Given the increasing demand for new skills across public and private sectors and the lackluster performance of existing vocational training programs, reforming the mainstream education system became essential. The goal was to align academic curricula with the evolving needs of industries and other players. This push led to the National Education Policy, 2020, which aims to integrate vocational training and skill development into mainstream education, ultimately equipping students with practical, job-ready skills.
Proponents of the NEP are optimistic, arguing that its courses foster holistic individual development. Their broad objectives range from enhancing communication skills and promoting scientific and data-based thinking to nurturing creativity, innovation, aesthetic values, health, fitness, wellness, sports, collaboration, teamwork, problem-solving, and logical reasoning. They're right to say the new courses facilitate learning behavioral skills like resilience, agility, innovation, and adaptability. Acquiring these qualities and skills will not only help individuals meet diverse employment requirements across sectors, but also enable them to leverage existing skills in emerging markets. Reflecting current industrial needs, the NEP emphasizes technical education in fields like Artificial Intelligence (AI), 3-D machining, big data analysis, machine learning, genomic studies, biotechnology, nanotechnology, and neuroscience, by integrating these into undergraduate education.
However, despite this optimistic outlook on the inclusive, multidimensional, and multidisciplinary syllabus, numerous grey areas need attention. These include the overall educational infrastructure, faculty strength, budgetary allocations for education, and the availability of trained personnel. Addressing certain structural gaps that cause uncertainty is also crucial for the NEP's progress to be truly effective and meaningful.
The most glaring flaw appears to be implementing this ambitious syllabus with the existing educational infrastructure and faculty. The numerous Multidisciplinary, Value-added, and Skill Enhancement Courses offered under the new policy strain institutions, forcing them to choose only those courses that current faculty can teach. Without proper training in these new subjects and due to a lack of adequate faculty, institutions feel compelled to implement the syllabus without sufficient readiness. Often, they merely manage classes rather than doing justice to them.
To assess student progress in various multidisciplinary courses, a complex examination pattern has been introduced, incorporating assignments and surprise tests into the existing semester-based system. This has made academics more examination-oriented. The more time students spend on exams, the less time they have for actual learning. This also overburdens existing faculty with the valuation of assignments and other tests.
Compounding existing challenges, India's unfavorable teacher-student ratio is further strained by the NEP's focus on teaching each subject in mother languages. Introducing study materials in mother languages will put additional pressure on institutions and teachers to shift their teaching methods. Many teachers currently blend regional languages with English, and transitioning to an exclusive focus on regional languages, with which most are unacquainted, will be difficult.
The NEP incorporates a multiple exit structure with certificates, implying students can leave skill enhancement courses midway, interrupting their learning and training. Their critical thinking development may be stunted. With these "half-skilled" qualifications, students are unlikely to secure top-tier jobs in the knowledge economy. The Central Government must ensure that courses are long enough to instill and develop the necessary skills. The target to increase student enrollment under the NEP further creates unpredictability, as more students join and then leave with certificates, creating uncertainty about how many will complete university-level studies. Nonetheless, there's a pressing need for more universities to accommodate this surge of students. A maximum four-year duration for graduation courses could discourage students from completing them, while leaving midway with certificates doesn't guarantee a job. The Central Government must ensure that certificates received at the end of each academic year carry enough weight to secure employment in either the public or private sector.
Considering the low budgetary allocations to education by both Central and State Governments, the skill landscape transformations envisioned by the NEP within a decade seem far from reality. To make meaningful progress, a much higher proportion of Union and State budgets needs to be allocated to education, treating it as a priority sector. Better and higher-quality digital infrastructure is crucial for implementing the NEP, which aims to improve both low-level skills and enhance high-level skills like AI, cybersecurity, and robotic technologies. Collaboration with developed countries and their universities is a priority, and more emphasis needs to be placed on Research and Development with increased budgetary allocations for these objectives. The central government must retain ultimate control over the development of these sensitive technologies. Therefore, the NEP requires massive outlays for infrastructural transformation to bring real and meaningful changes in curricula aimed at upskilling the masses.
The new policy framework should have emphasized skills associated with modernizing agriculture and agro-based industries, as the majority of India's population still finds employment in the agricultural sector. Furthermore, clear mechanisms should have been in place to ensure and assess whether Central and State government funds allocated for skill enhancement courses truly benefited the targeted individuals.
While the NEP allows private Higher Educational Institutions to set their own fees, they have a social responsibility to provide free education to 20 percent and scholarships to 30 percent of students. This will incentivize bright students from poor backgrounds to opt for private education. However, redistributing funding within public education through increased private sector involvement might reduce capital for many government scholarships intended for minority and backward classes. When involving private players, the government must ensure that students from poor socio-economic backgrounds are not deprived of necessary government support for skill acquisition. Clear governmental mechanisms must be established to ensure that more capital from private and philanthropic actors is directed towards upskilling more people in rural India with backward socio-economic backgrounds. Otherwise, the entire skill-learning exercise risks becoming elitist.
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*Senior Lecturer in Political Science, SVM Autonomous College, Jagatsinghpur, Odisha
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