India Education Summit 2021 HIGHLIGHTS: ‘By 2025, CBSE board exams will be entirely different’
Indian Education Summit 2021HIGHLIGHTS: Talking about the debate on teaching in the regional language, the Education Minister said, no language will be imposed on any student and they will have the freedom to chose.
Indian Education Summit 2021 HIGHLIGHTS: Union Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank began his inaugural address on the day 1 of Indian Education Summit 2021. The three-day virtual conference dedicated to discussing the future of education begins today. From schools and colleges shut down due to the pandemic to the launch of the National Education Policy 2020 – the sector has undergone a complete overhaul in the past year. Read More
Under NEP 2020, students will be taught self-reliance right from the school level. There are several overhauls including learning vocational courses from class 6, the introduction of artificial intelligence from the school level, freedom of choosing one’s own subjects at the college level, and setting up of Academic Credit Bank where students who have drop-out can resume education from where they left, said Pokhriyal.
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Talking about the debate on teaching in the regional language, the Education Minister said, no language will be imposed on any student and they will have the freedom to chose.
The further sessions included discussion on asynchronous learning, and content and the game of accessibility. During one of the discussions between academicians, they discussed how NEP will change the board exams systems which in-turn will impact heavily what and how the schools teach. Talking about the NEP’s vision to make the board exams low-stake, one of the stakeholders reiterated, how CBSE has been asked to increase the number of application-based questions by 10% every year and eventually by 2025, the entire board exam systems is set to be changed.
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Indian Education Summit 2021 HIGHLIGHTS: Educating Bharat, key takeaways from the summit on future of education in India
13:34 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Here's what's next up for you in the next session.
This was just day one of the three-day-summit. Join us tomorrow at 10 am. We have many sessions that include eminent personalities including Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi who also holds education portfolio Manish Sisodia, CEO of NITI Aayog Amitabh Kant -- leaders from all spheres of education domain will talk about the education, teaching, learning, and employment opportunities throughout the sessions. Day 2 will focus on 'building a strong foundation', infrastructure play, educators of the new world, and a special address by Manish Sisodia, deputy CM.
13:13 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Content is available everywhere, curating right content is the key: Rajnish Kumar
Knowledge is available at a click of a button. Creativity and critical thinking in children are going to be the role of schools in the future. We require an extremely good level of content as it is available so much the idea is to curate best-suited content, said Rajnish Kumar, Director (Digital Education), Dept of School Education & Literacy Ministry of Education (Diksha PoV)
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MD Coursera shares key challenges in education space
Student management for employability, fee management, faculty management, and the change in mindset fo parents and students in selecting are the key challenges which are bringing changes in the education space, says Raghav Gupta, Managing Director - India & APAC, Coursera
12:34 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Human intervention still needed: upGrad Co-founder
You can get great content anywhere but education also comes with cognitive load and for that, we need human intervention, says Mayank Kumar, Co-Founder & MD, upGrad.
12:25 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Content and the game of accessibility: The last session of the day begins
The last session of the day on 'Content and the game of accessibility' begins. It is being moderated by Shruti Dhapola, Assistant Editor, Indian Express Online. The participants include Raghav Gupta, Managing Director - India & APAC, Coursera, Satya Raghavan, Director, Content Partnerships, YouTube India, Mayank Kumar, Co-Founder & MD, upGrad, and Rajnish Kumar, Director (Digital Education), Dept of School Education & Literacy Ministry of Education (Diksha PoV)
12:22 (IST)09 Feb 2021
How will CBSE board exams change?
CBSE exams are changing the way questions are asked in the exam. Last year, the board has introduced multiple-choice questions (MCQs) in the board exams. The number of MCQs will be increased by 10 per cent every year, the Education Ministry had informed earlier.
