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Five years of National Education Policy

Brief Context

In News The National Education Policy 2020, marked the first comprehensive education policy completed five years since adoption. Key Features of NEP 2020 Structural Reform: Shift from the 10+2 system to a 5+3+3+4 curricular structure—covering ages 3–18 across foundational, preparatory, middle, and secondary stages. Foundational Literacy Numeracy: Emphasis on basic reading and arithmetic skills through initiatives like NIPUN Bharat for all children by Grade 3.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/ Education

In News

  • The National Education Policy 2020, marked the first comprehensive education policy completed five years since adoption.

Key Features of NEP 2020

  • Structural Reform: Shift from the 10+2 system to a 5+3+3+4 curricular structure – covering ages 3-18 across foundational, preparatory, middle, and secondary stages.
  • Foundational Literacy & Numeracy: Emphasis on basic reading and arithmetic skills through initiatives like NIPUN Bharat for all children by Grade 3.
  • Mother Tongue & Multilingualism: Promotes instruction in the mother tongue/regional language up to at least Grade 5 (preferably till Grade 8); advances the three-language formula.
  • Holistic & Multidisciplinary Education: Multiple entry/exit options in higher education; flexible subject choices across streams.
  • Vocational & Skill Education: Integration of vocational courses and internships from an early stage, with at least 50% learners exposed to vocational education by 2025.
  • Technology Integration: National Digital Education Architecture (NDEAR), DIKSHA, and PM e-VIDYA as digital platforms for inclusive and scalable education delivery.
  • Higher Education Reforms: Push for multidisciplinary institutions, Academic Bank of Credits (ABC),  National Research Foundation, and increased autonomy for colleges/universities.
  • Universal Access & GER Targets: Universal school access by 2030; gross enrolment ratio (GER) in higher education to 50% by 2035.

Achievements & Impacts 

  • School Education: Over 6,400 PM SHRI schools upgraded as model schools in 27 states/UTs.
    • NIPUN Bharat has improved foundational learning outcomes, ASER 2024 shows remarkable progress: 23.4% of Class III students could read Grade II text in 2024, up from 16.3% in 2022.
    • DIKSHA platform has surpassed 5 billion learning sessions.
  • Higher Education: Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) portal has onboarded 1,667 institutions and 32 crore Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) IDs have been created.
    • Launch of Multidisciplinary Education and Research Universities (MERUs).
  • Equity, Access & Inclusion: Steps taken to mainstream out-of-school children, reduce dropout rates, and improve participation of girls and disadvantaged groups.
    • Higher education enrollment has risen significantly to 4.46 crore students.
    • Enrollment of SC, ST, Muslim, and North-East (NE) students has seen substantial growth, ranging from 36–75%.

Challenges

  • Centre–State Federal Tensions: Three-language formula rejected by Tamil Nadu, Kerala citing linguistic imposition.
    • Opposition to schemes like PM SHRI Schools over centralisation fears.
  • Resource Constraints: Significant financial investment is needed for infrastructure, teacher training, and digital access, especially in rural/remote areas.
  • Digital Divide: Inequities in internet/device access risk exacerbating socio-economic gaps, especially among marginalized populations.
  • Language Policy: Concerns over the practicality of widespread mother tongue/vernacular mediums, especially in diverse linguistic settings and for higher education.
  • Privatization & Equity: Fears that increasing privatization may hamper affordability and equal access to quality education.

Way Ahead

  • Strengthen Centre–State Coordination: Build contextual MoUs with states to localise NEP. Create state-level resource groups for capacity building.
  • Bridging Implementation Gaps: Accelerated capacity-building, state support, and regular review of progress are critical.
  • Digital and Physical Infrastructure: Investment in devices, internet connectivity, and school infrastructure must continue.
  • Inclusive Pedagogy & Curriculum: Regional needs and languages must be addressed; Special focus on SEDGs and inclusive strategies.

Source: PIB