NEP@5: Five Years of National Education Policy 2020
Kartavya Desk Staff
Syllabus: Education
Source: TOI
Context: The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 has completed 5 years since its launch on 29th July 2020. the policy has seen some classroom-level implementation but continues to face delays due to institutional hurdles and Centre–State disagreements.
About NEP@5: Five Years of National Education Policy 2020:
Key Provisions of NEP 2020:
• New School Structure (5+3+3+4): Replaces the 10+2 model with a learning-focused framework from ages 3–18. E.g., preschool (3–6 years) is now formally integrated into schooling.
• Foundational Literacy & Numeracy (FLN): NIPUN Bharat aims to ensure all students attain basic literacy and numeracy by Class 3.
E.g., PARAKH surveys monitor progress.
• Multilingual Education: Promotes mother tongue/regional language as the medium till Grade 5, supporting cognitive development.
• Flexible Undergraduate Education: Introduces multiple entry-exit options, Academic Bank of Credits (ABC), and multidisciplinary courses.
• Common Entrance Test (CUET): National-level admission test for UG courses to ensure fairness and eliminate multiple exams.
• Teacher Training Overhaul: National Professional Standards for Teachers (NPST) and integrated B.Ed programmes to improve quality.
• Equity & Inclusion: Focus on SC/ST/OBC, minorities, women, and NE states; expansion of scholarships and language access.
• Regulatory Reform – HECI Proposal: Plans to replace UGC, AICTE with one umbrella regulator — Higher Education Commission of India.
• Digital and Adult Education Push: Enhancing online learning, MOOC recognition, and aiming for 100% youth/adult literacy.
• Increase Education Spending to 6% of GDP: Targets higher public investment in both school and higher education sectors.
Achievements in the Last 5 Years:
• Surge in Enrolment & Inclusivity: Higher education enrolment rose to 4.46 crore and SC, ST, Muslim, and NE students saw 36–75% growth.
E.g. Female PhD enrolment doubled to 1.12 lakh, showing gender and regional inclusion.
• Early Childhood Education Gains: Over 1.1 crore enrolled in Balvatikas; 4.2 crore children entered ‘Vidya Pravesh’ readiness modules.
E.g. ECCE linked to play-based and language-diverse kits like Jaadui Pitara.
• Foundational Literacy Drive (NIPUN Bharat): ASER 2024: 23.4% Class III students read Grade II text vs 16.3% in 2022 and arithmetic gains also visible.
• Credit Flexibility and ABC Rollout: 32 crore Academic Bank of Credit (ABC) IDs created and 2,556 institutions onboarded.
• Internationalisation & CUET Success: CUET adopted widely, reducing coaching race; IIT/IIM campuses opened in Dubai, Zanzibar.
Challenges in Implementation:
• Federal Tensions and Policy Pushback: States like Tamil Nadu, Kerala oppose PM SHRI and 3-language formula citing centralisation.
• Slow Institutional & Legal Reforms: HECI Bill still pending; Board exam reform (2 attempts/year) yet to scale.
• Teacher Training and Curriculum Delay: National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education (NCFTE) not released.
• Poor Exit–Entry Uptake Despite Credits: Only ~31,000 UG and ~5,500 PG students used the ABC system till 2025.
• Infrastructure and Digital Access Gaps: Many rural schools lack digital tools, trained staff, or early-grade resources.
Way Forward:
• Centre–State Synergy and Localisation: Adapt NEP flexibly via contextual MoUs, capacity-building, and decentralised reforms.
• Strengthen Foundational & ECCE Systems: Upgrade Anganwadis, align ECCE–school pedagogy, and scale training modules.
E.g. Expand Jaadui Pitara and Vidya Pravesh under NIPUN Bharat.
• Operationalise HECI & Regulatory Unification: Fast-track the Higher Education Commission of India Bill for unified oversight.
E.g. Merge NHERC, NAC, GEC, and HEGC for standardised regulation.
• Expand Awareness of Credit & Digital Frameworks: Launch outreach drives in universities for ABC/NCrF uptake and reduce dropouts.
• Promote Equity, Research & Financing Models: Set up caste–gender dashboards and support regional language content and blended finance.
Conclusion:
The NEP 2020 has made visible progress in enrolment, foundational learning, and institutional flexibility. Yet, policy bottlenecks, digital divides, and centre–state friction slow its full potential. A calibrated push for inclusive, locally-adapted, tech-integrated reforms can turn vision into ground reality.