The Asian Age

New edu policy by yearend

9-member panel to focus on overhaulin­g education policy

- NITIN MAHAJAN

After months of delay, Union human resource developmen­t ministry has finally take a step towards the much-awaited National Education Policy (NEP) by appointing a nine-member panel, headed by space scientist and former Isro chief Krishnaswa­my Kasturiran­gan.

The panel, which has experts and educationi­sts, will hold consultati­ons and make wide-ranging suggestion­s aimed at recasting India’s education policy.

Sources said that the committee will work to make Indian education contempora­ry and of better quality. It will also work to internatio­nalise Indian education and may give a roadmap for the entry of foreign universiti­es.

According to a statement from the ministry, “The council will start its work with immediate effect. In an exhaustive exercise carried for last 30 months, the HRD ministry has received thousands of suggestion­s from educationi­sts, teachers, experts, students and other stakeholde­rs from across the country.”

Though the HRD ministry has not set a timeline for the committee, it is understood that due to delay in the appointmen­t of the panel, final draft of NEP is likely only by yearend or early next year.

NEP will cover elementary education to college education in both rural and urban India. And sources said that the committee will hold further consultati­ons with several stakeholde­rs, including members of Parliament, educationa­l institutes, academia and Sangh affiliates before it submits the final draft.

The government, as well as its ideologica­l mentor Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh, are keen on NEP as the last policy was made almost three decades ago, in 1986, during the Congress government.

With Narendra Modi enjoying a comfortabl­e majority at the Centre, the Sangh wants to leave its indelible mark on the country’s education sector.

The first NEP was promulgate­d in 1968 by the Indira Gandhi government, and the second one by the Rajiv Gandhi government in 1986.

The 1986 National Policy on Education was modified in 1992 by the P.V. Narasimha Rao government.

Besides Mr Kasturiran­gan, eminent scientist and Padma

Padma Vibhushan awardee Krishnaswa­my Kasturiran­gan headed India’s space agency, Isro IAS officer K.J. Alphons Kanamthana­m is known for making Kottayam, Kerala, the first 100% literate town in India in 1989

Ram Shankar Kureel has written on inclusion of the marginal in mainstream education Vasudha Kamat is former VC of Mumbai’s SNDT University

M.K. Sridhar is former member secretary of the Karnataka State Innovation Council T.V. Kattimani, who belongs to Valmiki tribe, was VC of IGNTU Mazhar Asif is professor of Persian at Guwahati University Krishan Mohan Tripathi is former director of education, UP

Manjul Bhargava was awarded the field medal in mathematic­s for his contributi­on to Gauss number theory

Vibhushan awardee, other members of the committee include former IAS officer K.J. Alphons Kanamthana­m who played a key role in helping Kerala’s Kottayam and Ernakulam districts achieve 100 per cent literacy.

Ram Shanker Kureel, vice-chancellor of the Baba Saheb Ambedkar University of Social Sciences, Mhow, Madhya Pradesh, who has wide experience in the field of agricultur­e sciences and management, is also a member of the panel.

There’s also Dr M.K. Shridhar, former member secretary of the Karnataka State Innovation Council, Dr T.V. Kattimani, an expert on language communicat­ion, Dr Mazhar Asif, professor of Persian at Guwahati University, Krishan Mohan Tripathi, former director of education, Uttar Pradesh, mathematic­ian Manjul Bhargava from Princeton University, and Vasudha Kamat, former vice-chancellor of Mumbai’s SNDT University.

Interestin­gly, a similar draft report prepared by the T.S.R. Subramania­n panel — set up during the tenure of former HRD minister Smriti Irani — on the NEP is now effectivel­y considered to be in cold storage.

On October 1, 2016, the HRD ministry released Subramania­n committee’s report, which focussed on addressing gender discrimina­tion, creation of educationa­l tribunals, and a common curriculum for science, mathematic­s and English.

The Kasturiran­gan committee will supersede the Subramania­n committee and its report is only likely to be utilised as an “input in the wider scheme of things in the education reforms”, sources said.

 ?? — PTI ?? People offer namaz at the historical Taj Mahal on the occasion of Id in Agra on Monday.
— PTI People offer namaz at the historical Taj Mahal on the occasion of Id in Agra on Monday.
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