National Education Policy 2020

  • First education policy of 21st century, replacing the National Policy on Education, 1986 (modified 1992).
  • Drafted by a committee chaired by Dr. K. Kasturirangan.
  • Built on five guiding pillars: Access, Equity, Quality, Affordability, Accountability.
  • Aligned with SDG-4 (Quality Education) and the broader 2030 Agenda, with the long-term vision of turning India into a global knowledge hub through flexible, holistic, multidisciplinary education.

Key Targets under NEP 2020

  • Universal access from pre-school to secondary level by 2030.
  • Foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) for all children in the early grades by 2025.
  • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER):
    • 100% GER from pre-school to secondary by 2030.
    • 50% GER in higher education by 2035.
  • Reintegrate about 2 crore out-of-school children via open schooling and flexible pathways.
  • Move towards an inclusive, equitable education system by 2030.
  • Gradually raise public spending on education to 6% of GDP.

Major Provisions – School Education

New school structure: 5+3+3+4

  • Replaces the old 10+2 design.
  • Covers ages 3–18 systematically:
    • Foundational Stage (5 years):
      3 years pre-school + Classes 1–2 (play-based, activity-based learning).
    • Preparatory Stage (3 years):
      Classes 3–5 (experiential learning, building on basic literacy and numeracy).
    • Middle Stage (3 years):
      Classes 6–8 (subject-wise teaching; introduction of vocational exposure, coding, projects).
    • Secondary Stage (4 years):
      Classes 9–12 (flexible choice of subjects, multidisciplinary combinations).

Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN)

  • Declares FLN as a non-negotiable national priority.
  • Proposes a National Mission on FLN with time-bound goals, teacher training, learning material in local languages, and continuous tracking of outcomes.

Curriculum and pedagogy

  • Reduces content load; stresses understanding and application.
  • Encourages inquiry, project work, arts integration, sports integration.
  • Removes hard boundaries between academic and non-academic areas; co-curricular activities are treated as integral to curriculum.

Teachers

  • Teacher education to shift towards a 4-year integrated B.Ed. as the standard qualification.
  • A new National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education (NCFTE) to modernise content and pedagogy.
  • Stronger focus on continuous professional development, transparent recruitment, and performance-linked career progression.

Language policy

  • Preference for mother tongue/ home language/ regional language as the medium of instruction at least up to Class 5, preferably up to Class 8 and beyond, wherever possible.
  • Students encouraged to learn three languages, with freedom to choose based on regional context; all Indian languages treated as national resources.
  • Sanskrit and other classical/foreign languages to be offered as options.

Assessments and exams

  • Board exams to become easier, competency-based, testing core concepts rather than rote memory.
  • Creation of a national body PARAKH to set standards for assessment and to guide test design and benchmarking.
  • School-based, formative and holistic assessment to carry more weight.

Major Provisions: Higher Education

Multidisciplinary undergraduate education

  • UG programmes designed to be broad-based and flexible.
  • Multiple entry–exit system with clear certification at each stage: for example,
    • 1 year – certificate,
    • 2 years – diploma,
    • 3–4 years – bachelor’s degree.
  • Academic Bank of Credits (ABC) to digitally store and transfer credits across institutions.

Research and innovation

  • Setting up of a National Research Foundation (NRF) to fund quality research across disciplines, including in social sciences and humanities, not just STEM.

Regulatory architecture

  • Proposal for an umbrella regulator, Higher Education Commission of India (HECI), with different verticals for:
    • regulation,
    • accreditation,
    • funding, and
    • academic standards.
  • Medical and legal education remain under separate frameworks.

Technology and online education

  • Creation of National Educational Technology Forum (NETF) as a platform for sharing ideas and best practices on ed-tech.
  • Expansion of online degree programmes, digital universities, blended learning models, with quality norms.

Indian knowledge systems and languages

  • Emphasis on Indian languages, classical texts, and knowledge traditions.
  • Proposed Indian Institute of Translation and Interpretation (IITI) and dedicated centres for languages like Pali, Persian, Prakrit, alongside strengthening Sanskrit and modern Indian language departments.

Internationalisation

  • High-performing Indian institutions to be encouraged to set up campuses abroad.
  • Top global universities allowed to establish campuses in India under transparent regulations.

Criticisms of NEP 2020

  • Seen by some as tilting towards privatisation, with concern that increased institutional autonomy and PPPs may lead to higher fees and exclusion of disadvantaged groups.
  • Allegations of excess centralisation, as several new bodies and frameworks are steered by the Union government, which may sideline the federal role of states in education (a concurrent subject).
  • Implementation roadmap considered vague in parts; state-level capacity and financial burden are not clearly addressed.
  • Perceived limited consultation with teachers’ unions, students’ groups and some regional stakeholders during finalisation.
  • Potential legal frictions with existing laws like the Right to Education Act, 2009, especially regarding school structure, early childhood care, and neighbourhood school norms.
  • Concerns that the mother-tongue medium requirement will be difficult in linguistically diverse states and in urban, mixed-language classrooms.
  • Digital divide may worsen inequality if online and tech-heavy measures are adopted without simultaneous investment in connectivity and devices.

About the UPSC Civil Services Examination (UPSC CSE)

The UPSC Civil Services Examination (CSE) is one of the most competitive and esteemed examinations in India, conducted by the Union Public Service Commission to recruit officers for services such as the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Police Service (IPS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS), and others. The exam comprises three stages — Prelims, Mains, and the Personality Test (Interview) — designed to test a candidate’s knowledge, aptitude, decision-making, and leadership skills.


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Cracking the UPSC CSE requires a deep understanding of the syllabus, consistent revision, structured answer writing, and smart test-taking strategies. The Prelims test analytical and conceptual clarity, the Mains focuses on critical thinking, articulation, and subject mastery, while the Interview assesses presence of mind, ethical judgment, and personality traits relevant to public service.

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