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Education and its economic outgrowths
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Amit Kapoor | 19 Aug, 2019
In his Independence Day speech, Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted
the issue of population explosion in the country and the need to
address it. He added education as a means of both moderating the trend
of rising population and making them productive as well. Development
trends throughout history have shown that as literacy levels go up,
fertility rate falls and economic growth is easier to achieve. The
latter is due to the fact that with education, child progress takes
place at a faster rate making the future generation of workforce more
productive.
Keeping this in view, the National Education Policy
(NEP) is updated regularly to ensure equitable access to high quality
education to the children of the country. The most recent, NEP 2019, is
still in the public domain for wider consultations. Since the country's
independence in 1947, Indian government has always sponsored a variety
of programmes to address the problems of low levels of literacy rates in
rural and urban India alike.
The first NEP was formulated in
1968. Based on the reports and recommendations of Kothari Commission
(1964-1966), the Indira Gandhi government called for radical
restructuring and equalizing educational opportunities to achieve
national integration along with greater cultural and economic
development. This policy laid the groundwork for all the other education
policies that followed it.
Focusing on compulsory education for
all children till the age of 14 years and introducing the policy which
promoted the three-language formula (promoting learning of regional
language), it gave way to the next educational policy, National
Education Policy 1986. This policy, under the Rajiv Gandhi government
focused on the inclusivity of the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled
Tribes (ST) by promoting scholarships, incentives to poor families, and
recruiting more teachers from the backward classes.
Due to such
initiatives, India has been on track of an improved and inclusive
educational condition that our society requires to provide to our next
generation. Literacy rate since the time of Independence has increased
from 18.33 per cent (Census 1951) to 74.04 per cent (Census 2011). In
the decade between the last two Census' alone, the country's literacy
rate shot up by 14 percentage points.
On the other hand, gender
disparity has still been an area that the existing policies have not
significantly influenced. As reported by Census 2011, there is a wide
gap between the literacy rates of males (80.9 per cent) and females
(64.60 per cent). This gap is also a leading cause for the population
explosion that the country has experienced through its impact on family
planning. Despite the best government efforts through initiatives like
‘Beti Bachao Beti Padhao', the trend has persisted.
Along with
such issues of basic literacy, India's education system will also need
to address the problem of employability. Each year the Annual Status of
Education Reports (ASER) reveal the learning deficit of Indian students
beginning at the level of elementary schools. The last report found that
more than half of Class V students can only read texts meant for Class
II. Such deficiencies will impede the country from achieving optimum
productivity levels in the long run.
The NEP 2019 emphasises on
these as well as many other obstacles in achieving a better education
system and looks to achieve a plethora of goals in the next decade.
Starting from early childhood care and education, NEP 2019 aims to
achieve quality education for children between 3-6 years and ensures
that every student in Grade 5 and beyond would achieve literacy and
numeracy by 2025. The policy also aligns itself with the Goal 5 of SDGs
by aiming to achieve universal Gross Enrolment Ratio in schools as well
as universal youth and adult literacy by 2030 after extending the Right
to Education Act from pre-school till Grade 12.
Along with these,
NEP 2019 also considers that the government bodies and policy makers do
have a huge role to play. First, it emphasizes on increasing school
governance by organizing schools into school complexes ensuring
availability of infrastructure, resources and people. Second, it plans
to establish an apex body, the Rashtriya Shiksha Aayog, which would act
as the custodian of the vision of education in India headed by Prime
Minister. Third, the higher studies institutions would have autonomy on
academic, administrative and financial aspects of their institutes.
Finally, the policy would also catalyse research and innovation across
the country through the formation of a National Research Foundation.
The
implementation is still key in deriving the desired outcomes through
the NEP, but it sets the required agenda on achieving child progress
and, through it, a moderation in population growth and robust economic
growth in the future. By increasing the importance of co-curriculars as
well as vocational training, for instance, it would provide a child with
a multi-disciplinary background, which might be the need of the hour in
an increasingly mechanised world. The effect of these initiatives will
only be realised over the long run but a timely shift in narrative
towards better education outcomes was necessary and a commensurate
policy shift is welcome at this time. The India of the future demands
it.
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