New Delhi: The New Education Policy (NEP), approved by the union cabinet on Wednesday, reflected sweeping reforms in school and higher education including teaching up to at least Grade 5 in "mother tongue or regional language" and a new 5+3+3+4 school curriculum with 12 years of schooling and three years of Anganwadi or pre-schooling.
The policy emphasizes skilling and use of technology, saying it will be used in education planning, teaching, learning and assessment.
Also read: Cong suspects BJP, CPI-M hand-in-glove in Kerala gold smuggling case
The policy calls for assessment reforms with 360-degree holistic progress card, tracking student progress for achieving learning outcomes and emphasises the creation of an academic bank of credits to facilitate the transfer of credits.
It says that a National Research Foundation will be established to foster a strong research culture and there will be light but tight regulation of higher education with a single regulator with four separate verticals for different functions.
Affiliation System to be phased out in 15 years and there will be graded autonomy to colleges.
The new policy promotes multilingualism in both schools and higher education institutes.
National Institute for Pali, Persian and Prakrit and Indian Institute of Translation and Interpretation will be set up.
The policy says e-courses will be developed in regional languages, virtual labs will be developed and a National Educational Technology Forum (NETF) is being created.
The major reforms in higher education through NEP 2020 include the creation of National Research Foundation (NRF), internationalisation of education, integration of vocational, teacher and professional education, setting up of new quality Higher Education Institutes (HEls), evolving standalone HEls and professional education institutions into multi-disciplinary institutions.
The major reforms in school education brought by NEP 2020 include Universalization of Early Childhood Care Education (ECCE), national mission to focus on basic literacy and basic numeracy, no rigid separation between arts and sciences streams and removal of separation between vocational and academic and curricular and extra-curricular.
The policy has emphasized mother tongue/local language/regional language as the medium of instruction at least till Grade 5, but preferably till Grade 8 and beyond.
Sanskrit to be offered at all levels of school and higher education as an option for students, including in the three-language formula.
Other classical languages and literature of India will be available as options and no language will be imposed on any student.
Students to participate in a fun project/activity on 'The Languages of India', sometime in Grades 6-8, such as, under the 'Ek Bharat Shrestha Bharat' initiative.