooperation with civil societies
to ensure that children of migrant labourers, and other children who are dropping out of school due to various
circumstances are brought back into mainstream education.
d) NIOS and State Open Schools will be expanded & strengthened,
75th round of household survey by NSSO in 2017-18, the number of out of school children in the
age group of 6 to 17 years is 3.22 crore.
Restructuring school curriculum and pedagogy in a new 5+3+3+4 design,
Foundational Stage (in two parts)
3 years of Aanganwadi/pre-school & 2 years in primary school in Grades 1-2; both
together covering ages (3-8years),
Preparatory Stage (Grades 3-5, covering ages 8-11),
Middle Stage (Grades 6-8, covering ages 11-14),
Subject-based classes and Skills development courses will start in sixth grade.
Secondary Stage (Grades 9-12 in two phases, i.e., 9 and 10 in the first and 11 and 12
in the second, (covering ages 14-18).
Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools: (Learning Should be Holistic, Integrated,
Enjoyable, and Engaging)
• An intensive study of the subjects also be the freedom to choose subjects.
• Earlier this system was not in government schools,
General education from first grade to 10th,
Strems- 11th, subjects could choose.
• Internships at the local level.
• Emphasis will be placed on vocational education and skills development.
• The new education policy will not create unemployment. At school, the child
will be given the necessary professional education.
• The tenth and twelfth Board exams will be easy. Major changes will be made to
the Board exams for classes 10th and 12th.
Medium of instruction- till grade 5th, local language/regional language/mother-tongue
At school and higher education, Sanskrit as an option, under “three language formulas”.
Literature of India/ classical languages will also be available.
No student would be forced for any Language.
Foreign languages, such as Korean, Japanese, Thai, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese,
and Russian, will also be offered at the secondary level,
National Curricular Framework for School Education, (NCFSE 2020-21), will be
undertaken by the NCERT
• Multilingualism and the power of language
Transforming Assessment for Student Development
• A new national assessment platform will be set up, “PARAKH (Performance
assessment, review, and analysis of knowledge for holistic
development)
• Students now take a school examination which was conducted by the appropriate
authority in grades 3, 5, and 8.
• Board examination for 10th and 12 will be continued but will be redesigned with the
aim of holistic development.
• The University entrance exams, The National Testing Agency (NTA) will work to
offer a high-quality common aptitude test, as well as specialized common subject
exams in- sciences, humanities, languages, arts, and vocational subjects,- twice
every year.
Support for Gifted Students/Students with Special Talents
• Topic-centered and Project-based Clubs and Circles will be encouraged and
supported at the levels of schools, school complexes, districts, and beyond.
• Examples include Science Circles, Math Circles, Music & Dance Performance
Circles, Chess Circles, Poetry Circles, Language Circles, Drama Circles, Debate
Circles, Sports Circles, Eco-Clubs, Health & Well-being Clubs/ Yoga Clubs and so on.
• Along these lines, high-quality national residential summer camps.
• The NCERT and NCTE will develop guidelines for the education of gifted children.
B.Ed. programmes may also allow a specialization in the education of gifted
children.
• Olympiads and competitions in various subjects will be conducted across the
country, with clear coordination and progression from school to local to state to
national levels,
Teacher Eligibility Tests (TETs) will be strengthened to inculcate better test material, both
in terms of content and pedagogy.
For subject teachers, suitable TET or NTA test scores in the corresponding subjects will also
be considered for recruitment
To measure passion and motivation for teaching, a classroom demonstration or interview
will be an integral part of teacher hiring at schools and school complexes.
Schools/school complexes will be encouraged to hire local eminent persons or experts as
‘master instructors’ in various subjects, such as in traditional local arts, vocational crafts,
entrepreneurship, agriculture, or any other subject where local expertise exists, to benefit
students and help preserve and promote local knowledge and professions.
