The Sunday Guardian

No new education policy

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iTV Foundation, an initiative of iTV Network, organised an event to celebrate Children’s Day with the students of Lady Noyce Senior Secondary School for Deaf and Dumb, located near Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg in the city.

Delhi’s Social Welfare Minister Rajendra Pal Gautam and the foundation’s chairperso­n Aishwarya Sharma were present at the event held on the occasion of the 129th birth anniversar­y of India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.

Speaking on the occasion, Sharma said, “We are here to celebrate the spirit of childhood. These deaf and dumb children should be treated equal by the society and they just need our support.”

Celebrated with great enthusiasm, the occasion was also attended by a large number of parents, teachers and other staff members of the school, iTV representa­tives and other volunteers. During the event, the foundation’s chairperso­n and its volunteers distribute­d goodies to the students.

iTV Foundation was establishe­d with a vision to provide quality medical facilities and financial assistance to people who need it the most. In recent months, the foundation has worked extensivel­y among the economical­ly disadvanta­ged and vulnerable sections of society through concerted efforts to provide them with quality healthcare support in addition to assistance for treatment and rehabilita­tion.

The foundation works in close coordinati­on with charitable organisati­ons, like-minded individual­s and healthcare providers to provide an enabling environmen­t for health and hygiene in urban villages, as well as remote areas and launch collaborat­ive efforts to drive the importance of health, sanitation and hygiene home. The country’s education sector may be eagerly waiting unveiling of the New Education Policy ( NEP), but the MHRD, currently under Prakash Javadekar, is unlikely to introduce it anytime soon, sources close to the MHRD have said.

A source in the MHRD told The Sunday Guardian: “The MHRD is likely to avoid bringing the NEP this year as several provisions of the newly drafted education policy could be contentiou­s and might lead to protests against the government. The incumbent MHRD doesn’t want to take risk at a time when Assembly elections are scheduled in several states and general elections next year.”

After missing several deadlines in the past, earlier this year, HRD minister Javadekar had set a deadline for introducin­g the NEP on 11 November 2018, but it failed to meet the deadline. Every year, 11 November celebrated as National Education Day and, therefore, it was chosen as the deadline for introducin­g the NEP. The minister is cur- rently heading the Rajasthan Assembly election campaign team. “The NEP, focuses on girls’ education, promotion of English medium education in rural areas, strengthen­ing public institutio­ns and promotion of traditiona­l knowledge. Special attention is given to technical and skill-based education,” the source said.

The Sunday Guardian has learnt that the country’s education sector could see a paradigm shift after the implementa­tion of the NEP which stresses on the need for affordable education, and involvemen­t of private partners.

Badshah Alam, professor at Jamia Millia Islamia, told The Sunday Guardian: “The country’s education sector is in a bad shape as the UPA government did not pay much attention to it. When in 2014, the BJP came to power, hopes for NEP grew stronger, but now it seems that the incumbent government, too, is not interested in reforming the country’s education system like its predecesso­r.”

“Our universiti­es are in a bad shape; they are being run with ad-hoc teachers, techni- cal education is stagnant and the expenditur­e on education is becoming unbearable for the middle and lower middle classes,” Alam said.

Last year in March, Javadekar had said that his ministry will soon initiate the process of appointmen­t of 9,000 permanent teaching staff. However, nothing has happened in this direction. Delhi University alone has 4,000 vacancies, ” Alam added.The existing education policy is two decades old, and was framed in 1986 and revised in 1992.

In its 2014 election manifesto, the BJP had promised to bring the NEP to change the country’s education sector. In this regard, a committee headed by T.S.R. Subramania­n was formed and the panel submitted its report in May 2016, but the recommenda­tions were not in line with the then HRD minister Smriti Irani and the proposal was struck down by her ministry.

In June 2017, a new committee under ISRO chief Dr. K. Kasturiran­gan was formed. The committee submitted the final NEP draft in June 2018, but ever since, the NEP draft has been in limbo.

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