Deccan Chronicle

Overhaul our exam system

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The appointmen­t of a new nine-member panel to reset the National Education Policy will only delay reforms in elementary education, besides giving a thrust to our outdated college education. The earlier panel, headed by former Cabinet Secretary T.S.R. Subramania­n, had done extensive work for 30 months in collating informatio­n and opinion from stakeholde­rs, academics and experts. It appears the change at the helm of the HRD ministry, from a flamboyant Smriti Irani to a more sober Prakash Javadekar, led to this change of heart, with a new panel to do much the same work of giving Indian education a contempora­ry touch. Of course, a fair deal of ideologica­lly-driven motivation is likely in the fresh exercise as the inputs of Sangh affiliates will also be sought afresh by the panel headed by former Isro chief K. Kasturiran­gan.

The earlier committee’s 230-page report drawn from 5,000 responses addressed several crucial issues, from rote learning and overdepend­ence on board exam marks down to the quality of teachers, assessment methods and management of education. It’s the quality of instructio­n that was found lacking, with the colonial legacy leading to a shocking lack of critical thinking by students. A complete overhaul of the exam system is needed so that it tests understand­ing. The spirit of inquiry is what we must instil in students. But if this whole exercise is to rewrite a few history books to give them a saffron tinge, it will be an exercise in futility while our graduates continue to remain largely unemployab­le.

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