• Quality control
To ensure decent and pleasant service conditions at schools- adequate and safe
infrastructure, including working toilets, clean drinking water, clean and attractive
spaces, electricity, computing devices, internet, libraries, sports & recreational
resources will be provided
Teachers and students, including all genders and disabilities, receive a safe, inclusive,
and effective learning environment and are comfortable and inspired to teach and
learn
In-service training will have inputs on safety, health and environment at workplace in
schools to ensure that all teachers are sensitized to these requirements.
Teachers will not be involved in nonteaching activities, particularly, teachers will not
be involved in strenuous administrative tasks, minimum time for mid-day meal
related work.
Service Environment and Culture
Teachers will be given continuous opportunities for self-improvement and to learn
the latest innovations and advances in their professions
Each teacher will be expected to participate in at least 50 hours of CPD
opportunities every year,
CPD opportunities will systematically cover the latest pedagogies regarding
foundational literacy and numeracy, formative and adaptive assessment of learning
outcomes, competency-based learning, and related pedagogies-such as experiential
learning, arts-integrated, sports-integrated, and storytelling-based approaches, etc.
Continuous Professional Development (CPD)
Teachers doing outstanding work must be recognized, promoted, and given salary
raises, to incentivize to do their best work.
Outstanding teachers with demonstrated leadership and management skills would be
trained over time to take on academic leadership positions in schools, school
complexes, BRCs, CRCs, BITEs, DIETs as well as relevant government departments.
• Career Management and Progression (CMP)
National Professional Standards for Teachers (NPST) will be developed by 2022, by the National
Council for Teacher Education in its restructured new form as a Professional Standard Setting Body
(PSSB) under the General Education Council (GEC), in consultation with NCERT, SCERTs,
The professional standards will be reviewed and revised in 2030, and thereafter every ten years, on
the basis of rigorous empirical analysis of the efficacy of the system.
By 2030, the minimum degree qualification for teaching will be a 4-year integrated B.Ed.
The 2-year B.Ed. programmes will also be offered, by the same multidisciplinary institutions offering
the 4-year integrated B.Ed., only for those who have already obtained Bachelor’s Degrees in other
specialized subjects.
These B.Ed. programmes may also be suitably adapted as 1-year B.Ed. programmes and will be
offered only to those who have completed the equivalent of 4-year multidisciplinary Bachelor ’s
Degrees or who have obtained a Master’s degree in a specialty and wish to become a subject teacher in
that specialty.
• Professional Standards for Teachers
Efficient Resourcing and Effective Governance through School Complexes/Clusters
This Policy strongly endorses the idea of the school complex/cluster (, wherever
possible. This suggestion was first made by the Education Commission (1964–66)
but was left unimplemented.
The aim of the school complex/cluster will be greater resource efficiency and more
effective functioning, coordination, leadership, governance, and management of
schools in the cluster.
Monitoring and Supervision
Improved support for children with disabilities, more topic-centered clubs and
academic/sports/arts/crafts events across school complexes,
Better student support, enrolment, attendance, and performance through the
sharing of social workers and counsellors, and School Complex Management
Committees (rather than simply School Management Committees)
The District Education Officer (DEO) and the Block Education Officers (BEO) will
interact primarily with each school complex/cluster as a single unit and facilitate its
work.
The establishment of school complexes/clusters and the sharing of resources
across complexes will have several other benefits,
• The culture of working to a plan, both short-term and long-term ones, will be
developed through such complexes/clusters. Schools will develop their plans
(SDPs) with the involvement of their SMCs.
• These plans will then become the basis for the creation of School
Complex/Cluster Development Plans (SCDPs).
• The plans will include human resources, learning resources, physical resources
and infrastructure, improvement initiatives, financial resources, school culture
initiatives, teacher development plans, and educational outcomes.