12:19 (IST)09 Feb 2021
By 2025, CBSE board exams will be entirely different
If questions are more fact-based the meaning of assessment is superficial. If we pose open-ended questions where the child implies his/her concepts where a child focuses on thinking, the assessment will change, said Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School. By 2025 there will be a completely different type of Board questions as under NEP the govt has asked to add 10% application-based questions every year, added Ashutosh Batta, Chairman, Bloom Public School
12:04 (IST)09 Feb 2021
'Learning is more than just exams'
You cannot replicate the offline day online. We came up with models where synchronous teaching, independent work etc worked for different sections of schools. It implied students do not have to be online all the time. We spent time working on the emotional well-being of students as well. Learning is more than just passing the exams, said Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School
11:36 (IST)09 Feb 2021
'Technology and teachers' experience have to blend for blending learning to be the future'
We need to change the way we think about it. While during COVID we were forced to do it but moving forward, we need to make people comfortable using technology. It has given us cross-campus proxy settings in case a teacher is absent. We can hire experts for 10 hours and all campus students can join and learn certain topics. Technology and teachers' experience have to blend for blending learning to be the future of learning, said Pramod Tripathi Director Academics, Global Indian International School, Singapore.
11:26 (IST)09 Feb 2021
'Online learning is not a new avatar but an extension of what we do'
Pandemic has been a virtual climb for teachers too. We as a school had to figure out an online model. We were not only figuring out tools but also the right screentime for the right age-group. Online learning is not a new avatar but an extension of what we do, says Sowmya Narayanan, Head Centre of Excellence, Inventure Academy
11:21 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Session 2 on asynchronous begins
The second session of the day titled 'Asynchronous Learning: a driving force post the pandemic' moderated by Roshun Povaiah, Editor, FE Digital. The session will have Sowmya Narayanan, Head Centre of Excellence, Inventure Academy, Ashutosh Batta, Chairman, Bloom Public School, Pramod Tripathi Director Academics, Global Indian International School, Singapore, and Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School
11:04 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Gap in teachers' knowledge in impacting design thinking: Ramanathan
We have realised that there is a gap in teachers' knowledge in impacting design thinking. Mentors have voluntered to work at Atal Tinker Labs to fill in this gap, said Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog
11:00 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Need to put foundation skills on high priority: CEO Pratham
Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham said that NEP puts forth the right direction and articulates the goals well. Highlighting that students across the country lack foundation skills, she said that a focused approach is needed. she highlighted that over the two decades of her work with the ASER report, she has seen improvement when teachers "keep curriculum aside and focus on foundation skills" but highlights that this needs to be made a high priority more so in 2021 because of the impact of the pandemic on education.
10:57 (IST)09 Feb 2021
How NEP goals can be realised in govt schools?
I am excited about the direction and articulation of goals, says Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham. The basic levels are worrying low, if we don't fix it early it will be very difficult to fix it later. For more than 10 years we are working on a fruitful, low-coast solution. We need to start where the child is and move where we need to be. Over the last two years, the results when you work with partners with school systems, one can see that when you allow teachers to work on the foundation skills, there can be 20-25% increase. We know how to do things but we need to put it on high-priority. It is more critical this year because of (pandemic) last year, said Banerji.
10:50 (IST)09 Feb 2021
'Need to have standardised training of teachers'
Model schools can act as a basis to spread best practices from one school to others. There has been an emphasis on national professional standards for teachers. There has to be standardisation for the training of teachers. An organisation has been set-up regarding the same, said Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog.
10:46 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Panel discussion on 'NEP - A new approach to education'
Bani Paintal Dhawan, Head of Education India and South Asia, Google Cloud India is moderating the panel where Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham, Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog, and Ashish Dhawan, Founder and Chairman, Central Square Foundation discuss about the policy, its impact, and implementation.
10:40 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Students lacking devices can be given a one-time grant: former ISRO chief
Education institutes will be given access to devices and connectivity to ensure students who do not have access to devices at home have access at least at school. Students who do not have devices will be given a one-time grant for devices such as tablets, etc, said former ISRO chief.
10:37 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Education of future needs to be reconfigured, says former ISRO chief
Education of the future needs to be reconfigured, says former ISRO chief while addressing the education summit. He said that the new education policy replaces a three-decade-old policy. He said that the new policy integrates ICT in teaching learning methods. It streamlines education planning, education, and management.
10:25 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Watch the summit live here
10:24 (IST)09 Feb 2021
'Focus on both online, offline to ensure nothing disrupts education'
We have already asked the top 100 universities under the NIRF ranking to impart online education. IITs, IIMs. KVs, IISERs have worked in this direction. We are creating a base for the future where regardless of the situation, India will continue its education. The online and offline preparations are simultaneously being carried out, said Pokhriyal.
