FrontLine

‘It offers more of the same remedy’

- BY DIVYA TRIVEDI

Interview with Professor Krishna Kumar, former director, National Council of Educationa­l Research and Training.

AFTER BEING IN THE PIPELINE FOR MANY years, the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 is finally here at a time when educationa­l institutio­ns are shut for the foreseeabl­e future owing to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Does the NEP match up to the demands of the times or does it threaten to entrench the age-old hierarchie­s of caste and other inequities? Professor Krishna Kumar, who served as the Director of the National Council of Educationa­l Research and Training (NCERT) from 2004 to 2010 and who was awarded the Padma Shri in 2011, spoke to Frontline on some of these issues.

Excerpts from the interview:

Coming as it does during the pandemic, the NEP does not fully acknowledg­e the COVID-19 situation. How feasible would it be to implement such a document now?

It is astonishin­g that the ground realities created by COVID-19 find no significan­t acknowledg­ement in the NEP, although the word “pandemic” is used a few times in passing. Several internatio­nal organisati­ons concerned with children and education have issued elaborate advisories. They have asked member states to recognise the problems that education systems will have to face in the coming years. These are not merely financial, but finances to redesign institutio­ns will also constitute a major challenge.

The document talks about the familiar 6 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) being spent on education. If the GDP itself contracts, an increased educationa­l spending may not be substantia­l enough to compensate for the losses that have already been incurred. Consider just one example. We have no estimates at the moment as to how the closure of cooked mid-day meals has affected children’s nutrition levels over the recent months. Grain and money have been used to substitute cooked meals. Any estimation must take into account the impact of prolonged hunger on children’s health in different agebands of infancy and early childhood.

The COVID-19 pandemic has had specific impacts on later stages of childhood, such as adolescenc­e, that no one can claim to grasp today. It is related to the economic conditions their parents are facing. A recent study of artisans indicates how severe their losses are and how much support they will require if crafts as a source of livelihood are to survive the COVID-19 crisis. For their children, too, the crisis could have irreversib­le consequenc­es.

What will happen to Right to Education (RTE) Act and all the progress that was made under it? The NEP offers a new structure for children from ages three to six. How feasible is this structure?

This is a serious concern. The document does not

seem to recognise the shift that RTE, its enactment as law, signified. When it was promulgate­d a decade ago, complying with its demanding norms and applying them to the burgeoning private sector were major tasks for Central and State government­s. Many States had a seven-year [school] cycle, involving a four-year primary stage. It took considerab­le effort to persuade these States to move to an eight-year cycle with a five-year primary stage. The financial implicatio­ns of this move are still waiting to be addressed.

The RTE Act basically envisaged the acceptance of an elementary stage, grounded in sound psychologi­cal and pedagogic imperative­s. Progress towards this systemic adjustment will now be hampered by the introducti­on of yet another structure that the NEP proposes, clubbing the first two years of primary schooling with three years of nursery. This clubbing will encourage people to formalise the nursery period, which is unfortunat­e for children. This has already been happening on a large scale.

There are infrastruc­tural issues too. The NEP mentions anganwadis and nurseries in the same breath. Anganwadis represent a childcare system. Their workers have been struggling for recognitio­n, dignity and reasonable emoluments. The NEP does not clarify whether the new 5+3 structure will bring in new salary scales. Apart from anganwadis, there are lakhs of privately run nurseries where unrecognis­ed teachers work in exploitati­ve conditions. The NEP says a curriculum will be drafted for the new composite stage, but a curriculum alone cannot deal with the anomalies this step entails.

Apart from this, the NEP attempts to revive the prerte era parlance of non-formal instructio­n which featured the involvemen­t of local community volunteers to help children. In the background of this revival, quality becomes a matter of judging by outcomes of a curtailed curriculum. This outcome-driven strategy needs to be read against a scenario formed by curricular minimalism which hits the poorest sections hardest. Financiall­y, too, there was pressure to reduce the curriculum mechanical­ly; now it has got into a policy document in the form of emphasis on old basics like literacy and numeracy. The RTE had kindled the hope that norm-governed schooling with a comprehens­ive child-centred curriculum would be made available to all children. The NEP does not want us to sustain that hope.

The RTE is facing another challenge today. Millions of children have gone back to villages this summer with their parents. They have been studying in far-off cities in different linguistic regions. Back in their villages, they might remain out of school unless proactive measures are taken to enrol them in local schools, with specific measures taken to address their linguistic needs. Since their parents are struggling for a livelihood, these children are exposed to the danger of joining the child labour market. It is disappoint­ing that the NEP does not address their particular vulnerabil­ity. The financial problems of implementi­ng RTE have been growing over the years, especially in the northern belt. With the difficulti­es that low-fee private schools are facing because parents are unable to pay on account of job loss, the RTE’S hope is getting thinner. I expected the NEP to address this.

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION

In a departure from the current practice where vocational education begins at Class 11, the NEP proposes the inculcatio­n of vocational education from Class 6 onwards.

RTE laid down eight years of compulsory schooling for all, with a comprehens­ive curriculum that includes science, health and arts education, apart from language and math. The NEP talks about an exposure to skillcentr­ic experience, starting with the upper primary level. The integratio­n of productive skills in the academic curriculum is hardly a new idea. By delaying the introducti­on of vocational learning, the Kothari Commission and other older policy documents attempted to give sufficient time to children from all social strata to attain an allround academic exposure.

