KartavyaDesk
news

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.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News