• It will detail the efforts to leverage the teachers and students across the school
complex to develop vibrant learning communities
The Department of School Education, which is the apex state-level body in school education,
will be responsible for overall monitoring and policymaking for continual
improvement of the public education system
The educational operations and service provision for the public schooling system of the
whole State will be handled by the Directorate of School Education (including the
offices of the DEO and BEO,
An effective quality self-regulation or accreditation system will be instituted for all stages of
education including pre-school education - private, public, and philanthropic
• Standard-setting and Accreditation for School Education
• The SSSA will establish a minimal set of standards based on basic parameters (namely, safety,
security, basic infrastructure, number of teachers across subjects and grades, financial probity,
and sound processes of governance),
• The framework for these parameters will be created by the SCERT in consultation with various
stakeholders,
• Academic matters, including academic standards and curricula in the State will be led by the
SCERT (with close consultation and collaboration with the NCERT),
• The SCERT will develop a School Quality Assessment and Accreditation Framework (SQAAF).
• The SCERT will also lead a “change management process” for the reinvigoration of CRCs,
BRCs, and DIETs to change the capacity and work culture of these institutions in 3 years,
• Public and private schools (except the schools that are managed/aided/controlled by the
Central government) will be assessed and accredited on the same criteria, benchmarks, and
processes, emphasizing online and offline public disclosure and transparency,
• Private philanthropic efforts for quality education will be encouraged - protecting parents and
communities from arbitrary increases in tuition fees.
• Public disclosure on the school website and on the SSSA website - for both public and private
schools - would include (at the very least) information on the numbers of classrooms, students,
and teachers, subjects taught, any fees, and overall student outcomes on standardized
evaluations such as the NAS and SAS.
• For schools controlled/managed/aided by the Central government, the CBSE in consultation
with the MHRD shall prepare a framework.
A New and Forward-looking Vision for India’s Higher Education
System
Higher education plays an important role in improving human well-being
and developing India, as envisioned in its Constitution - a democratic,
just, socially-conscious, cultured, and humane nation upholding liberty,
equality, fraternity, and justice for all.
NEP aim to increase GER from 26.3% to 50% by 2035,
• Part II. HIGHER EDUCATION
The policy’s vision includes the following key changes to the current system:
(a) Moving towards a higher educational system consisting of large, multidisciplinary Universities and colleges,
(b) Moving towards a more multidisciplinary undergraduate education; & towards faculty and institutional autonomy
(c) Revamping curriculum, pedagogy, assessment, and student support for enhanced student experiences;
(d) Reaffirming the integrity of faculty and institutional leadership positions through merit-appointments and career
progression based on teaching, research, and service;
(e) Establishment of a National Research Foundation to fund outstanding peer-reviewed research and to actively seed
research in universities and colleges;
(f) Governance of HEIs by high qualified independent boards having academic and administrative autonomy;
(g) “Light but tight” regulation by a single regulator for higher education;
(h) Increased access, equity, and inclusion through a range of measures, including greater opportunities for outstanding public
education;
(i) Scholarships by private/philanthropic Universities for disadvantaged and underprivileged students; online education, and
Open Distance Learning (ODL); and all infrastructure and learning materials accessible and available to learners with
disabilities.
By 2040, all higher education institutions (HEIs) shall aim to become multidisciplinary institutions,
By 2030, be at least one large multidisciplinary HEI in or near every district.
Institutions will have the option to run Open Distance Learning (ODL) and online programmes,
Single-stream HEIs will be phased out over time, and all will move towards becoming vibrant
multidisciplinary institutions or parts of vibrant multidisciplinary HEI clusters
Institutional Restructuring and Consolidation
3.5 cr. new seats will be added to higher education institutions.
UG program will be of 3 or 4 years with multiple exit options
Appropriate certification-
a) Certificate, after 1-year,
b) Advanced diploma after 2 years,
c) Degree after 3 years, and bachelor with research after 4 years, (with numbers of entry
and exit options).
• The 4-year programme may also lead to a degree ‘with Research’ if the student
completes a rigorous research project in their major area(s) of study as specified by the
HEI.
Multidisciplinary education and Research University will be set up of global standards.
