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Ed-Sector Policy Changes

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August 02, 2018

What is the issue?

  • The Union HRD Ministry has drafted two legislations recently - The “HECI Bill and the RTE (amendment) Bill”.
  • Both seem to lack quality thinking and foresight to better the ed-sector.

What are the two bills about?

  • HECI - Draft bill for “Higher Education Commission of India” (HECI) for replacing “University Grants Commission” (UGC) has been released.
  • It has now been put to public consultation and received more than 10,000 suggestions/comments from various stakeholders.
  • RTE - Right to Education (Amendment) Bill, 2018, was passed by the Lok Sabha recently and is now before the Rajya Sabha.
  • It seeks to eliminate the no-detention policy and reintroduce testing for Classes V and VIII students to stem the degradation of education quality.
  • Why - A number of reports and data validate our concerns of plummeting standards in education, which triggered a need for a thorough policy shift.
  • The recent bill has been proposed in this context, but they at best seem short-sighted with little clarity.   

What are the issues with the HECI Bill?

  • National Knowledge Commission Report (2006) and the Yashpal Committee on Higher Education (2009) did recommend a new regulator to replace UGC.
  • But many concerns have been flagged by stakeholders on the HECI Bill, as it seems to want to replace UGC with a more flawed set up.
  • The proposed bill will lead to over-centralisation and enhance political interference as Union HRD ministry is envisioned as the fund disposal authority for universities.
  • Further, the Bill allows the Chairperson of the new Commission to be a member of the Central government (which was explicitly banned in UGC).
  • The bill also transgresses the autonomy of higher educational institutions by allowing micromanagement on aspects like syllabi.
  •  The new over-arching body does not involve the States sufficiently and or accommodate the diverse needs of the country.
  • Therefore, instead of this half-hearted measure, the government would have been better off plugging the loopholes in the UGC.

What is the proposed RTE (amendment) majorly premised on? 

  • The Right to Education (RTE) Bill 2018 proposes to do away with the current policy that children cannot be detained till they complete Class VIII.
  • This gives States the option of holding regular examinations either at the end of Class V or Class VIII, or both, and failures can also be detained if necessary.
  • This would potentially push out many children who are unable to meet standards because of their lack of access to quality education.
  • Notably, the no-detention policy was to be implemented together with continuous assessment for identify learning deficiencies and correcting them.
  • However, as the system has failed to provide continuous assessment, there was a constant deterioration of education quality.
  • While the policy rollback was to stem this trend, this can lead to students becoming discouraged and precipitate in higher dropout rates.

Was No-detention policy a failure?

  • The no-detention policy is successful in the sense that it has effectively stemmed the dropout rate in enrolments to high school.   
  • However, if the aim is to improve learning outcomes, then multiple other aspects of the RTE are to have been focused on.
  • Besides maintaining a good pupil-teacher ratio (PTR), proper infrastructure like all-weather buildings, barrier-free access in schools are to be ensured.  
  • Further, separate toilets for boys and girls is another pertinent measure to improve qualitative standards enshrined in the RTE.
  • Also, other infrastructure aspects like libraries, playgrounds need to improve from the current dismal state of affairs.

How is funding affecting RTE?

  • Poor funding is a major reason for the dismal implementation of RTE.
  • Further, quality-related interventions accounted for only 9% of the total approved RTE budget in 2016-17.
  • Also, funding for “Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan”, which is the main vehicle to implement RTE, has remained much below the resource estimated need.
  • Interestingly, better off states like Kerala that properly budget and spend the allocated amount, plan to continue with the no-detention policy.

 

Source: The Hindu

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