10:21 (IST)09 Feb 2021
About 10-20% of students yet to get access to online education: Edu Min
There can be no alternative to physical classrooms but we are working towards bringing all the students to digital education. We have tried to reach students who do not have access to the internet via television, radio. About 10-20% of students are yet to have a digital access. But with the pace we have moved forward in the digital education space is work which would have taken years otherwise, said Pokhriyal.
10:19 (IST)09 Feb 2021
NEP focuses on research, Budget allocation to NRF a proof: Pokhriyal
Allocated of Rs 50,00 crore in Union Budget National Research Foundation shows the focus of the govt towards research. Now, we have a need of approaching with a new spirit. The NRF is being set-up under the NEP. A technological forum NETF is also being set-up. Now, students opting to study abroad will stay back home to pursue higher education, said the education minister.
10:18 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Have challenge of bringing all the 33 crore students online: Pokhriyal
When pandemics hit the world, students in many countries have to lose one academic year but we did not let that happen. We have conducted all the exams on time and declared the results timely as well. Now, we have the challenge of bringing the 33 crore students online in the digital space, said Pokhriyal.
10:15 (IST)09 Feb 2021
No language will be imposed: Pokhriyal on the debate on regional language
Talking about the debate on teaching in the regional language, the Education Minister said, when students will have the freedom of studying and expressing themselves in their own language, students will flourish and grow. Pokhriyal also gave the example of Israel, Japan, and other countries and said that these countries have found their niche by teaching in their own language. He also clarified that no language will be imposed on any student.
10:10 (IST)09 Feb 2021
India to be the first country to teach AI at the school level: Education Minister
India will be the first country to introduce artificial intelligence (AI) at the school level. Usually, AI is being taught at IITs and specialised colleges but we would start by giving the education right from school level, said Pokhriyal during his inaugural address at Indian Education Summit 2021.
10:07 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Under NEP, students to be taught Atmanirbharta right from school-level: Pokhriyal
The new era, new zeal, new content, and new curriculum will build the new India. This will begin with the initial stages of teaching in the mother tongue. As soon as a student reaches class 6, s/he will get vocational training. Right from class 6, we will imbibe atmanirbharta (self-reliance) in a student. By the time these students will complete school education, they will be warriors who can take on any task. We have also introduced a 360 wholistic assessment system. This will not only help students in introspection and build personality and networking skills in students, said Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank, Union Education Minister.
10:01 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Here is list of events for the day
While day one will begin with Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank's address. It will be followed by a panel discussion on 'NEP - a new approach to education'. This will be moderated by Bani Paintal Dhawan, Head of Education India and South Asia, Google Cloud India. The third session of the day will be another discussion on 'Asynchronous Learning: a driving force post the pandemic'. The would conclude on discussions on 'Content and the game of accessibility'
09:44 (IST)09 Feb 2021
Where to watch the event?
Interested can register themselves by clicking at the top right button 'Indian Education Sumit' on the indianexpress.com homepage. One can also visit indianeducationsummit.in to catch the updates and participate in the event. The event will also be live-streamed at the Youtube Channel of Indian Express Online. For more updates keep watching this space.
09:33 (IST)09 Feb 2021
What to expect from IES 2021?
Stakeholders from different domains of the education sector will hold discussions on the most pressing issues in the space. Day 1 will have a discussion on the National Education Policy, its impacts, and implementation plan. Through the event, participants will also have a chance to learn and implement blended education, meet educators of the new world and interact on a real-time basis wuth speakers as well as fellow attendees.
09:23 (IST)09 Feb 2021
What is IES 2021?
Indian Education Summit (IES) 2021 is a dialogue platform hosted by the Indian Express Online media where stakeholders from different spheres of the education domain will discuss the 'future of education'. Beginning on February 9, it is a three-day event. On the first day, Education Minister will talk about India's National Education Policy (NEP) 2021 and how it would be implemented. The discussion to start at 10 am.
The three-day event to discuss the future of education has begun today with the inaugural address of Minister of Education Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank. On day 2, special address by Manish Sisodia, Deputy CM, Delhi, and discussion on major happenings including educators of the new world among others. On day 3, discussion on 'journey towards a new world' including gaining digital proficiency, to creating modern thinkers to journey of education to employment.
The Indian Express website has been rated GREEN for its credibility and trustworthiness by Newsguard, a global service that rates news sources for their journalistic standards.