Higher education commission of India (HECI) will be the only body for entire higher education (except
medical and legal education)
HECI will have 4 independent verticals such as NHERC (National higher education regulatory council) for
a directive, GEC (Genera education council) for standard setting,
HEGC (Higher education grants council) for sponsoring, and NAC (National accreditation council) for
recognition.
• An Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) shall be established digitally
• To store the academic credits earned from various recognized HEIs
• The degrees from an HEI can be awarded considering credits earned.
Different designs of master’s programmes:
(a) 2-year programme with the second year devoted entirely to research for those who have
completed the 3-year bachelor’s programme.
(b) for students completing a 4-year Bachelor ’s programme with Research, there could be a
1-year master’s programme;
(c) there may be an integrated 5-year Bachelor’s/Master’s programme. Undertaking a Ph.D.
shall require either a Master’s degree or a 4-year Bachelor’s degree with Research.
The M.Phil. Programme shall be discontinued.
• 16. Reimagining Vocational Education
• 16.1. The 12th Five-Year Plan (2012–2017) estimated that only a very small percentage of the Indian workforce
in the age group of 19–24 (less than 5%) received formal vocational education.
• Whereas in countries such as,
• USA the number is 52%,
• Germany 75%,
• South Korea it is as high as 96%.
• These numbers only underline the urgency of the need to hasten the spread of vocational education in India.
• 16.5. By 2025, at least 50% of learners through the school and higher education system shall have exposure to
vocational education,
• 16.6. Vocational education will be integrated into all school and higher education
institutions in a phased manner over the next decade.
• Focus areas for vocational education will be chosen based on skills gap analysis and
mapping of local opportunities.
• MHRD will constitute a National Committee for the Integration of Vocational Education
(NCIVE), consisting of experts in vocational education and representatives from across
Ministries, in collaboration with industry, to oversee this effort.
New National Educational Policy 2020,.pptx

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New National Educational Policy 2020,.pptx

  • 1. New National Educational Policy 2020 By-Satyavir Singh
  • 2. RATIONAL INTRODUCTION: The global education development agenda reflected in the goal-4, (SDG4) of the 2030, Seeks to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” by 2030.
  • 3. Goal of new education policy- • To bring more than 2 crore out of school children into the mainstream. • To achieve 100% GER (Gross enrollment ratio) from pre- school to secondary by the end of 2030. • To make India a “global knowledge superpower” through this NEP 2020, • To make education system for schools and colleges more flexible, holistic, and multi-disciplinary.
  • 4. Vision of New National Education Policy “The NEP 2020 envisions, an India Centered education system that directly contributes to the evolution of our nation enduring into an equitable and vibrant knowledge society by giving them a top-class quality of education.”
  • 5. Structural Provisions for Implementation • Part-I, School Education • PART II. HIGHER EDUCATION • PART III. OTHER KEY AREAS OF FOCUS & • PART IV. MAKING IT HAPPEN
  • 6. Part-I, School Education 1. Early Childhood Care and Education: The foundation of Learning The new 5+3+3+4 structure, includes a strong base of Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) from age 3
  • 7. Delivery of ECCE Institutions consisting of (a) Stand-alone Aanganwadi (b) Aanganwadi co-located with primary schools; (c) pre-primary schools/sections covering at least age 5 to 6 years co- located with existing primary schools; and (d) Stand-alone pre-schools - all of which would recruit workers/teachers specially trained in the curriculum and pedagogy of ECCE Initial cadre of high-quality ECCE teachers, Current Aanganwadi workers/teachers will be trained through a systematic effort in accordance with the curricular/pedagogical framework developed by NCERT Criticism- Aanganwadi workers, (six month or one year training programme)
  • 8. 2. Foundational Literacy and Numeracy: An Urgent & Prerequisite to Learning Learning crisis: a large proportion of students currently in elementary school - estimated to be 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. Policy aims that the children who are in the age group of 3 to 6 year has access to free, safe, high quality, developmentally appropriate care, and education by 2025.
