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PRO BONO AND LEGAL AID CLINIC ON EDUCATION & LEGAL SERVICES COMMITTEE Inclusivity vis-à-vis National Education Policy 2020 i PRO BONO AND LEGAL AID CLINIC ON EDUCATION & LEGAL SERVICES COMMITTEE LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS PUBLISHED BY National Law University, Delhi Press Sector 14, Dwarka New Delhi 110078 Published in January 2021 © National Law University, Delhi 2021 All rights reserved SUPERVISION Professor (Dr) Bharti Kumar, Professor of Law, National Law University Delhi ASSISTANCE Aadarsh Singh Ayushi Pathak Priya Abhinav Hansa Raman Himanshu Mishra Riya Shah Akshita Rai Jeetu Tolani Shreyasi Tripathi Amit Verma Kartikey Singh Shubham Jain Amber Tickoo Kali Srikari Kancherla Varsha Sharma Anuna Tiwari Manas Manu Anugya Chauhan Pritam Raman Giriya ii FOREWORD The National Education Policy 2020 (“NEP 2020”) is the third educational policy developed after 34 years. The first education policy was announced in 1968 based on the reports and recommendations of the Kothari Commission, and the second education policy was announced in 1986. The NEP 2020 has a transformative vision of education policy. It is a comprehensive policy that underscores the multi-disciplinary and multi-modal universities, including technology-enabled education. It envisages increased expenditure on education, about 6% of GDP which was suggested in the NEP 1968. Currently, the Government of India is spending less than 3% on education. Questions arise on its implementation and share between central and state governments. The NEP 2020 helps us to understand the futuristic education policy in our country. It not only discusses concepts but identifies innovation in bringing equality in education. The NEP 2020 seeks to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” by 2030. This aspirational goal remains a stark contrast to India’s learning outcomes which remain stubbornly low. It has drawn much attention to the theme of inclusive and equitable education. The UNESCO in its Guidelines for Inclusion viewed inclusion ‘as a process which is concerned with the identification and removal of barriers’ of education and ensures the presence, participation, and achievement of all students and their diversities’. Even though previous education policies have used inclusive education to make education accessible to all, there is still a lack of systemic effort to explore the origins, meanings, and applications of inclusive education in India. iii The NEP 2020 has moved away from the traditional sites of exclusion and has broadened the categories of Socio-Economically Disadvantaged Groups (SEDGs) by including individuals and crucial intersectionalities such as migrant communities, transgender individuals, students of villages, and aspirational districts. The clubbing of categories has potential risks of preferential treatment not being put forward during the implementation more so for refugee children, students of LGBQTI communities, internally displaced communities who did not find recognition in any of the National Educational Policies including NEP 2020. The National Education Policy document is one such policy document whose inclusion affects the future discourse on our education, so the need to assess the NEP 2020 from a different point of view was pressing. With this aim, the Pro-bono and Legal Aid Clinic on Education and the Legal Services Committee at National Law University Delhi successfully organized the Essay Competition on “Inclusivity in the National Education Policy, 2020: A Needle in a Haystack?” which deepens our understanding of the diverse origins and influences of inclusive education in the NEP 2020. The essays in the compendium reflect on diverse aspects of inclusivity such as community engagement, disability, skill-based education, income-based inequality, masculinity, sexuality, rural- urban divide, language, and privatization. Each essay in the compendium strengthens the meaning of inclusion in education and thus focuses on changing how the educational system addresses exclusion. I congratulate Prof. Bharti Kumar and all the members of the Pro-bono and Legal Aid Clinic on Education and the Legal Services Committee at National Law University Delhi for having undertaken this initiative in gathering students' perspectives across India to critically examine the provisions of NEP 2020 from the lens of inclusivity concerning individuals, institutions as well as communities. I am delighted to learn that more than eighty essays were received for evaluation across India for the competition showing the prominence and concern towards the cause of inclusion in education today. I am sure that this compendium will enhance our understanding of systematizing inclusive education in the Indian and comparative context. This compendium has shown that there is a need to place inclusive education within a common framework which will provide important iv
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