This was just day one of the three-day-summit. Join us tomorrow at 10 am. We have many sessions that include eminent personalities including Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi who also holds education portfolio Manish Sisodia, CEO of NITI Aayog Amitabh Kant -- leaders from all spheres of education domain will talk about the education, teaching, learning, and employment opportunities throughout the sessions. Day 2 will focus on 'building a strong foundation', infrastructure play, educators of the new world, and a special address by Manish Sisodia, deputy CM.
Knowledge is available at a click of a button. Creativity and critical thinking in children are going to be the role of schools in the future. We require an extremely good level of content as it is available so much the idea is to curate best-suited content, said Rajnish Kumar, Director (Digital Education), Dept of School Education & Literacy Ministry of Education (Diksha PoV)
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Student management for employability, fee management, faculty management, and the change in mindset fo parents and students in selecting are the key challenges which are bringing changes in the education space, says Raghav Gupta, Managing Director - India & APAC, Coursera
You can get great content anywhere but education also comes with cognitive load and for that, we need human intervention, says Mayank Kumar, Co-Founder & MD, upGrad.
The last session of the day on 'Content and the game of accessibility' begins. It is being moderated by Shruti Dhapola, Assistant Editor, Indian Express Online. The participants include Raghav Gupta, Managing Director - India & APAC, Coursera, Satya Raghavan, Director, Content Partnerships, YouTube India, Mayank Kumar, Co-Founder & MD, upGrad, and Rajnish Kumar, Director (Digital Education), Dept of School Education & Literacy Ministry of Education (Diksha PoV)
CBSE exams are changing the way questions are asked in the exam. Last year, the board has introduced multiple-choice questions (MCQs) in the board exams. The number of MCQs will be increased by 10 per cent every year, the Education Ministry had informed earlier.
If questions are more fact-based the meaning of assessment is superficial. If we pose open-ended questions where the child implies his/her concepts where a child focuses on thinking, the assessment will change, said Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School. By 2025 there will be a completely different type of Board questions as under NEP the govt has asked to add 10% application-based questions every year, added Ashutosh Batta, Chairman, Bloom Public School
You cannot replicate the offline day online. We came up with models where synchronous teaching, independent work etc worked for different sections of schools. It implied students do not have to be online all the time. We spent time working on the emotional well-being of students as well. Learning is more than just passing the exams, said Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School
We need to change the way we think about it. While during COVID we were forced to do it but moving forward, we need to make people comfortable using technology. It has given us cross-campus proxy settings in case a teacher is absent. We can hire experts for 10 hours and all campus students can join and learn certain topics. Technology and teachers' experience have to blend for blending learning to be the future of learning, said Pramod Tripathi Director Academics, Global Indian International School, Singapore.
Pandemic has been a virtual climb for teachers too. We as a school had to figure out an online model. We were not only figuring out tools but also the right screentime for the right age-group. Online learning is not a new avatar but an extension of what we do, says Sowmya Narayanan, Head Centre of Excellence, Inventure Academy
The second session of the day titled 'Asynchronous Learning: a driving force post the pandemic' moderated by Roshun Povaiah, Editor, FE Digital. The session will have Sowmya Narayanan, Head Centre of Excellence, Inventure Academy, Ashutosh Batta, Chairman, Bloom Public School, Pramod Tripathi Director Academics, Global Indian International School, Singapore, and Sumeeta Ghosh, Head - Ed-tech, Enlearn Xperiential Learning System, Heritage School
We have realised that there is a gap in teachers' knowledge in impacting design thinking. Mentors have voluntered to work at Atal Tinker Labs to fill in this gap, said Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog
Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham said that NEP puts forth the right direction and articulates the goals well. Highlighting that students across the country lack foundation skills, she said that a focused approach is needed. she highlighted that over the two decades of her work with the ASER report, she has seen improvement when teachers "keep curriculum aside and focus on foundation skills" but highlights that this needs to be made a high priority more so in 2021 because of the impact of the pandemic on education.
I am excited about the direction and articulation of goals, says Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham. The basic levels are worrying low, if we don't fix it early it will be very difficult to fix it later. For more than 10 years we are working on a fruitful, low-coast solution. We need to start where the child is and move where we need to be. Over the last two years, the results when you work with partners with school systems, one can see that when you allow teachers to work on the foundation skills, there can be 20-25% increase. We know how to do things but we need to put it on high-priority. It is more critical this year because of (pandemic) last year, said Banerji.
