NATIONAL CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK – POLITY

News: Government releases pre-draft of National Curriculum Framework for schools, seeks feedback

 

What's in the news?

       The Ministry of Education released a pre-draft version of the National Curriculum Framework for School Education on April 6, 2023, and has sought feedback from various stakeholders, including students, parents, teachers, teacher educators, experts, scholars and professionals.

 

Key takeaways:

       The textbooks based on the revised NCF will be taught in schools starting from the 2024-25 academic session.

 

National Curriculum Framework (NCF):

       NCF provides the framework for creation of the school syllabi and the writing of textbooks, while giving guidelines on teaching practices in India.

       It addresses four issues:

a.       Educational purpose

b.      Educational experience

c.       Organization of experience

d.      Assessing learners.

       NCF is only suggestive and provides guidelines on different aspects of education.

       All the states also developed the State Curriculum Framework (SCF) in line with NCF.

 

Purpose:

       To make education comparable across the country in qualitative terms and also making it as a means of ensuring national integration without compromising on the country’s pluralistic character.

 

Previous NCF:

NCF past guidelines came in 1975, 1988, 2000 and 2005.

       NCF 1975: General Science as a compulsory subject, activity based integrated science recommended up to Class X.

       NCF 1988: Science curriculum should be learner-centered, develop well-defined abilities in cognitive, affective and psychomotor domains.

       NCF 2000: Teaching of Science and tech in upper primary and secondary, part of environment studies in primary recommended.

       NCF 2005: Focus on learning without burden, reduction in syllabus, including age appropriate concepts.

 

Sections of NCF:

The NCF has four sections:

  1. The National Curriculum Framework for School Education
  2. The National Curriculum Framework for Early Childhood Care and Education
  3. The National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education
  4. The National Curriculum Framework for Adult Education

 

Proposed Changes in NCF:

The NCF steering committee headed by former ISRO chairperson K Kasturirangan proposed the following changes.

1. Classes and learning circumstances:

a. Foundational level:

       At the foundational level, for children aged 3-8 enrolled in grades between preschool and class II, the pedagogical approach suggested is play based.

       It adds that textbooks are to be used from Grade 1 and most of the content should be concrete materials – toys, puzzles, and manipulatives.

       Along with these materials, learning experience organized through physical exploration of the classroom and outdoor space becomes the most appropriate content.

 

b. Preparatory stage:

       For grades III, IV, V or the preparatory stage, children are to be introduced to textbooks on languages, mathematics, while also retaining the activity and discovery-based approach.

c. Middle stage:

       In the middle stage (class VI, VII, VIII), natural as well as social sciences will be introduced.

       The textbooks need to play a central role in mediating the content in the Middle Stage.

       Both the expansion of curricular areas and the engagement with abstract ideas and unfamiliar contexts could be challenging and bewildering for students.

       Well-designed textbooks with clear expectations and specific learning goals would support students in entering these forms of understanding in a structured and systematic manner.

d. Choice of subjects in Class IX-XII:

       The most significant recommendations in the draft NCF on school education are about choice of subjects and exams in classes IX-XII.

       Over two years, in class IX and X, the students will have to study 16 courses categorised under eight curricular areas.

       The suggested curricular areas are Humanities (that includes languages), Mathematics & Computing, Vocational Education, Physical Education, Arts, Social Science, Science, and Inter-disciplinary Areas.

2. Continuous assessment:

       Students will have to clear eight board exams, each of which will assess their hold on courses they learnt in class IX and X, to obtain the final certification which will factor in their performances in exams held over two years.

3. Semester system in Class XII:

       The committee has recommended more changes at the level of Class XI and XII, including the introduction of a semester system in class XII.

       Modular Board Examinations will be offered as opposed to a single examination at the end of the year. The final certification will be based on the cumulative result of each of the examinations

4. Multidisciplinary education:

       In terms of subjects, students will be given a choice to pick 16 courses from eight curricular areas.

       Currently, in Class 12, CBSE students appear for the board exam in at least five subjects and a maximum of six and there is little scope for them to pursue multidisciplinary education. In other words, a student who has picked a combination of Physics, Mathematics and Chemistry cannot simultaneously study History or Political Science.

       Under the proposed system, that will be possible as the NEP envisages “no hard separation” among arts, humanities, and sciences.