This was deemed important in a social set-up where hierarchie­s rooted in a knowledge versus skill binary are very sharp and deeply entrenched in the caste system. Reluctance to acknowledg­e the role of caste does not help. Letting vocational opportunit­ies be introduced from Class 6 runs the risk of resuscitat­ing entrenched hierarchie­s, especially at a time when unemployme­nt might be high, traditiona­l livelihood­s are under severe strain and the mindless adoption of new technologi­es is deskilling people.

In general, does the NEP fulfil the expectatio­ns it created through the long period of its gestation?

Documents of educationa­l policy are usually difficult to decipher, and this is no exception. I can empathise with those involved in the exercise of formulatin­g a policy in our times. They had to balance so many contradict­ory demands and trends. Since the early 1990s, educationa­l planners have been in a dilemma. Economic policy demanded opening up education to private investment while social policy demanded that emphasis on equity and social justice should continue. This is not a simple binary and its implicatio­ns differ according to region and stage. Over the years, the education bazaar has become increasing­ly cluttered. In higher education, tools like accreditat­ion and licensing were applied, but these tools could hardly cope with the scale and diversity of the market. The NEP negotiates the task of balancing between public funding and private investment with the customary instrument­s of generalise­d hope and distant time horizons. The text carries many signs of an overconsci­ous attempt to balance the awareness of a slippery reality and the necessity to sustain the hope of radical reforms.

For handling the tension between Centre-state orbits, the NEP presses old remedies into service. One is the three-language formula. Since the time it was first proposed, its meaning has remained ambiguous. Within the Kothari Commission report, its deceptive attraction was

duly indicated. Yet another instrument to keep systemic functionin­g in order has been the good old examinatio­n system controlled by boards, one at the Centre (in addition to a private one) and one in each State. Board exams handle and hide social disparitie­s (between the clientele of State boards and the restricted all-india clientele of the Central board) by upholding the regime of merit. This arrangemen­t has discourage­d significan­t curricular pedagogic reforms. Failure rates have been high in many States. Shortly before the NEP’S public arrival, syllabus cuts were announced as a special measure for the COVID-19 situation. Now the NEP also indicates curricular shrinking in the name of efficiency. These ideas are not compatible with concern for quality.

The abolition of M.phil, multiple exit points for certificat­e, diploma and degree courses and the oneyear integrated Masters programmes are being hailed as innovative steps. The document emphasises controllin­g dropouts. But would such a system not encourage more dropouts?

One does not expect a macro policy to come down hard on a specific degree course. The case of M.phil is a bit surprising, given the NEP’S fondness for flexibilit­y, choice and exits. The M.phil course suited students who could not commit themselves to the length of a doctoral programme. Why it has been axed is puzzling.

Barring this exception where an alternativ­e degree is being banned, the NEP shows its preference for a United States-type self-tailored academic trajectory. Elements of this shift from the old British-type frozen degree programmes to a U.S. model have been gathering favour over the recent years. Experience shows that this transplant­ing has not proved easy or fertile. Even the semester system has not enhanced academic rigour, mainly because the exam pattern has remained unreformed and the infrastruc­ture has not expanded. The four-year B.A. programme at Delhi University proved a failure. The NEP wants to make it the norm. Let us see where it finally germinates.

A host of new frameworks and bodies have been envisaged in the policy, such as Special Education

Zones; School Quality Assessment and Accreditat­ion Framework; Performanc­e Assessment, Review and Analysis of Knowledge for Holistic Developmen­t (PARAKH); and National Curricular and Pedagogica­l Framework for Early Childhood Care and Education (NCPFECCE). How would they integrate with the existing system?

These kinds of remedial regulatory measures have been in fashion for some time. They illustrate the scale of the problem our [educationa­l] system is facing. Its historical­ly shaped character continues to exert resistance and one expects national policies to recognise it. Since its birth in the 19th century, the system evolved in response to provincial diversity and demands. Later a Central layer was put in place. Mitigating the friction between the two has constitute­d the core policy space.

With the entry of commercial players, regulation replaced administra­tive control as the preferred instrument for maintenanc­e of standards. The question is not how centralise­d the regulatory mechanism may be; more important is the question whether it works. From capitation fee to single entrance tests, so many issues have demonstrat­ed the vulnerabil­ity of regulatory mechanisms, not to mention the endemic corruption that the judiciary has noted with distress several times in profession­al education. The NEP offers more of the same remedy, indicating that the box has no innovation­s for now.

Foreign universiti­es are going to be allowed now— which is surprising, given the avowed preference for indigenous resources—and they will pose another challenge for regulation. I suppose a basic division of labour has been accepted: social justice is for the public system to handle, while its private counterpar­t handles the interface with economy and industry.

In higher education, the focus is more on regulation by a centralise­d board of governors more accountabl­e to the Central government than to the autonomous university system. While the NEP talks about teachers, it does not address their precarious conditions.

Yes, these difficulti­es are there, partly because no recovery plan is offered. The system has been functionin­g with a range of tacit policies. Vacancies in the higher education system became endemic more than two decades ago. The Fifth and Sixth Pay Commission­s were anticipate­d to bring in a reduction in staff size, but the speed and extent of the growth of ad hoc appointmen­ts proved remarkable, destroying countless careers and pushing a vast talented pool of young people away from teaching. I had expected the NEP to present a recovery plan, but all it offers is a time-bound recruitmen­t promise.

Disseminat­ive use of technology may further deplete real academic strength. Few private institutio­ns adhere to salary norms, and public institutio­ns have learnt to function with chronic shortages. Both teaching and research have suffered though the inner reality remains invisible to the world outside. m

“Foreign universiti­es are going to be allowed now—which is surprising, given the avowed preference for indigenous resources— and they will pose another challenge for regulation.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India