A digital university to be built on the ‘hub-and-spoke’ model and expansion of ‘one class-one TV channel’ program through 200 channels for providing supplementary education in regional languages in schools are among the major initiatives in the education sector proposed by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in her budget speech on Tuesday.
The government has proposed the expansion of the ‘one class-one TV channel’ program through 200 channels for providing supplementary education in regional languages in schools for classes 1 to 12.
“Learning loss of two years to be compensated by setting up TV channels, really????? It shows that we are not serious about the loss of learning of our children. Open the schools and get children back for in-person learning. Invest in school education,” tweeted Chandrakant Lahariya, an epidemiologist and public policy specialist who has been vocal against prolonged school closures.
Centre for Policy Research president Yamini Aiyar tweeted, “Kudos to Finance Minister for recognizing loss from two years of school closure but really one class-one TV, e-content is NOT the answer. Opening schools in the and (sic). Are we so blind to realities on the ground?”
Mona Lisa Bal, the chairperson of KIIT International School, said the budget was hit-and-miss for the education sector. Bal said,- “Supplementary education can help bridge the gap to a large extent. Increase of ‘One Class-One TV Channel’ from 12 to 200 TV Channels to provide supplementary education in regional languages for classes 1-12 is a welcome move but it will not be enough.”
The overall financial allocation for the education sector for 2022-23 has increased to Rs 1.04 lakh crore from Rs 93,224 crore (Budget estimate) in 2021-22 as the minister emphasized digital modes of education to reverse learning losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic. The revised estimate for 2021-22 is Rs 88,001 crore.
A digital university to be built on the ‘hub-and-spoke’ model and expansion of ‘one class-one TV channel’ program through 200 channels for providing supplementary education in regional languages in schools are among the major initiatives in the education sector proposed by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in her budget speech on Tuesday.
Academics for Action and Development (AAD), a group of Delhi University teachers, said in a statement,
“A major thrust of the budget this year is towards digitalization of higher education and it’s a matter of serious concern. The announcement of digital university and PM e-vidya scheme will merely give a statistical uplift to GER without increasing public spending on education. With huge digital divide and resource and gadget-deficient families in India, there is a need for more schools and higher education institutions on the ground than in the cyber-space,”.
“The idea of replacing human teachers with digital teachers in digital university is not appropriate for India, where huge diversity among students needs different explanations for better understanding. Secondly, this will inflict job cuts, whereas a huge number of eligible and NET-qualified aspirants are looking for teaching jobs,” it added.