scholarly journals EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND EDUCATION [ ECCE] IN NATIONAL EDUCATION POLICY 2020 AND QUESTIONS ON DISABILITY

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 651-656
Author(s):  
Siyar Manuraj ◽  
◽  
Babu C.C ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-59
Author(s):  
Anamika Shrivastava ◽  

Early childhood care and education (ECCE) is a very crucial pillar in development. It is a foundational learning which nurtures a child and makes him/her capable of further education. However, a sad aspect in our country is this education has been given least attention; the foundational learning is only mugging up knowledge with no practical learning. But New Education Policy is a ray of hope, ECCE is hope for bright future of children who are at present only capable of mugging up and are unknown to concepts of correct learning. This paper tries to analyze all these situations, it is attempted to discuss the benefits of the new policy, its impact and the revolution it might bring. This paper also tries to discuss the roles of aganwadi and other important institutions.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenny Ritchie ◽  
Angel Chan

© 2019, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. All rights reserved. It is important that national education policy respond to demographic changes. In Aotearoa (New Zealand), recent immigration policy changes have produced the new challenge of ‘superdiversity’, which overlays the ‘bicultural’ context of Māori and settler populations and the longstanding impacts of the colonisation of the Indigenous Māori. The lack of equity in this ‘bicultural’ arrangement remains to be fully resolved due to the dominance of the settler culture and the historical (and in many instances ongoing) reluctance of this majority group to recognise and address injustices. The early childhood care and education (ECCE) sector requires of its teachers deep cultural understandings of and engagement with all those children and families present in the education settings. This article provides a discussion of the tensions arising when the new reality of superdiversity interacts with a ‘bicultural’ ECCE policy environment. It then describes the results of a study that utilised a process of documentary analysis to critically examine the macro-and micro-level policy statements and reports with regard to bicultural, cultural diversity, equity, social justice, and place-connectedness matters in ECCE settings in Aotearoa (New Zealand). The implications of the findings point to challenges faced by teachers when translating policy commitments into pedagogical enactment, and highlight the importance for teachers to not only engage deeply with the Indigenous Māori language, culture, and local histories of connectedness with place, but that this engagement should also be made available to all children and families present, including immigrant children and their families.


Author(s):  
Renu Gandhi

Purpose: The New Education Policy (NEP-2020) aimed to revitalize the early childhood care and education (ECCE) program as ≈ 85 % of child’s cumulative brain proliferation occurs prior to 6 years. This initiative is made with special emphasis for socio-economically disadvantaged background communities to ensure better paradigm development of each preschooler. It will allow each child to flourish in life and enhance its skills to give better output in the future and be a useful citizen for the nation. Current digital India and Atma Nirbhar Bharat make it imperative to revitalize each member of the community with mandatory basic skills. For instance, basic financial transactions, online job application forms, electricity bills, fee payments, home shopping, and many more. The pandemic situation has amended the turmoil among the community, which again necessitates basic learning among people. India had made a remarkable stride through initiatives like “Right to Education Act” and “Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan” to ensure the maximum spread of literacy across the nation. With the current unprecedented scenario, a spurring behavior needs to be established to identify key features of NEP-2020, its role, implication, future impact and role of various stakeholders associated. The Present review aims to understand an imperative approach of NEP-2020 towards preschooler’s development and its significance for disadvantaged groups and non-literate members of the community. Design: Identifying the significance of preschool education programs and implementation strategies proposed by NEP 2020. Originality/ Value: The positive impact of NEP-2020 in the development of foundation skills of preschoolers and spread of ECCE program to each section of community to ensure well development of preschooler’s stage. Paper type: Review article.


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