Model schools can act as a basis to spread best practices from one school to others. There has been an emphasis on national professional standards for teachers. There has to be standardisation for the training of teachers. An organisation has been set-up regarding the same, said Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog.
Bani Paintal Dhawan, Head of Education India and South Asia, Google Cloud India is moderating the panel where Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham, Ramanan Ramanathan, Mission Director Atal Innovation Mission, Additional Secretary, NITI Aayog, and Ashish Dhawan, Founder and Chairman, Central Square Foundation discuss about the policy, its impact, and implementation.
Education institutes will be given access to devices and connectivity to ensure students who do not have access to devices at home have access at least at school. Students who do not have devices will be given a one-time grant for devices such as tablets, etc, said former ISRO chief.
Education of the future needs to be reconfigured, says former ISRO chief while addressing the education summit. He said that the new education policy replaces a three-decade-old policy. He said that the new policy integrates ICT in teaching learning methods. It streamlines education planning, education, and management.
We have already asked the top 100 universities under the NIRF ranking to impart online education. IITs, IIMs. KVs, IISERs have worked in this direction. We are creating a base for the future where regardless of the situation, India will continue its education. The online and offline preparations are simultaneously being carried out, said Pokhriyal.
There can be no alternative to physical classrooms but we are working towards bringing all the students to digital education. We have tried to reach students who do not have access to the internet via television, radio. About 10-20% of students are yet to have a digital access. But with the pace we have moved forward in the digital education space is work which would have taken years otherwise, said Pokhriyal.
Allocated of Rs 50,00 crore in Union Budget National Research Foundation shows the focus of the govt towards research. Now, we have a need of approaching with a new spirit. The NRF is being set-up under the NEP. A technological forum NETF is also being set-up. Now, students opting to study abroad will stay back home to pursue higher education, said the education minister.
When pandemics hit the world, students in many countries have to lose one academic year but we did not let that happen. We have conducted all the exams on time and declared the results timely as well. Now, we have the challenge of bringing the 33 crore students online in the digital space, said Pokhriyal.
Talking about the debate on teaching in the regional language, the Education Minister said, when students will have the freedom of studying and expressing themselves in their own language, students will flourish and grow. Pokhriyal also gave the example of Israel, Japan, and other countries and said that these countries have found their niche by teaching in their own language. He also clarified that no language will be imposed on any student.
India will be the first country to introduce artificial intelligence (AI) at the school level. Usually, AI is being taught at IITs and specialised colleges but we would start by giving the education right from school level, said Pokhriyal during his inaugural address at Indian Education Summit 2021.
The new era, new zeal, new content, and new curriculum will build the new India. This will begin with the initial stages of teaching in the mother tongue. As soon as a student reaches class 6, s/he will get vocational training. Right from class 6, we will imbibe atmanirbharta (self-reliance) in a student. By the time these students will complete school education, they will be warriors who can take on any task. We have also introduced a 360 wholistic assessment system. This will not only help students in introspection and build personality and networking skills in students, said Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank, Union Education Minister.
While day one will begin with Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank's address. It will be followed by a panel discussion on 'NEP - a new approach to education'. This will be moderated by Bani Paintal Dhawan, Head of Education India and South Asia, Google Cloud India. The third session of the day will be another discussion on 'Asynchronous Learning: a driving force post the pandemic'. The would conclude on discussions on 'Content and the game of accessibility'
Interested can register themselves by clicking at the top right button 'Indian Education Sumit' on the indianexpress.com homepage. One can also visit indianeducationsummit.in to catch the updates and participate in the event. The event will also be live-streamed at the Youtube Channel of Indian Express Online. For more updates keep watching this space.
Stakeholders from different domains of the education sector will hold discussions on the most pressing issues in the space. Day 1 will have a discussion on the National Education Policy, its impacts, and implementation plan. Through the event, participants will also have a chance to learn and implement blended education, meet educators of the new world and interact on a real-time basis wuth speakers as well as fellow attendees.
Indian Education Summit (IES) 2021 is a dialogue platform hosted by the Indian Express Online media where stakeholders from different spheres of the education domain will discuss the 'future of education'. Beginning on February 9, it is a three-day event. On the first day, Education Minister will talk about India's National Education Policy (NEP) 2021 and how it would be implemented. The discussion to start at 10 am.