Hyderabad:The Kasturi Rangan Committee Report which was tabled at the first meeting of the Ministry of Human Resource Development and approved by the Cabinet on the first day of the second stint of the Modi government aims at building a dynamic science-based new society in the country.
The prophetic ambition to remodel the Indian teaching-learning system as one of the best in the world by 2040 through decisive reforms at various levels from nursery to higher education is very laudable. In the wake of the sharp criticism in 1991 that the national education system of 1986 had lost its relevance, though minor changes were made in 1992, it still remained an incomplete exercise.
The new approach which professes a robust educational structure that takes into account the problems and challenges in various periods, is many times better compared to the half-hearted and unsuccessful attempts made in the past.
If the education sector is strengthened, the flexibility and opportunity to maximize the utilisation of human resources in productive processes will rewrite the new future of the nation. By the time schooling is completed, the new curriculum has given due prominence to vocational skills in some professions, teaching in the mother tongue, reducing the heavy weight of the back-pack of school books by rationalising and reducing the syllabus, and allocation of six per cent GDP to education.
Generous allocations in budgets are essential for the realisation of education for all on a solid foundation. The qualitative transformation unveiled by the new education system will be possible if the amount currently spent by the central and state governments (4.4 per cent of GDP) increases by another Rs 2.25 lakh crore.
While ‘ASAR’ reports are critical about the way primary education in the country is neglected, even higher education is no better. The higher the qualification, the greater the unemployment is the order of the day! The right antidote to this is to reform education from the grassroots! By giving preference to teaching in mother tongue, Germany, Japan, Italy and Egypt are achieving significant growth in productivity.