  • 9. • A National Curricular and Pedagogical Framework- for Early Childhood Care and Education (NCPFECCE) will be developed by NCERT,  a sub-framework for 0–3-year-olds, a sub-framework for 3–8-year-olds, • Including art, stories, poetry, games, songs, and more,. • The framework will serve as a guide both for parents and for early childhood care and education institutions.
  • 10. The planning and implementation- 1. Jointly by the ministries of HRD, women and child development (WCD), health and family welfare (HFW), and tribal affairs. 2. A special joint task force will be constituted for continuous guidance of the smooth integration of early childhood care and education into school education
  • 11. 1) National Mission on Foundational Literacy and Numeracy will be set up by the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) on priority. 2) State/UT governments will prepare an implementation plan for attaining universal foundational literacy and numeracy in all primary schools, by identifying stage-wise targets and goals to be achieved by 2025, 3) Teacher’s vacancies will be filled at the earliest, in a time-bound manner 4) Special attention will be given to employing local teachers 5) A pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) of under 30:1 6) High-quality resources on foundational literacy and numeracy will be made available on the Digital Infrastructure for Knowledge Sharing (DIKSHA) Steps to be taken
  • 12.  Public and school libraries will be significantly expanded to build a culture of reading across the country.  Digital libraries will also be established,  School libraries will be set up - particularly in villages - to serve the community during non-school hours  Book clubs, in public/school libraries to further facilitate and promote widespread reading.  A National Book Promotion Policy will be formulated,  Nutrition and health (including mental health) of children will be addressed, through healthy meals and by well-trained social workers, counsellors, and community involvement All school children shall undergo regular health check-ups especially for 100% immunization in schools and health cards will be issued to monitor the same.
  • 13. Curtailing Dropout Rates and Ensuring Universal Access to Education at All Levels. a) It will be a top priority to bring these children back into the educational fold as early as possible, and to prevent further dropping out, with a goal to achieve 100% Gross Enrolment Ratio in preschool to secondary level by 2030. Infrastructure, trained teachers, tracking learning outcomes and ensuring, enrolled students are attending schools, (b) Have suitable opportunities to catch up and re-enter school in case they have fallen behind or dropped out. c) Alternative and innovative education Centres- will be put in place in cooperation with civil societies to ensure that children of migrant labourers, and other children who are dropping out of school due to various circumstances are brought back into mainstream education. d) NIOS and State Open Schools will be expanded & strengthened, 75th round of household survey by NSSO in 2017-18, the number of out of school children in the age group of 6 to 17 years is 3.22 crore.
  • 14. Restructuring school curriculum and pedagogy in a new 5+3+3+4 design, Foundational Stage (in two parts) 3 years of Aanganwadi/pre-school & 2 years in primary school in Grades 1-2; both together covering ages (3-8years), Preparatory Stage (Grades 3-5, covering ages 8-11), Middle Stage (Grades 6-8, covering ages 11-14), Subject-based classes and Skills development courses will start in sixth grade. Secondary Stage (Grades 9-12 in two phases, i.e., 9 and 10 in the first and 11 and 12 in the second, (covering ages 14-18). Curriculum and Pedagogy in Schools: (Learning Should be Holistic, Integrated, Enjoyable, and Engaging)
  • 15. • An intensive study of the subjects also be the freedom to choose subjects. • Earlier this system was not in government schools, General education from first grade to 10th, Strems- 11th, subjects could choose. • Internships at the local level. • Emphasis will be placed on vocational education and skills development. • The new education policy will not create unemployment. At school, the child will be given the necessary professional education. • The tenth and twelfth Board exams will be easy. Major changes will be made to the Board exams for classes 10th and 12th.
