Seminar on National Curriculum Framework
National
Curriculum Framework (2005)
Introduction
The process of development of National
Curriculum Framework (NCF) was initiated in November, 2004 by setting up
various structures like National Steering Committee chaired by Prof. Yash Pal and twenty-one National Focus
Groups on themes of curricular areas, systemic reforms and national concerns. Wide
ranging deliberations and inputs from multiple sources involving different
levels of stake holders helped in shaping the draft of NCF. The draft NCF was
translated into 22languages listed in the VIII Schedule of the Constitution.
The translated versions were widely disseminated and consultations with
stakeholders at district and local level helped in developing the final draft.
The NCF was approved by Central Advisory Board on Education in September, 2005.
Vision and Perspective
§ To
uphold values enshrined in the Constitution of India
§ To
reduce of curriculum load
§ To
ensure quality education for all
§ To
initiate certain systemic changes
Guiding Principles
§ Connecting knowledge to life outside the
School
§Ensuring
that learning is shifted away from rote methods
§Enriching
curriculum so that it goes beyond Text Book
§Making
Examination more flexible and non-threatening
§Discuss
the aims of education
§ Building
commitment to democratic values of equality, justice, secularism and freedom.
Focus on child as an active
learner
§
Primacy to children’s
experience, their voices and participation
§
Needs for adults to change
their perception of children as passive receiver of knowledge
§
Children can be active
participants in the construction of knowledge and every child come to with
pre-knowledge
§
Children must be encouraged
to relate the learning to their immediate environment
emphasizes that gender, class, creed
should not be constraints for the child
§
Highlights the value of Integration
§
Designing more challenging activities
Curricular areas, school
stages and Assessment
§Recommends
significant changes in Maths, Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
§Overall
view to reduce stress, make education more relevant, meaningful
Languages
§
To implement 3-language formula.
§
Emphasis on mother tongue as medium of instruction.
§
Curriculum should contain multi-lingual proficiency only if mother
tongue is considered as second language.
§
Focus on all skills.
Mathematics
§ Teaching
of Mathematics to focus on child’s resources to think and reason, to visualize
abstractions and to solve problems.
Sciences
§ Teaching
of science to focus on methods and processes that will nurture thinking
process, curiosity and creativity.
Social
Sciences
§ Social
sciences to be considered from disciplinary perspective with rooms for:
§ Integrated
approach in the treatment of significant themes
§ Enabling
pedagogic practices for promoting thinking process, decision making and
critical reflection.
Draws
attention on four other areas
Art Education: covers
music, dance, visual arts and theatre which on interactive approaches not instruction aesthetic awareness
and enable children to express themselves in different forms.
Health and Physical Education: Health
depends upon nutrition and planned
physical activities.
Education for Peace: As
a precondition to snub growing violence and intolerance
Work and Education: As
it can create a social temper and agencies offering work opportunities outside
the school should be formally recognized.
School and Classroom
environment
§Critical
pre-requisites for improved performance – minimum infrastructure and material facilities and support for planning a
flexible daily schedule
§ Focus
on nurturing an enabling environment
§ Revisits
tradition notions of discipline
§ Discuss
needs for providing space to parents and community
- Discuss
other learning sites and resources like Texts and Books, Libraries and laboratories and media and ICT
- Addresses the need for plurality of material and
Teacher autonomy/professional independence to use such material.
Systemic Reforms
§ Covers
needs for academic planning for monitoring quality
§ Teacher
education should focus on developing professional identity of the Teacher
- Examination reforms to reduce psychological stress
particularly on children in class X and XII
Teacher Education Reforms
emphasize on preparation of teacher to
§ View
learning as a search for meaning out of personal experience, and knowledge generation
at a continuously evolving process of reflective learning.
§ View
knowledge not as an external reality embedded in textbooks, but as constructed
in the shared context of teaching-learning and personal experience.
Examination
reforms highlight
§
Shift from content based testing to problem-solving and competency-based
assessment.
§
Examinations of shorter duration.
§
Flexible time limit.
§
Change in typology of questions.
§
No public examination till class VIII.
§
Class X Board Exam to be made optional (in long term).
Guidelines for
Syllabus Development
Development of syllabi and text books based
on following considerations:
§
Appropriateness of topics and themes for relevant stages of children’s
development.
§
Continuity from one level to the next.
§
Pervasive resonance of all the values enshrined in the constitution of
India the
§
Organization of knowledge in all subjects.
§
Inter-disciplinary and thematic linkages between topics listed for
different school
§
Subjects, which falls under different discrete disciplinary areas.
§
Linkage between school knowledge and concern in all subjects and at all
levels.
§
Sensitivity to gender, caste, class, peace, health and need of children
with disability.
§
Integration of work related attitudes and values in every subject and
all levels.
§
Need to nurture aesthetic sensibility, and values.
§
Linkage between school and college syllabi to avoid overlapping.
§
Using potential of media and new information technology in all subjects.
§
Encouraging flexibility and creativity in all areas of knowledge, and
its construction by children.
Development of
Support Material
§
Audio/video programmes on NCF-2005 and text-books.
§
Source-book on learning assessment.
§
Exemplar problems in Science and Mathematics.
§
Science and Mathematics kits.
§
Teachers’ handbooks and manuals.
§
Teacher Training Packages.
§
Developed syllabi and text-books in new areas such as Heritage Craft,
Media Studies, Art Education, Health and Physical Education, etc.
§
Initiatives in the area of ECCE (Early Childhood Care Education),
Gender, Inclusive
§ Education, Peace, Vocational Education,
Guidance and Counseling, ICT, etc.
Conclusion
The
value of Interaction with environment, peers and older people to enhance
learning. That learning task must be designed to enable children to seek
knowledge other than text books. The need to move away from “Herbartian” lesson
plan to prepare plans and activities that challenge children to think and try
out what they are learning.
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