NDA to extend scope of RTE, refurbish undergraduate courses

Human resources development (HRD) minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank said the new education policy and education modification will be implemented on priority

NDA, HRD Ministry, Undergraduate Program, Right To Education,  K Kasturirangan committee, Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank, Dhotre Sanjay Shamrao, Education News, Latest English News, English News- True Scoop

New Delhi: India is likely to see a complete reformation of undergraduate programmes, including reintroduction of the four-year course, and multiple entry and exit options for students.

The human resource development (HRD) ministry unveiled the new draft education policy on Friday, on the first working day of the new government, after five years of deliberations.

The draft policy also proposes extending the Right To Education (RTE) Act, which currently applies to classes I to VIII, to the entire school system from pre-school to class XII. As part of the undergraduate reforms, both three-year and four-year courses will be allowed to co-exist, but with “multiple exit and entry options".

The four-year programme will provide for greater strictness and allow students to conduct research optionally, it added.

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“Students will graduate with a four-year Liberal Arts Science Education degree with Honours, or may graduate with a BSc, BA, BCom or BVoc after completing three years with a suitable completion of credits within their subject," it said.

The K. Kasturirangan committee, which drafted the report, also recommended extending RTE to cover children of ages three to 18 (pre-school to senior secondary level).

It advocates “A 5+3+3+4 curricular and pedagogical structure based on cognitive and socio-emotional developmental stages of children.” The Indian school sector caters to over 250 million children, but suffers from quality issues.

Besides, the draft policy advises restructuring higher education institutions into three categories.

“Type 1 focused on world-class research and high quality teaching; Type 2: focused on high quality teaching across disciplines with significant contribution to research; Type 3: high quality teaching focused on undergraduate education. This will be driven by two missions—Mission Nalanda and Mission Takshashila."

Human resources development (HRD) minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank said the new education policy and education modification will be implemented on priority. “We should provide flexibility to students in their university education. The draft policy suggests reform in courses and also suggests students should be allowed multiple exit, let say, after two years of UG, one can exit with a diploma or stay on for a degree," said junior HRD minister Dhotre Sanjay Shamrao.

Higher education secretary R. Subrahmanyam said the draft policy advises a more liberal and comprehensive education system that will allow students to pursue broad-based education in the first year of their undergraduate programme, and then decide which subject suits them best for a specialization or honours degree.

The draft plan says “several institutions of higher studies across the world have implemented what we today characterize as liberal education through an array of different disciplines that include the arts, humanities, mathematics and sciences, suitably integrated with a deeper study of a special area of interest."

The plan will be put up for public comments for a month on 1 June, and will be taken to cabinet in July for a final approval.


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