English, asked by rupakumari906595, 7 months ago

essay writing of new education policy 2020​

Answers

Answered by nethraloganathan2006
20

Answer:essay is here:

Explanation:

First new education policy in 34 years has been brought out. The union Cabinet gave its nod to the new policy recently.

The aim of the National Education Policy 2020 is to create an education system which is deeply rooted in Indian ethos and can rebuild India as a global knowledge superpower, by providing high-quality education to all.

Background:

A panel headed by former ISRO chief K. Kasturirangan submitted a draft in December 2018, which was made public and opened for feedback after the Lok Sabha election in May 2019.

Highlights of the policy:

Public spending on education by states, Centre to be raised to 6% of the GDP.

Ministry of Human Resource Development to be renamed Minister of Education.

Digital Education- related:

An autonomous body, the national educational technology forum, will be created for the exchange of ideas on use of technology to enhance learning, assessment, planning and administration.

Separate technology unit to develop digital education resources. The new unit will coordinate digital infrastructure, content and capacity building.

Teacher Education- related:

By 2030, the minimum degree qualification for teaching will be a four year integrated B.Ed.

Teachers will also be given training in online educational methods relevant to the Indian situation in order to help bridge the digital divide.

School Education- related:

Universalise the pre-primary education (age range of 3-6 years) by 2025.

Universalization of Education from pre-school to secondary level with 100% Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in school education by 2030.

A new school curriculum with coding and vocational studies from class 6 will be introduced.

A child’s mother tongue will be used as the medium of instruction till class 5.

A new curricular framework is to be introduced, including the preschool and Anganwadi years.

A National Mission on Foundational Literacy and Numeracy will ensure basic skills at the class 3 level by 2025.

Board exams to be easier, redesigned. Exams will test core competencies rather than memorising facts, with all students allowed to take the exam twice.

School governance is set to change, with a new accreditation framework and an independent authority to regulate both public and private schools.

Higher Education- related:

Four year undergraduate degrees with multiple entry and exit options will be introduced.

The Phil degree will be abolished.

New umbrella regulator for all higher education except medical, legal courses.

An Academic Bank of Credit will be set up to make it easier to transfer between institutions.

College affiliation system to be phased out in 15 years, so that every college develops into either an autonomous degree-granting institution, or a constituent college of a university.

It also aims to double the Gross Enrolment Ratio in higher education, including vocational education, from 26.3% in 2018 to 50% by 2035, with an additional 3.5 crore new seats.

Traditional knowledge- related:

Indian knowledge systems, including tribal and indigenous knowledge, will be incorporated into the curriculum in an accurate and scientific manner.

Special focus:

Regions such as aspirational districts, which have large number of students facing economic, social or caste barriers will be designated as ‘Special Educational Zones’.

The Centre will also set up a Gender Inclusion Fund to build the country’s capacity to provide equitable quality education to all girls and transgender students.

Financial support:

Meritorious students belonging to SC, ST, OBC and other socially and economically disadvantaged groups will be given incentives.

New Curricular and Pedagogical Structure:

The NEP proposes changing the existing 10+2 Curricular and Pedagogical Structure with 5+3+3+4 design covering the children in the age group 3-18 years. Under this —

Five years of the Foundational Stage: 3 years of pre-primary school and Grades 1, 2;

Three years of the Preparatory (or Latter Primary) Stage: Grades 3, 4, 5;

Three years of the Middle (or Upper Primary) Stage: Grades 6, 7, 8;

Four years of the High (or Secondary) Stage: Grades 9, 10, 11, 12.

Challenges ahead:

Since education is a concurrent subject most states have their own school boards. Therefore, state governments would have to be brought on board for actual implementation of this decision.

Answered by chandujnv002
0

Answer:

The 21st century's first education policy in India is New Education Policy 2020. It emphasized each student's development of creative potential.

Explanation:

The National Education Policy, introduced in 2020 becomes the first education policy of India in the 21st century. Ancient scholars like Sushruta, Aryabhatta, Bhaskaracharya, Chanakya, Patanjali, and Charaka are mentioned in NEP 2020.

There are various principles of the National Education Policy 2020- Flexibility, Multi-disciplinary education, critical thinking, ethical values, Conceptual understanding, no hard separations between subjects, curricular, and extra-curricular activities, a strong public system, and Teachers as the heart of the learning process.

The Kasturirangan Committee submitted an education policy the National Education Policy, to seek the address the following challenges of the existing education system- Affordability, Quality, Equity, Access, and Accountability. It provides reforms at all levels of education from school to higher education.

The main aim is to increase the focus on reforming the existing exam system, strengthening teacher training, and restructuring the regulatory framework of education, and early childhood care.

To know more about New Education Policy 2020, click on the link

brainly.in/question/20229021

To know more about New Education Policy, click on the link

brainly.in/question/21111233

#SPJ3

Similar questions