General

Here’s Why Indian Education System Needs Remodeling

NewsGram Desk

The country's education system needs to be remodeled as per the requirements and aspirations of today's world, instead of taking it back to the old ages.

What is education? The answer to this question is multifaceted. Some say that it is the process of acquiring knowledge, skills, values, and habits. Swami Vivekananda rightly said that "Education is the manifestation of the perfection already in men." Mahatma Gandhi said that "Education is the basic tool for the development of the consciousness and the reconstitution of society". However, recent moves by our policy and decision-makers try to belie this belief, as these moves seem aimed at taking India back to the old ages.

Education is a journey, which gives the art of living, not just the livelihood. It makes us learn how to nurture our life and be more creative. Education makes us understand our conflicts. Thus, education is not merely learning facts but is to train our minds to think. Education systems must provide opportunities to every individual to learn through experience and should help to develop critical thinking and problem-solving skills.

Follow NewsGram on Facebook to stay updated.

However, in India, the education system has evolved in a completely different manner. Instead of focussing on critical thinking, expressing new ideas, and debating and writing critically on any issue, our students are forced to learn through the rote route. This concept of education goes back to the British colonialists, who wanted an army of clerks with a basic understanding of the language and mathematics, to support their administrative system. However, this concept got roots in India and instead of focussing on developing the mental and critical thinking faculties of the students and promoting research, our education system turned into one where you amass degrees by cramming.


Education and the right to education are some of the fundamental rights of our country's citizens.

Photo by Tim Mossholder on Unsplash

Educational advance in India

Education and the right to education are some of the fundamental rights of our country's citizens. It is compulsory for children aged between 6-14 to have an education. Over the many years, especially after independence, India has managed to increase its literacy rates to nearly 75 percent by 2021, and some states even boast of a 100 percent literacy rate.

The most important focus in the recent decades has been on enhancing infrastructure, incentivizing enrolments in schools by providing benefits such as midday meals, etc. The private sector with government support has played a significant role in the expansion of the Indian education system and improving its quality. But it can also be credited with corporatizing the education system, thus making education accessible to a privileged few. In the research domain, India lags behind many countries. Our universities and colleges lack a multi-disciplinary approach to stimulate inquiry-based research skills. Absence of a proper framework for developing industry linkages with academia to promote research, further limits the faculty and students to work in this area.

We can perceive that most measures are more on paper with no tangible results evident. In 2004, the then UPA government had imposed an Educational Cess of 2 percent on every transaction in the country. In a three-year period, this cess generated 32,000 crore rupees. But how this amount was used, nobody knows and if one asks then vague answers are given. In fact, if this amount had been used prudently, we would have a well-equipped and well-staffed middle-level school functioning in every village of the country. Similarly, for the last ten years, every taxpayer is bound to pay a 1.5 percent education cess on his total income tax. Where this money goes, nobody knows.

Tinkering with the school syllabus

Last year, in a completely uncalled for move, the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) revised its syllabus for students of Classes 9th to 12th in the name of handling the stressful situation of teachers and students given the continuing Covid-19 pandemic, and in the name of rationalizing the syllabus. Some of the important chapters that have been deleted include Federalism, citizenship, nationalism, and secularism from Class 11th political science subject besides India's foreign relations with neighboring countries and citizenship, besides Social and New Social Movements chapter in India from Class 12th political science paper. Demonetization from Class 12th Business Studies paper. Colonialism and the countryside colonial cities and understanding partition from Class 12th History subject has been deleted.

The irrational exclusions smack of a political tone, aimed at keeping a large and young part of the population unaware of these issues. We should not forget that depriving the young generation of its right to increase its knowledge base is not only authoritarian but it might also boomerang. Most of the deleted topics form the foundation of democratic societies and students need to learn about these to enhance their knowledge base.


The irrational exclusions smack of a political tone, aimed at keeping a large and young part of the population unaware of these issues

Photo by Jeswin Thomas on Unsplash

National Education Policy 2019 and 2020

The national educational policy came into force in 1968 to make education accessible to the masses. It was aimed to strengthen national integration through a unified culture of learning. Since then constant measures have been taken to reform the Indian education system to provide better education services in the country, the latest being the National Education Policy (NEP) 2019 and 2020.

However, if we analyze critically the NEP 2019 and 2020, the overall intent and decision maker's mindset, in tandem with the moves taken last year, will be clearer. A critical study of the 484-page NEP 2019 reveals an issue deserving of wider, more heated debate. The words "secular" or "secularism" are not found anywhere in the NEP 2019. Though a clear reference to secular education was vital to be seen as the base for these ambitious reform proposals.

The absence of the word "secular" in the NEP 2019 becomes all the more pronounced when seen in contrast to the earlier policies of mentioning secularism as a core Indian value for Indian education. The omission of the words "secular" and "secularism" in the NEP 2019 is ominous, along with the frequent affirmation of its aim of inculcating constitutional values in the education system, making it doubly odd.

ALSO READ: the critique of the indian education system

The NEP 2019 was launched last in its new avatar as NEP 2020, but many of the contentious issues remain.

In contemporary India, which has seen a sharp rise in caste and religious violence, the curriculum and teaching methods in Indian classrooms clearly have a key role to play in making caste and religious prejudices in society irrelevant and out of time. The challenge is to find fresh and creative ways of making young minds grasp these difficult contemporary social realities.

You have to understand that you can't hide history by giving it a new twist. Even in countries like the UK, there are demands to teach medieval history to the school students again. If you feel that by hiding the truth on your controversial decisions you'll be able to befool people or hide your misjudgments then you are wrong, as history will ultimately judge you, whether you like it or not. (IANS/JC)

In the ‘Wild West’ of AI Chatbots, Subtle Biases Related to Race and Caste Often Go Unchecked

Future of Education with Neuro-Symbolic AI Agents in Self-Improving Adaptive Instructional Systems

Lower turkey costs set table for cheaper US Thanksgiving feast this year

Suicide bombing kills 12 Pakistan soldiers

Dark energy pushing our universe apart may not be what it seems, scientists say