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18th July 2025 (14 Topics)

Five Years of National Education Policy (NEP) 2020

Context:

The Government of India has completed five years of implementation of the National Education Policy 2020, marking substantial progress in curriculum reforms, digital integration, teacher training, and equitable access to quality education.

Historical Context and Rationale

  • Legacy of Colonial System: The British education model was designed to create clerks, not innovators. It was job-centric and not skill-oriented.
  • Need for Reform: Post-independence, minor changes were made, but a comprehensive restructuring was missing.
  • NEP 2020 was envisioned to address these systemic gaps and align Indian education with 21st-century needs.

Vision and Objectives of NEP 2020

  • Practical & Skill-based Education: Move away from rote learning.
  • Holistic Development: Build value-based, tech-savvy, and globally competitive citizens.
  • Inclusive Access: Bridge rural-urban, gender, and socio-economic divides.
  • Public Investment Target: Increase spending to 6% of GDP.

School Education Reforms

  • Structural Reform: 5+3+3+4 Curriculum
    • Foundation: 3–8 years
    • Preparatory: 8–11 years
    • Middle: 11–14 years
    • Secondary: 14–18 years
  • Curriculum and Pedagogy Modernization
    • NCERT's National Curriculum Framework introduced.
    • Bal Vatika, VidyaPravesh, and JaaduiPitara for early childhood care.
    • CBSE introduced subjects like AI, Design Thinking, Data Science.
    • Syllabus reduction to reduce student burden.
  • Assessment Reform
    • CBSE Class 10 board exams to be conducted twice a year from 2026.
    • Introduction of formative assessments and internal assessments.
  • Skill Development in Schools
    • Skill modules introduced in Classes 9–12.
    • 138 skill job roles approved till 2025.
    • Vocational education expanded: From 1,850 (2014–15) to 29,342 schools (2024–25).

Higher Education Reforms

  • Curriculum and Credit Reforms
    • National Higher Education Qualification Framework (NHEQF)
    • Multiple Entry-Exit System, Academic Bank of Credits
    • PM Vidya Lakshmi for financial aid
    • 40% credit transfer through SWAYAM
  • Institutional Expansion
    • 7 new IITs, 8 IIMs, 13 AIIMS, 354 Eklavya Schools
    • MBBS seats nearly doubled in a decade
      • 2014: 54,348 seats | 2025: 1,18,190 seats
  • Digital Education Ecosystem
    • Diksha, SwayamPrabha, PM e-Vidya, e-Pathshala
    • Content in 126 Indian and 7 foreign languages
    • Over 25,000 hours of broadcast in 29 languages
  • Teacher Training and Governance
    • NISHTHA 3.0 for teacher training
    • Over 26 lakh master trainers trained
    • SAMARTH: Digital governance for Higher Education Institutions (HEIs)

Foundational Literacy and Numeracy

  • NIPUN Bharat: Basic literacy and numeracy by Class 2
  • Integrated with SamagraShiksha 2.0 (till 2025–26)

Global Recognition and Rankings

  • QS World University Rankings (2026):
    • Indian institutions included: 54 (2015: only 11)
    • 8 new Indian universities entered for the first time
    • IIT Delhi ranked 123rd globally

Challenges

  • Implementation gaps at state level
  • Digital divide in rural and tribal regions
  • Teacher shortages and uneven quality of training
  • Alignment of voctional education with employability

Way Forward

  • Strengthen decentralised capacity-building at the state and district levels
  • Foster public-private partnerships for infrastructure and skilling
  • Ensure inclusivity for differently-abled and disadvantaged groups
  • Establish strong monitoring and feedback mechanisms
  • Promote research and innovation through increased funding and autonomy to institutions

Verifying, please be patient.

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