  • 16. Medium of instruction- till grade 5th, local language/regional language/mother-tongue At school and higher education, Sanskrit as an option, under “three language formulas”. Literature of India/ classical languages will also be available. No student would be forced for any Language. Foreign languages, such as Korean, Japanese, Thai, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, and Russian, will also be offered at the secondary level, National Curricular Framework for School Education, (NCFSE 2020-21), will be undertaken by the NCERT • Multilingualism and the power of language
  • 17. Transforming Assessment for Student Development • A new national assessment platform will be set up, “PARAKH (Performance assessment, review, and analysis of knowledge for holistic development) • Students now take a school examination which was conducted by the appropriate authority in grades 3, 5, and 8. • Board examination for 10th and 12 will be continued but will be redesigned with the aim of holistic development. • The University entrance exams, The National Testing Agency (NTA) will work to offer a high-quality common aptitude test, as well as specialized common subject exams in- sciences, humanities, languages, arts, and vocational subjects,- twice every year.
  • 18. Support for Gifted Students/Students with Special Talents • Topic-centered and Project-based Clubs and Circles will be encouraged and supported at the levels of schools, school complexes, districts, and beyond. • Examples include Science Circles, Math Circles, Music & Dance Performance Circles, Chess Circles, Poetry Circles, Language Circles, Drama Circles, Debate Circles, Sports Circles, Eco-Clubs, Health & Well-being Clubs/ Yoga Clubs and so on. • Along these lines, high-quality national residential summer camps. • The NCERT and NCTE will develop guidelines for the education of gifted children. B.Ed. programmes may also allow a specialization in the education of gifted children. • Olympiads and competitions in various subjects will be conducted across the country, with clear coordination and progression from school to local to state to national levels,
  • 19. Teacher Eligibility Tests (TETs) will be strengthened to inculcate better test material, both in terms of content and pedagogy. For subject teachers, suitable TET or NTA test scores in the corresponding subjects will also be considered for recruitment To measure passion and motivation for teaching, a classroom demonstration or interview will be an integral part of teacher hiring at schools and school complexes. Schools/school complexes will be encouraged to hire local eminent persons or experts as ‘master instructors’ in various subjects, such as in traditional local arts, vocational crafts, entrepreneurship, agriculture, or any other subject where local expertise exists, to benefit students and help preserve and promote local knowledge and professions. • Quality control
  • 20. To ensure decent and pleasant service conditions at schools- adequate and safe infrastructure, including working toilets, clean drinking water, clean and attractive spaces, electricity, computing devices, internet, libraries, sports & recreational resources will be provided Teachers and students, including all genders and disabilities, receive a safe, inclusive, and effective learning environment and are comfortable and inspired to teach and learn In-service training will have inputs on safety, health and environment at workplace in schools to ensure that all teachers are sensitized to these requirements. Teachers will not be involved in nonteaching activities, particularly, teachers will not be involved in strenuous administrative tasks, minimum time for mid-day meal related work. Service Environment and Culture
  • 21. Teachers will be given continuous opportunities for self-improvement and to learn the latest innovations and advances in their professions Each teacher will be expected to participate in at least 50 hours of CPD opportunities every year, CPD opportunities will systematically cover the latest pedagogies regarding foundational literacy and numeracy, formative and adaptive assessment of learning outcomes, competency-based learning, and related pedagogies-such as experiential learning, arts-integrated, sports-integrated, and storytelling-based approaches, etc. Continuous Professional Development (CPD)
  • 22. Teachers doing outstanding work must be recognized, promoted, and given salary raises, to incentivize to do their best work. Outstanding teachers with demonstrated leadership and management skills would be trained over time to take on academic leadership positions in schools, school complexes, BRCs, CRCs, BITEs, DIETs as well as relevant government departments. • Career Management and Progression (CMP)
