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National Education Mission
View on WikipediaThis article contains promotional content. (March 2023) |

The National Education Mission (Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan) is an overarching programme for the school education sector extending from pre-school to class 12, launched in 2018. It was allocated a budget of ₹385.72 billion (US$4.6 billion) in the 2019 Interim Union Budget of India. The stated mission comprises four schemes, namely Saakshar Bharat, Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan and the Centrally Sponsored Scheme on Teacher Education (CSSTE).[1] In 2021, the NIPUN Bharat Mission was launched as part of Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan,[2] teaching literacy and numeracy skills in universities by Grade 3.[3]
In the 2023–24 Union Budget presented on 1 February 2023, the Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan allocated an amount of ₹37,453.47.[4]

Saakshar Bharat
[edit]Saakshar Bharat is a government of India initiative launched by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to conduct teaching-learning programmes for the non-literate aged 15 and above. It was launched on 8 September 2009, as a centrally sponsored scheme.[5] It aims to recast India's National Literacy Mission to focus on the literacy of women.[6] It is a scheme from the Department of School Education, Ministry of Education, Government of India. The National Literacy Mission covered 597 districts under the Total Literacy Campaign, 485 districts under the Post Literacy Programme and 328 districts under the Continuing Education Programme. The Saakshar Bharat Mission has chosen six villages for 'Model Adult Education Centers' under Lok Shiksha Samiti in the Karimnagar district, in Telangana state.[7]
The National Literacy Mission (NLM) is a nationwide program started by the Government of India in 1988 with the approval of the Cabinet as an independent and autonomous wing of the Ministry of HRD (the then Department of Education). Its stated aim is to educate 80 million adults in the age group of 15–35 over an eighty-year period.
National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy Bharat
[edit]
The Ministry of Education has launched a National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy (NIPUN Bharat), with the stated goals that all Indians attain foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) by the end of Grade 3 by 2026–27.[8] These are called ‘Lakshyas’ and they are defined for each level from the Balvatika to Grade 3. The children who are in Classes 4 and 5 were provided individual teacher guidance.[9] The estimated budget for the NIPUN Bharat Mission is ₹2,688 for fiscal year 2021–22.[10]
States such as Uttar Pradesh,[11] Madhya Pradesh,[12] West Bengal,[13] Bihar,[14] Tamil Nadu,[15] Assam,[16] and Haryana[17] have also launched their respective State Foundational Literacy and Numeracy Missions based on the framework of NIPUN Bharat.
Framework
[edit]The NIPUN Bharat Mission categorizes the expected learning outcomes into three primary developmental goals, namely (i) Children to maintain good health and well-being, (ii) Children to become effective communicators, and (iii) Children to become evolved learners and connect with their environment.[18]
Foundational Learning Study 2022
[edit]The Foundational Learning Study 2022 (FLS 2022) is a study serving as the baseline for the implementation of the NIPUN Bharat Mission by the Ministry of Education in March 2022. The FLS 2022 is one of the largest ever studies to assess the foundational level of schoolchildren in India, with a sample size of 86,000 students across grades III, V, VIII and X across 10,000 schools.[19] It is also the first-ever study to benchmark Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) and numeracy on the basis of the UN Global Proficiency Framework.[citation needed]
Foundational Learning in India's G20 Presidency
[edit]'Foundational Literacy and Numeracy, especially in the context of blended learning'[20] has been recognized by the Ministry of Education as one of the four 'pillars' of the Education Working Group for India's G20 Presidency in 2023.
References
[edit]- ^ "Education Budget 2019 Highlights: How the education sector and job market will be affected", India Today, 1 February 2019
- ^ "All about ICT Scheme Under Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan". www.idreameducation.org. Retrieved 9 November 2024.
- ^ "Education Ministry launches NIPUN Bharat Mission". @businessline. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
- ^ "Union Budget 2023: School education outlay rises by Rs 5,355 cr". news.careers360.com. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
- ^ "The Hindu news report". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 9 September 2009. Archived from the original on 12 September 2009. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
- ^ "New Kerala". Retrieved 9 September 2009.
- ^ "Saakshar Bharat Mission selected 6 villages in Telangana". Retrieved 7 February 2015.
- ^ "Nipun Bharat Scheme". pib.gov.in. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "Vikaspedia Domains".
