Yashpal Committee
Yashpal Committee
Yashpal Committee
A curriculum proves heavy for children when (a) it is too lengthy to be completed in time by an average teacher under normal conditions; (b) there is mismatch between the difficulty level of the concepts of course content with the mental level of the pupils; (c) the language used in the textbooks is incomprehensible and the style of presentation is verbose and rhetorical rather than simple and straight forward; (d) the basic assumptions underlying curriculum development are not fulfilled.
1. Starting Early
It has been observed during the last few years that admission age to nursery classes has been progressively lowered down to the age of 2 1/2 years at some places. It appears that the perception has taken a deep root that if a child has to succeed in life, he or she must start education early in life.
3. Examination system
The major, well understood defect of the examination system is that it focuses on children's ability to reproduce information to the exclusion of the ability to apply concepts and information on unfamiliar, new problems or simply to think. Both the teachers and the parents constantly reinforce the fear of examination and the need to prepare for it by memorising a whole lot of information from the textbook and guide books. This sort of perception about the examination makes things difficult for children.
4. Joyless learning
Majority of our school going children view learning at school as a boring, even unpleasant and bitter experience. The limited purpose of preparing for examination is indeed a very important factor for the unpleasantness of learning. The child centred education and activity based teaching learning method are talked about but are seldom practised in our school.
2. Experts commissioned to write textbooks for school students are isolated from classroom realities
Since they are not familiar with learning process of children, the textbooks prepared by them prove too difficult for majority of children.
decided to generate a country-wide debate in composite groups of teachers, parents and other interest groups. In December 1993, the State/UT Governments were urged to conduct workshops on these composite groups. In the 50th meeting of the CABE held on 2.3.1994, the Education Ministers of a number of States/UTs expressed their broad agreement with the recommendations of Yash Pal Committee read with suggestions of MHRD Group and the CABE advised effective dialogue and follow up action with the State/UT Governments in the matter. Based on the consensus of State/UT views, 2 sets of action- points, one for states/ UTs and other for central agencies like NCERT, CBSE, KVS, NVS were circulated in Juneand July 1994 respectively. The main recommendations of the Committee which have been included in the broad framework suggested to State/UT Governments in June 1994 are, i) Greater involvement of teachers in framing curriculum and preparation of textbooks at State/UT level. ii) Amendment of School Education Acts or Rules of State/UTs for laying down norms for pre-school. iii) Abolition of tests/interviews for admission in pre- schools and discontinuance of textbooks and homework at pre- school stage. iv) Abolition of home work and project work at primary stage. V) Extensive use of audio-visual material and enforcing teacher-pupil ratio of 1:40. A monitoring Committee for making periodical review of the pace of the implementation process has been set up in the Ministry of Human Resource Development. The whole question of curriculum load is a complex question and there are no simple solutions. It has to be tackled in a comprehensive way, and not through isolated steps. It may not be possible to enhance overnight the level of competence, motivation and commitment of teachers, provide the facilities required to all the schools, check the growth of commercialisation in education, channelise the parental ambitions and aspirations, and minimise the importance of annual examinations. But this should not mean that we are altogether helpless and can do nothing in this 34 regard. A package of suitable measures, both short term and long term, needs to be initiated urgently to tackle the problem. The measures will naturally include attempts to reform curriculum, raise the level of teachers' competence, motivation and commitment, strengthen the system of supervision to make teachers responsible for nonperformance,
provide minimum essential infrastructural facilities to schools and to regulate the system of homework assignment. 35