  • 23. National Professional Standards for Teachers (NPST) will be developed by 2022, by the National Council for Teacher Education in its restructured new form as a Professional Standard Setting Body (PSSB) under the General Education Council (GEC), in consultation with NCERT, SCERTs, The professional standards will be reviewed and revised in 2030, and thereafter every ten years, on the basis of rigorous empirical analysis of the efficacy of the system. By 2030, the minimum degree qualification for teaching will be a 4-year integrated B.Ed. The 2-year B.Ed. programmes will also be offered, by the same multidisciplinary institutions offering the 4-year integrated B.Ed., only for those who have already obtained Bachelor’s Degrees in other specialized subjects. These B.Ed. programmes may also be suitably adapted as 1-year B.Ed. programmes and will be offered only to those who have completed the equivalent of 4-year multidisciplinary Bachelor ’s Degrees or who have obtained a Master’s degree in a specialty and wish to become a subject teacher in that specialty. • Professional Standards for Teachers
  • 24. Efficient Resourcing and Effective Governance through School Complexes/Clusters This Policy strongly endorses the idea of the school complex/cluster (, wherever possible. This suggestion was first made by the Education Commission (1964–66) but was left unimplemented. The aim of the school complex/cluster will be greater resource efficiency and more effective functioning, coordination, leadership, governance, and management of schools in the cluster. Monitoring and Supervision
  • 25. Improved support for children with disabilities, more topic-centered clubs and academic/sports/arts/crafts events across school complexes, Better student support, enrolment, attendance, and performance through the sharing of social workers and counsellors, and School Complex Management Committees (rather than simply School Management Committees) The District Education Officer (DEO) and the Block Education Officers (BEO) will interact primarily with each school complex/cluster as a single unit and facilitate its work. The establishment of school complexes/clusters and the sharing of resources across complexes will have several other benefits,
  • 26. • The culture of working to a plan, both short-term and long-term ones, will be developed through such complexes/clusters. Schools will develop their plans (SDPs) with the involvement of their SMCs. • These plans will then become the basis for the creation of School Complex/Cluster Development Plans (SCDPs). • The plans will include human resources, learning resources, physical resources and infrastructure, improvement initiatives, financial resources, school culture initiatives, teacher development plans, and educational outcomes. • It will detail the efforts to leverage the teachers and students across the school complex to develop vibrant learning communities
  • 27. The Department of School Education, which is the apex state-level body in school education, will be responsible for overall monitoring and policymaking for continual improvement of the public education system The educational operations and service provision for the public schooling system of the whole State will be handled by the Directorate of School Education (including the offices of the DEO and BEO, An effective quality self-regulation or accreditation system will be instituted for all stages of education including pre-school education - private, public, and philanthropic • Standard-setting and Accreditation for School Education
  • 28. • The SSSA will establish a minimal set of standards based on basic parameters (namely, safety, security, basic infrastructure, number of teachers across subjects and grades, financial probity, and sound processes of governance), • The framework for these parameters will be created by the SCERT in consultation with various stakeholders, • Academic matters, including academic standards and curricula in the State will be led by the SCERT (with close consultation and collaboration with the NCERT), • The SCERT will develop a School Quality Assessment and Accreditation Framework (SQAAF). • The SCERT will also lead a “change management process” for the reinvigoration of CRCs, BRCs, and DIETs to change the capacity and work culture of these institutions in 3 years, • Public and private schools (except the schools that are managed/aided/controlled by the Central government) will be assessed and accredited on the same criteria, benchmarks, and processes, emphasizing online and offline public disclosure and transparency,
  • 29. • Private philanthropic efforts for quality education will be encouraged - protecting parents and communities from arbitrary increases in tuition fees. • Public disclosure on the school website and on the SSSA website - for both public and private schools - would include (at the very least) information on the numbers of classrooms, students, and teachers, subjects taught, any fees, and overall student outcomes on standardized evaluations such as the NAS and SAS. • For schools controlled/managed/aided by the Central government, the CBSE in consultation with the MHRD shall prepare a framework.
