Narendra Modi turns 72: The Modi government has emphasized the rapid transformation of the education sector, with a concentration on basic, secondary, and medical education. The Modi administration has announced the opening of new IITs, IIMs, IIITs, NITs, and NIDs since 2014. Since 2014, a new IIT or IIM has been established each year. There are currently 20 IIMs and 23 IITs located throughout the nation. Since 2014, two new colleges and one new university have been established every day. As a result, there are now significantly more students enrolled in higher education.
India had 723 universities in 2014, which would increase to 1,043 by 2020. In the same time period, the number of colleges increased from 36,634 to 42,343. The number of students enrolled in higher education rose from 3.45 crore in 2016 to 3.85 crore by 2020. In addition to this, Ladakh now has its own central university, the first forensic university, and 22 new universities have been established throughout the Northeast. A rail and transport university has also been established.
In 2021, a record 71 Indian universities were included in the World University Rankings, up from 63 the previous year. According to the QS World University Rankings, three Indian universities (IIT-Bombay, IIT-Delhi, and IISc Bengaluru) were among the top 200. The improvement of primary education is receiving a lot of attention. The infrastructure of schools, including power, libraries, girls' restrooms, and medical check-ups in schools, has improved along with the student-teacher ratio. Since 2015, there have been 8,700 Atal Tinkering Labs established. Girls' gross enrollment in higher education increased by 18% between 2015 and 2020.
The quality of medical education is increasing rapidly. Post-graduate seats have expanded by 80%, while MBBS seats have increased by 53% to increase accessibility. Six additional AIIMS have already begun operations, and 16 more are planned. The Academic Bank of Credit, which will offer multiple admission and exit alternatives for students in higher education, first-year engineering programmes in regional languages, and standards for the internationalisation of higher education, were highlighted in a PMO release from last year.
Along with SAFAL (Structured Assessment For Analysing Learning Levels), a competency-based assessment framework for Grades 3, 5, and 8 in CBSE schools, Vidya Pravesh, a three-month play-based school preparation module for Grade 1 students, Indian Sign Language as a subject at the secondary level, Nishtha 2.0, an integrated programme of teacher training designed by NCERT, and an artificial intelligence website are also among the initiatives that will be unveiled. Scholarships and student exchange programmes with other nations have also been implemented.
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