Asserting that the quality of education will energise the youth, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today unleashed measures to revamp the country’s education system, including setting up a National Testing Agency to conduct all entrance examinations for higher education institutions.
Unveiling the budgetary proposals for 2017—18 in Parliament, Jaitley said the government proposes to establish a National Testing Agency as an autonomous and self-sustained premier testing organisation to conduct all entrance examinations for higher education institutions.
This would free CBSE, AICTE and other premier institutions from these administrative responsibilities so that they can focus more on academics, he said.
“We have proposed to introduce a system of measuring annual learning outcomes in our schools. Emphasis will be on science education and flexibility in curriculum to promote creativity through local, innovative content,” Jaitley said.
The government also proposes to create an innovative fund for secondary education for ensuring universal access, gender parity and quality improvement.
Delivering his Budget speech, the Finance Minister said this would include ICT-enabled learning, transformation and the focus will be on 3,479 educationally backward blocks.
The Finance Minister said the government proposes to leverage information technology and launch the SWAYAM Platform with at least 350 online courses, which will enable students to virtually attend the courses taught by the best faculty, access high quality reading resources, participate in discussion forums, take tests and earn academic grades.
Access to SWAYAM would be widened by linkage with DTH channels dedicated to education, Jaitley said.
“In higher education, the government will undertake reforms in the UGC. Good quality institutions would be enabled to have greater administrative and academic autonomy,” Jaitley said.
In his Budget speech, the Finance Minister said colleges will be identified based on accreditation and ranking and will be given autonomous status. A revised framework will be put in place for outcome-based accreditation and credit-based programmes.
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