Acharya
Ramamurthy Committee (1990)
The Government
constituted a review committee under the chairmanship of
Acharya Ramamurthy in 1989 to
review the progress and effectiveness of NPE
1986. That Committee submitted its report in December 1990 with
81 main points in it. The Report of Rammurthy Committee put up
in 1990 was named “Towards an Enlightened and Humane Society”.
The Committee recommended that even the
private schools should be converted into common schools to remove social, economic, regional and gender
disparities. It suggested that there must
be some concrete programmes for SCs, Tribes, Women and educationally backward minorities. It further suggested that
there should be adequate funds to improve
the basic structure and quality of primary education. Primary education must be in mother tongue and the aid to
schools providing education in other
medium should be stopped. The recommendation of the Committee provided a base to develop a new programme of
action, the revised Programme of Action,
1992.
It suggested that the responsibility
for planning, implementing and internal
monitoring of all school based programmes for women's education should be handed over to the
Educational Complexes in the Panchayati
Raj framework. At the institutional level, the Head of the institution (Primary/Middle/Higher Secondary
Schools) should be made fully
responsible for micro level planning and ensuring universalisation (not
just enrolment) of girls' education and their access to high school or vocational education, according to disaggregated
strategies and timeframes. It was also
recommended that all school text books, both by NCERT/SCERTs and other
publishers, be reviewed to eliminate the invisibility of women and gender
stereotypes, and also for the proper incorporation of a women's perspective in
the teaching of all subjects. This review should also cover all the supplementary reading material and library
books being recommended for schools, particularly those supplied by Operation
Blackboard. It also emphasized that decentralized and participative mode of
planning and management offers an effective basis for responding to the
challenge of regional disparities in education, including girls' education.
Diverse strategies and disaggregated time frames, worked out locally,
constitute the twin instrumentalities to achieve the goal of universalisation.
The approach of the Committee in reviewing the National Policy on Education,
1986 and its implementation has been guided by the following principal concerns:-
·
Equity
and social justice.
·
Decentralisation
of educational management at all levels.
·
Establishment
of a participative educational order.
·
Inculcation
of values indispensable for creation of an enlightened and humane society.
·
Empowerment
for work
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