Anjela Taneja reviews the draft New Education Policy 2019

Anjela Taneja reviews the draft New Education Policy 2019

  • By Anjela Taneja
  • 04 Jul, 2019

The draft National Education Policy (NEP), 2019, is full of provisions that many in the education sector have been desperate to see for decades. The conferring of the Right to Education to children under six and above 14, doubling of the overall financial allocation to education and strengthening the teaching profession bring cheer. However, many of the policy’s omissions and contradictions, combined with the previous track record of central and state governments in implementing existing education policies, diminish this hope.

The omissions: While the policy talks about the need to bring “unrepresented groups" into school and focus on educationally lagging “special education zones", it misses a critical opportunity of addressing inequalities within the education system. It misses to provide solutions to close the gap of access to quality education between India’s rich and poor children. It proposes to remove the expectations that all schools meet common minimum infrastructure and facility standards, and that primary schools be within a stipulated distance from children’s homes.

India’s schools already vary across the scale—from single room structures without water and sanitation, to technology-enabled international schools. Not specifying a common minimum standard below which schools cannot fall, creates conditions where quality of facilities in some schools will only sink lower, widening this gap.

This is even more of an issue since it proposes a roll back of existing mechanisms of enforcement of private schools making parents “de-facto regulators" of private schools. Parents, and particularly poor and neo-literate parents, cannot hold the onus of ensuring that much more powerful and resourced schools comply with quality, safety and equity norms.

India should have moved towards a national system of education that shapes India’s next generation and enforce standards of quality across the country.

The contradictions: While the policy places considerable emphasis on the strengthening of “school complexes" (clusters of schools sharing joint resources) and decentralized mechanisms for supporting teachers, their everyday management appears to have been tasked to the head teacher of the secondary school in the cluster.

Furthermore, no separate funding appears to have been earmarked for this. This is false economy, since this is a full time activity and needs to be staffed and resourced accordingly.

Lessons from non-implementation of past policies: The policy’s implementation is predicated on the assumption that the education budget would be almost doubled in the next 10 years through consistent decade-long action by both the centre and states. However, the revenue is decentralized to the states and it is unclear what would be done to ensure that resources needed will be allotted. The sheer scale of changes expected, the rapid timeline, the absence of a strong mechanism for handholding states on this journey and the probable inadequate budget raises questions on the full implementation of this policy. India’s history is littered with ambitious education policies that have not been fully implemented. The National Education Policy risks following this tradition, unless the government addresses the reasons behind the past policy-practice implementation gap and makes conscious efforts to carry all of India on the same road towards improvement in education.

Original article here.


Related Stories

Humanitarian Response and DRR

06 Jan, 2022

Kerala

The Bamboo Craftswomen of Kerala

The rehabilitation project started after the 2018 Kerala floods has now grown into a full-fledged brand. The bamboo craftswomen of Kerala sell bamboo products under the brand name Fibrent. Mrudula Bhavani meets the women who are at the helm of affairs of a climate-resilient, pandemic-resilient enterprise.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

03 Jan, 2022

Musabani, Jharkhand

Relief for Stranded Mine Workers

The Surda Copper Mine in Musabani in Jharkhand shut down leaving many stranded. Oxfam India’s Mission Sanjeevani helped distribute rations to all workers in the area, providing them with dry ration kit including 25 kgs of rice, soybean, and spices, safety and hygiene kit including sanitary napkins, hand wash, and masks. Oxfam India provided ration to 1578 families who were mostly contractual and unskilled labourers.
Read More

Humanitarian Response and DRR

31 Dec, 2021

S 24 Parganas, West Bengal

Silver Lining for Tiger Widows

For tiger widows, Sabitri Bauliya and Sanaka Singh in Sunderbans Kumirmari village, Oxfam India’s aid in the form of dry ration was god sent. Kumirmari, a remote village in Gosaba block in S 24 Parganas in the Sunderbans is prone to super cyclones and storms. The devastation due to breached embankments, ingress of sea water and complete destruction of any cultivable land leaves behind utter poverty and desperation.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

23 Dec, 2021

Delhi

Picking Up The Threads

For Rajeshwari, a garment factory worker, her only hope for aid was the civil society. SLD partnered with Oxfam India under Mission Sanjeevani to provide ration and safety kits to vulnerable families. 220 families of garment factory workers received food kits to last a family for at least a month.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India