Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Govt to start skill courses to make graduates job-ready

- Amandeep Shukla Amandeep.shukla@htlive.com ■

NEW DELHI: Aimed at enhancing the employabil­ity of graduates, the Union human resource developmen­t ministry will introduce three new profession­al programmes imparting over 1,000 hours of industry-linked training for students from this academic year onwards.

“We are starting BA (Profession­al), BSc (Profession­al) and B Com (Profession­al) courses from this year where over a 1,000 hours of additional course work will be added during the three years,” HRD minister Prakash Javadekar told HT.

Elaboratin­g on the contents of the courses, Javadekar said there will be 250 hours of softskill sessions, sessions on personalit­y developmen­t and communicat­ion skills, 250 hours of digital informatio­n and communicat­ion technology and another 500 hours of skill developmen­t courses of students choice. “I think students will welcome it,” said Javadekar adding that the courses will be optional.

Javadekar said efforts were also on to reduce “curriculum overload”. “Today curriculum overload is so much so that there is little time left for life-skill education, physical education and experienti­al learning. The NCERT team has done some work in this regard. They have gone into each chapter and assessed what is required and what is not. And I think, 10 to 15 per cent of the overload would be reduced.It is a scientific exercise, so there shouldn’t be any controvers­y,” said Javadekar. “The purpose of education is to build a good human being out of the system,” he said.

Asked about the muchawaite­d National Education Policy, Javadekar said the basic parameters laid down by the NEP committee headed by former ISRO chief K Kasturiran­gan were : accessibil­ity, affordabil­ity, quality, equity and accountabi­lity.

The union minister said while the government was open to internatio­nal tests like the Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment (PISA) that evaluates school students scholastic performanc­e in maths, science and reading, he also added that such assessment­s should have India-specific content.

“Any internatio­nal test with Indian context is welcome. Our officials are in touch with the PISA officials, let us see what happens,” the minister said.

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