Teacher + student = Knowledge economy
The National Curriculum Framework for School Education (NCFSE), released last week, understands this. As one of four curriculum frameworks, it proposes a broad structure of school education that is fit for purpose for a rapidly growing and emergin...

NCFSE is purportedly designed with the teacher at its centre. This certainly makes sense, since a large proportion of India's school-going population relies heavily on teachers, both qualitatively and quantitatively, to gain from attending classrooms. NCFSE builds on earlier iterations, moving towards a semester-based system, blurring of 'hard' choices between streams (science, commerce, arts) and dismantling embedded hierarchies of disciplines regardless of academic or vocational education. The recommendation of a biannual Board exam will help de-stress learning.
There are real challenges that the NCF proposes to tackle - translating the intent of creating a system of openness, inclusivity, confidence and innovation into a real knowledge economy. Arguably, the most crucial challenge will be creating a body of educators that can transform NCF into reality. Here again, the framework for imparting teacher education will be vital.
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