NEP 2020 Clarified: Why School Boards Won't Merge Into One National Entity

The government has made it clear there's no plan to combine all school boards into one. Instead, the new education policy focuses on a common structure for learning stages. A national center called PARAKH will help make assessments and certificates more consistent across different boards. Schools are also using a portal to connect with volunteers and get support from companies.

Key Points: NEP 2020 No Plan to Merge School Boards Says MoS Jayant Chaudhary

  • NEP 2020 recommends a common 5+3+3+4 school structure nationwide
  • Policy ensures curricular consistency while preserving board autonomy
  • National body PARAKH to set assessment norms and grant certificate equivalence
  • Vidyanjali portal connects over 8 lakh schools with volunteers and CSR initiatives
2 min read

NEP 2020: No proposal to merge all school Boards into national entity, says MoS

MoS Jayant Chaudhary clarifies NEP 2020 does not propose merging school boards, details new 5+3+3+4 structure and the role of assessment body PARAKH.

"The NEP 2020 does not propose to merge or unify all School Boards into a single national Board. – Minister of State Jayant Chaudhary"

New Delhi, Dec 1

The National Education Policy, 2020 (NEP 2020) does not propose to merge or unify all School Boards into a single national Board, the Ministry of Education said on Monday.

Replying to a question in Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Education Jayant Chaudhary said, “The policy recommends a common 5+3+3+4 structure to replace the earlier 10+2 format across all Boards.”

“The NEP 2020 does not propose to merge or unify all School Boards into a single national Board,” he said.

He said the policy has suggested the common structure for ensuring developmental appropriateness and curricular consistency nationwide, while allowing existing Boards to continue functioning within their respective jurisdictions.

Chaudhary said the Ministry of Education has notified the National Assessment Centre, PARAKH (Performance Assessment, Review, and Analysis of Knowledge for Holistic Development) as the national body for setting norms and guidelines for student assessment and strengthening the quality of school assessments in the country.

The MoS was giving a written reply to a question raised by Trinamool MP Kalyan Banerjee.

Chaudhary said PARAKH was set up on February 8, 2023, to fulfil the objectives of setting norms, standards, guidelines and implement activities related to student assessment.

He said that PARAKH has been entrusted with the responsibility of granting Equivalence to Class X and Class XII certificates issued by School Boards across the country.

The Equivalence of Boards initiative, led by PARAKH, seeks to harmonise academic expectations, improve comparability of learning standards and enhance the credibility of Board examinations while respecting the diversity and autonomy of more than 60 School Boards.

While sharing details of CSR initiatives of local Public Sector Undertakings related to welfare projects and curriculum training to teacher, the MoS said that government schools across the country are registered on the Vidyanjali portal that facilitates community and CSR engagement in alignment with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.

Schools independently assess and upload their specific requirements whether for services or assets on the portal. These requests are publicly visible to all registered contributors in the public domain and participation remains entirely demand-driven at the school level, said Chaudhary.

He also highlighted Vidyanjali, a school volunteer management programme to strengthen government and government-aided schools through community and private sector involvement across the country.

From Vidyanjali’s inception on September 7, 2021, more than 8.33 lakh government and government-aided schools have onboarded 5.54 lakh volunteers and 2,365 CSR/NGOs, he said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to know there's no forced merger. As a parent, my main concern is the huge variation in syllabus and exam difficulty between boards. If PARAKH can truly standardise assessment and grant proper equivalence, it will be a huge relief for students moving cities or applying for higher education.
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Aman W
The Vidyanjali portal data is impressive! Over 8 lakh schools and 5.5 lakh volunteers? If implemented well at the ground level, this community and CSR engagement can really bridge resource gaps in government schools. Hope it's not just a number on paper.
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Sarah B
Respectfully, while the intent is good, I'm skeptical. We have a history of great policies struggling with implementation. How will PARAKH ensure a student from a state board in a rural area is judged on par with a CBSE student? The devil is in the details and execution.
K
Karthik V
The 5+3+3+4 structure focusing on foundational, preparatory, middle, and secondary stages makes much more sense than the old 10+2. It's more aligned with how children actually learn. Glad they are keeping the boards but changing the approach. This is progressive thinking.
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Nisha Z
Autonomy for state boards is crucial. We can't have a one-size-fits-all syllabus for a country with so many languages and local contexts. Equivalence through PARAKH is the key. Hope they involve actual teachers and educators from all boards in setting these "norms and guidelines".

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