NEP not passed in Parliament, states not taken into confidence: WB Minister

Kolkata: A senior minister of Mamata Banerjee’s government in West Bengal has described the National Education Policy (NEP) as “copy paste of the western model”, and hit out at the BJP-led Union ministry for
formulating the new pattern of learning without either taking the states into confidence or Parliamentary approval.

Though education is in the concurrent list, the contents of the new policy on education had not been discussed with the state governments before it was passed by the union cabinet July 29, West Bengal Education Minister Partha Chatterjee said.

Trinamool is the latest to join the opposition parties in criticising the NEP, which will replace the previous system
that was announced in 1986 and modified in 1992.

The Congress and the Left parties had July 30 criticised the Centre for “bypassing” the Parliament on NEP.
DMK president M K Stalin Saturday slammed the NEP saying, it was an attempt at “imposition” of Hindi and
Sanskrit and vowed to fight against it by joining hands with like-minded political parties and chief ministers of other states.

Chatterjee, who was speaking to newsmen Friday night, claimed that the NEP, 2020 is a “copy paste of the
western model”.

“I wonder how come they (centre) thought of enforcing it without any discussion in Parliament and with the state
governments. This is unilateral,” said Chatterjee, who is also the TMC secretary general.
Banerjee, who is the TMC supremo, is among the foremost critics of the BJP.

The West Bengal government has “listed 10-12 points of the NEP which we will point out in a letter to be sent to the centre very soon,” the minister said, but did not elaborate.

The TMC’s criticism of the NEP drew strong retort from the BJP in Bengal.
Reacting to Chatterjee’s comments, West Bengal BJP President Dilip Ghosh said, those who have destroyed the
state’s education system have no right to criticise others.

“It is an irony that the state government which does not have any education policy is opposing the central
government’s education policy. The education system has completely broken down in Bengal,” Ghosh said.

According to the draft policy all students will take school examinations in grades 3, 5 and 8, which will be
conducted by the appropriate authority. Board exams for Grades 10 and 12 will be continued, but redesigned.
It also advocated broad-based, multi-disciplinary, holistic under graduate education with flexible curricula,
creative combinations of subjects, integration of vocational education and multiple entries and exit points with
appropriate certification.

The NEP received clearance from the cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi after six years of consultations.

 

PTI

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