- ^ "Does the Union Budget 2022-23 Offer Inclusive Recovery for School Education?". CBGA India. 8 February 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
- ^ "IIM-Lucknow to aid UP script new chapter in education goals under Bharat Mission | Lucknow News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "मिशन अंकुर का लक्ष्य वर्ष 2026 तक मध्य प्रदेश में कक्षा पहली से तीसरी तक हर छात्र पढऩा-लिखना और गणित में हो जाए दक्ष | Mission Ankur In MP Schools NIPUN Bhart". Patrika News (in Hindi). 27 April 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "Foundational Literacy and Numeracy in West Bengal". Economic and Political Weekly. 56 (16). 17 April 2021.
- ^ B. K. Mishra (6 September 2022). "Nipun Bihar Mission Launched, to Skill Pupils Of Up To Class Iii | Patna News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "Our Projects". Madhi Foundation. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ Kangkan Kalita (31 December 2022). "Assam set to take big strides in education | Guwahati News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "Towards Nipun Haryana and Nipun Bharat". digitalLEARNING Magazine. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ Shukla, Anubhav (28 August 2022). "Nipun Bharat Mission : Objectives, Benefits and Features - Nipun Bharat Mission". Retrieved 30 January 2023.
- ^ "Press Information Bureau". pib.gov.in. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
- ^ "Shri Dharmendra Pradhan holds a high-level meeting on preparations for G20 Summit going to be held in India in 2023". pib.gov.in. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
National Education Mission
View on GrokipediaBackground and Establishment
Predecessor Schemes
The primary predecessor schemes to the National Education Mission were the fragmented centrally sponsored initiatives targeting elementary education, secondary education, and teacher training, which operated independently until their merger into an integrated framework in 2018.[12] These schemes addressed gaps in access, equity, and quality but suffered from siloed implementation, leading to inefficiencies in resource allocation and coverage across school stages. Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), launched in 2000–2001 following the 86th Constitutional Amendment designating free and compulsory elementary education as a fundamental right, aimed to universalize enrollment, retention, and achievement for children aged 6–14.[13] It emphasized infrastructure development, teacher recruitment, and community involvement, building on prior externally aided projects like the District Primary Education Programme (DPEP), initiated in 1994 with World Bank support to improve primary schooling in 18 low-performing districts across multiple states.[14] SSA allocated funds on a 60:40 center-state sharing basis (90:10 for northeastern and special category states), with outlays scaling from approximately ₹5,000 crore annually in its early years to over ₹30,000 crore by 2017–18, though enrollment rates hovered around 95% while learning outcomes remained suboptimal per assessments like ASER reports.[13] Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA), introduced in March 2009, sought to achieve universal secondary education (classes IX–XII) by 2017 through expanding access, upgrading facilities, and reducing dropout rates, which stood at about 15% at the secondary level in 2009–10.[15] Funded similarly to SSA with a focus on equity for girls and disadvantaged groups, it supported new school construction, ICT integration, and vocational education, disbursing around ₹4,200 crore in its peak budget year of 2017–18 before integration.[15] RMSA complemented SSA by bridging the transition from elementary to higher secondary stages but faced challenges in equitable teacher distribution and infrastructure quality in rural areas. The Centrally Sponsored Scheme on Teacher Education (TE), evolving from recommendations in the National Policy on Education 1986, focused on pre-service and in-service training through institutions like District Institutes of Education and Training (DIETs), established since 1986 to cover over 250 districts by the 2010s.[12] It aimed to strengthen the teacher cadre, with components including grants for SCERTs and upgrades to 50 integrated teacher training institutions, but implementation varied due to state-level capacity constraints and funding dependencies. Earlier foundational efforts, such as Operation Blackboard launched in 1987, provided minimum learning materials and teacher training to primary schools, influencing subsequent schemes by highlighting infrastructure deficits in over 800,000 schools nationwide.[16] For adult literacy, precursors to integrated components like Saakshar Bharat included the National Literacy Mission (NLM) initiated in 1988, targeting eradication of illiteracy among those aged 15–35 through voluntary participation and functional literacy programs across 600 districts by 1991, achieving a literacy rate rise from 52.2% in 1991 to 64.8% in 2001 per census data.[17] These schemes laid the groundwork for the Mission's holistic approach but underscored the need for convergence to avoid overlaps and enhance outcomes.[12]Launch and Integration
