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CBSE Syllabus Cuts - COVID-19 Impact

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July 10, 2020

What is the issue?

  • The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has announced a reduction in the curriculum for the year 2020-2021 for Classes IX to XII.
  • The reductions and deletions suggested by the CBSE violates the cohesiveness and holistic nature of the planned curriculum.

What is the decision taken?

  • The CBSE syllabus for classes 9 to 12 has been reduced by 30%.
  • However, core concepts is said to be retained.
  • The CBSE circular says that the move has been finalised by the respective Course Committees.
  • The Curriculum Committee and Governing Body of the Board have approved the same.
  • The CBSE circular instructs the Heads of Schools and Teachers to ensure that the topics that have been reduced are also explained.
  • But this is only to the extent required to connect different topics that are retained.
  • However, the reduced syllabus will not be part of the topics for internal assessment and year-end board exams.
  • The move comes in view of the reduced number of class hours available in 2020-2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

What are the key deleted portions?

  • For Class 11 students of political science, 'federalism in the Constitution' is removed.
  • Political theory sections on citizenship, secularism and nationalism have also been removed.
  • The core English course will not include exercises to write a letter to the editor, or apply for a job with a resume.
  • In Class 12, the topic of India's relations with its neighbours has been deleted.
  • Also, sections on social movements, regional aspirations, the changing nature of India's economic development, and the Planning Commission have been removed.
  • Business Studies students will not study the concepts of demonetization, and GST.
  • The impact of government policy changes on business with special reference to liberalization, privatization and globalization in India has also been removed.
  • In History classes, students will not study chapters on understanding partition, or on peasants, zamindars and the State.
  • For Class 10 students, the social science chapter on forests and wildlife in contemporary India has been deleted.
  • Also, chapters on democracy and diversity; gender, religion and caste; popular struggles and movements; and, challenges to democracy are deleted.
  • In science, the chapter on the functioning of the human eye has been removed, along with a section on the basic concepts of evolution.
  • A number of practical experiments have been removed.
  • These will be harder to conduct when students are able to spend limited time in the laboratory.

What are the contentious aspects?

  • Basic Science - In basic science topics, it is much better to retain the fundamentals.
  • If need be, the advanced topics or the higher application levels could be removed.
  • But the steps taken by the CBSE are in the opposite direction.
  • For instance, in physics, many basic topics such as Newton’s laws, motion along a straight line and basic concepts of heat are removed.
  • But more advanced topics corresponding to these have been retained, such as -
  1. the topics on work, power and energy, which uses the concepts of Newton’s laws
  2. motion in a plane, which expands on linear motion
  3. kinetic theory of gases, which builds on heat
  • So, teachers will have to teach the deleted portions anyway, in order to build the next level of concepts.
  • So, the deletions remain only nominal, and thus add an invisible burden on teachers.
  • Ecology and evolution - In biology syllabus, higher-level topics such as ecology, environmental science and evolution have been arbitrarily removed.
  • Topics like these, notably, connect the student to real-life situations.
  • Importantly, it is ironic that such topics are removed at the time of the pandemic.
  • The pandemic has highlighted the consequences of the neglect of evolution and ecology in school and higher education in India.
  • Understanding practically every aspect of a zoonotic pandemic requires a thorough grounding in diverse areas of ecology and evolution.
  • These include ideas like species interactions, population dynamics, co-evolutionary dynamics, evolution of host range expansions, and the transmission dynamics of pathogens.
  • A direct consequence of neglect of ecology and evolution is the relative scarcity of epidemiologists in India.

What is to be done?

  • It is fair to take into account the views of all stakeholders in the area of education and do a careful job of trimming the syllabus.
  • Another option to consider would be to better allow the students a gap year to pursue their own interests.

 

Source: The Hindu

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