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Unleashing the power of early childhood learning: NIPUN Bharat

Foundational literacy and numeracy are still out of reach for more than 50 million Indian children. How NIPUN Bharat and Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi schemes are chipping away at the problem with far-reaching consequences.

November 04, 2023 / 16:02 IST
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NIPUN Bharat aims to achieve universal foundational literacy and numeracy for all children aged 3-9 by 2026-27. And the interim school readiness module, Vidya Pravesh, a 12-week play-based curriculum developed by NCERT, attempts to improve a child's pre-literacy, pre-numeracy, cognitive, and social skills, to close the gap in preschool education quality. (Photo by Saili Chodankar via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)
NIPUN Bharat aims to achieve universal foundational literacy and numeracy for all children aged 3-9 by 2026-27. (Photo by Saili Chodankar via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)

One in every five children born worldwide originates from India, a country renowned for its rich heritage and diverse culture. However, there is a big obstacle that lurks underneath this impressive figure: foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN), which is still out of reach for more than 50 million Indian children. According to UNESCO, this educational divide has far-reaching effects, and good quality FLN has the ability to pull 171 million people out of poverty globally, with more than half of them living in India.

Issues raised by Ramamurthi Committee (1990)

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Deep problems about fairness and social justice within the educational framework were revealed during the Ramamurthi committee's detailed examination of India's educational system in 1990. Today's substantial learning outcome differences make these inequities clear.

More recently, the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) for 2018 revealed a depressing truth: only 28 percent of fifth-grade pupils in rural India could perform simple division, and only 50 percent of them could read at a second-grade level. Urban areas performed better, with 44 percent of fifth-grade children being able to do basic division and 70 percent of pupils reading at a second-grade level.