  • 30. A New and Forward-looking Vision for India’s Higher Education System Higher education plays an important role in improving human well-being and developing India, as envisioned in its Constitution - a democratic, just, socially-conscious, cultured, and humane nation upholding liberty, equality, fraternity, and justice for all. NEP aim to increase GER from 26.3% to 50% by 2035, • Part II. HIGHER EDUCATION
  • 31. The policy’s vision includes the following key changes to the current system: (a) Moving towards a higher educational system consisting of large, multidisciplinary Universities and colleges, (b) Moving towards a more multidisciplinary undergraduate education; & towards faculty and institutional autonomy (c) Revamping curriculum, pedagogy, assessment, and student support for enhanced student experiences; (d) Reaffirming the integrity of faculty and institutional leadership positions through merit-appointments and career progression based on teaching, research, and service; (e) Establishment of a National Research Foundation to fund outstanding peer-reviewed research and to actively seed research in universities and colleges; (f) Governance of HEIs by high qualified independent boards having academic and administrative autonomy; (g) “Light but tight” regulation by a single regulator for higher education; (h) Increased access, equity, and inclusion through a range of measures, including greater opportunities for outstanding public education; (i) Scholarships by private/philanthropic Universities for disadvantaged and underprivileged students; online education, and Open Distance Learning (ODL); and all infrastructure and learning materials accessible and available to learners with disabilities.
  • 32. By 2040, all higher education institutions (HEIs) shall aim to become multidisciplinary institutions, By 2030, be at least one large multidisciplinary HEI in or near every district. Institutions will have the option to run Open Distance Learning (ODL) and online programmes, Single-stream HEIs will be phased out over time, and all will move towards becoming vibrant multidisciplinary institutions or parts of vibrant multidisciplinary HEI clusters Institutional Restructuring and Consolidation
  • 33. 3.5 cr. new seats will be added to higher education institutions. UG program will be of 3 or 4 years with multiple exit options Appropriate certification- a) Certificate, after 1-year, b) Advanced diploma after 2 years, c) Degree after 3 years, and bachelor with research after 4 years, (with numbers of entry and exit options). • The 4-year programme may also lead to a degree ‘with Research’ if the student completes a rigorous research project in their major area(s) of study as specified by the HEI.
  • 34. Multidisciplinary education and Research University will be set up of global standards. Higher education commission of India (HECI) will be the only body for entire higher education (except medical and legal education) HECI will have 4 independent verticals such as NHERC (National higher education regulatory council) for a directive, GEC (Genera education council) for standard setting, HEGC (Higher education grants council) for sponsoring, and NAC (National accreditation council) for recognition. • An Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) shall be established digitally • To store the academic credits earned from various recognized HEIs • The degrees from an HEI can be awarded considering credits earned.
  • 35. Different designs of master’s programmes: (a) 2-year programme with the second year devoted entirely to research for those who have completed the 3-year bachelor’s programme. (b) for students completing a 4-year Bachelor ’s programme with Research, there could be a 1-year master’s programme; (c) there may be an integrated 5-year Bachelor’s/Master’s programme. Undertaking a Ph.D. shall require either a Master’s degree or a 4-year Bachelor’s degree with Research. The M.Phil. Programme shall be discontinued.
  • 36. • 16. Reimagining Vocational Education • 16.1. The 12th Five-Year Plan (2012–2017) estimated that only a very small percentage of the Indian workforce in the age group of 19–24 (less than 5%) received formal vocational education. • Whereas in countries such as, • USA the number is 52%, • Germany 75%, • South Korea it is as high as 96%. • These numbers only underline the urgency of the need to hasten the spread of vocational education in India. • 16.5. By 2025, at least 50% of learners through the school and higher education system shall have exposure to vocational education,
  • 37. • 16.6. Vocational education will be integrated into all school and higher education institutions in a phased manner over the next decade. • Focus areas for vocational education will be chosen based on skills gap analysis and mapping of local opportunities. • MHRD will constitute a National Committee for the Integration of Vocational Education (NCIVE), consisting of experts in vocational education and representatives from across Ministries, in collaboration with industry, to oversee this effort.