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TSR Subramanian committee

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March 14, 2017

Why in news?

The government has decided to junk the TSR Subramanian committee report on education reform.

What is the view of HRD ministry?

  • It termed the report as a “mere compilation” of older reports
  • The ministry will soon announce another committee to give a fresh report.

What the original report contains?

  • In 2015, the TSR Subramanian was set up to give a new education policy, which submitted its report in May, 2016.
  • The original report bans the political parties from universities. However it is not present in the officially published report.
  • Banning political parties from the campus is unlikely to go down well with the political class considering this is where they get recruits from.
  • It had talked of the need for a standing Education Commission to continually assess the changing circumstances of the education sector and advise the HRD ministry on the need to upgrade policy accordingly.
  • At the school level, it proposed that the Right to Education Act be amended to include mandatory learning outcome norms with the existing norms on infrastructure.
  • It wanted to bring minority institutions under the purview of applicability of the Economically Weaker Sections quota.
  • It had recommended that the selection of teachers for government schools be handled by an autonomous body to reduce corruption and politicisation.
  • On the higher education front, it had called for a “flexible and nuanced” regulatory regime that allowed high-quality institutions much greater freedom than before on financial and administrative decisions.
  • It suggested that accreditation of quality be made more outcome-based instead of being based on input metrics such as spending on infrastructure.

What is the way ahead?

  • It is the government’s prerogative to accept, fully or partially, or reject a report it commissioned.
  • But junking a report that had many progressive recommendations is odd.
  • Some of the recommendations it made represented a radical change from the past thinking and some aren’t entirely new.
  • But together they could have proven a worthy template for the country’s education policy.
  • The government should retain the best of what the Subramanian panel had recommended.

 

 

Source: The Indian Express

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