The National Education Mission for school education was operationalized through the launch of the Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan, an integrated scheme approved by the Government of India in 2018 to consolidate fragmented efforts in elementary, secondary, and teacher education.[3] This initiative subsumed three prior centrally sponsored schemes: Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), which focused on universal elementary education since its inception in 2001; Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA), aimed at secondary education expansion from 2009; and the Teacher Education scheme, which addressed pre-service and in-service training since 2007.[18] The integration sought to eliminate operational silos, enabling a holistic approach from pre-school to Class 12, with improved fund flexibility and alignment to the Right to Education Act, 2009.[19] The formal launch occurred on May 24, 2018, by then Union Human Resource Development Minister Prakash Javadekar during an event in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh, marking the shift to a unified funding and implementation framework with an initial outlay supporting over 11.6 lakh schools nationwide.[20] Prior to integration, SSA and RMSA operated with separate guidelines and state-level project directors, leading to inefficiencies in resource allocation and coverage gaps between elementary and secondary levels; the merger introduced converged planning at district and block levels to foster equity and quality continuity. This restructuring was driven by recommendations to enhance outcomes under Sustainable Development Goal 4, emphasizing inclusive access without compromising on teacher capacity building.[18] Implementation post-launch involved transitioning state mechanisms, with advisory guidelines issued to harmonize SSA and RMSA activities, such as joint infrastructure audits and shared digital platforms like UDISE+ for data-driven monitoring.[21] By 2021, the scheme was extended to March 2026 with a total allocation of Rs. 2,94,283.04 crore, incorporating components like gender-focused interventions and digital integration to address persistent disparities in enrollment and learning outcomes.[19] The integration has been credited with streamlining administrative overlaps, though challenges in full convergence at the grassroots level persist due to varying state capacities.[22]Objectives and Framework
Core Goals
The National Education Mission, through its integrated framework such as Samagra Shiksha, prioritizes universal access to school education from pre-primary to senior secondary levels, ensuring a continuum of learning without silos between stages. This involves expanding enrollment and retention, particularly targeting out-of-school children and underserved regions, with an emphasis on cost-effective delivery to achieve equitable participation.[3] The mission aligns these efforts with the National Education Policy 2020, supporting states in implementing reforms for foundational literacy and numeracy by Grade 3, as embedded in initiatives like NIPUN Bharat.[23] Equity forms a central pillar, focusing on inclusion of disadvantaged groups including Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, girls, and children with disabilities through targeted interventions like scholarships, special training modules, and barrier-free infrastructure. It addresses disparities by promoting gender parity in enrollment and reducing dropout rates, with data-driven monitoring to close gaps observed in historical schemes like Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan.[24] Quality enhancement targets improved learning outcomes via teacher capacity building, curriculum aligned with cognitive development, and integration of vocational skills from middle school onward to foster employability.[3] Additional core aims include leveraging technology for digital infrastructure, such as broadband connectivity in schools and e-learning platforms, while strengthening governance through outcome-based evaluations rather than input-focused metrics. The mission commits to increasing public expenditure on education toward 6% of GDP, though implementation varies by state fiscal capacities, underscoring the need for decentralized execution with central oversight.[23] These goals collectively seek to produce a skilled, literate populace capable of contributing to economic growth, drawing from empirical assessments of prior programs' shortcomings in retention and skill gaps.[24]Structural Components
The National Education Mission encompasses an integrated framework for school education in India, primarily operationalized through the Samagra Shiksha scheme, launched on 29 July 2018, which subsumes the earlier Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan for elementary education, Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan for secondary education, and the Centrally Sponsored Scheme on Teacher Education.[1] This structure treats school education as a continuum from pre-school to Class 12, emphasizing holistic development aligned with the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009, and supporting the curricular shift to a 5+3+3+4 model under the National Education Policy 2020.[23] The framework prioritizes seamless progression across educational stages, with funding norms adjusted to cover infrastructure, equity interventions, and quality enhancements, allocating approximately 37,499.99 crore rupees for Samagra Shiksha in the 2024-25 budget.[25] At the organizational level, the mission employs a decentralized, three-tier governance model. Nationally, the Ministry of Education oversees policy, approves annual work plans via a Project Approval Board, and manages a 10% equity component for disadvantaged regions, while states receive 90% of funds based on performance-linked criteria.[3] State Implementation Societies, headed by a State Project Director, coordinate execution through district and block-level cells, ensuring convergence with schemes like mid-day meals and integrated child development services. This hierarchy facilitates data-driven monitoring via the Unified District Information System for Education Plus platform, which tracks over 1.5 million schools and 260 million students as of 2023.[1] Programmatically, the structural components focus on equity, quality, and access, with dedicated provisions for:- Pre-school and Foundational Education: Integration of anganwadi centers into government schools for ages 3-6, emphasizing play-based learning to achieve universal foundational literacy and numeracy by Grade 3, as targeted under the NIPUN Bharat Mission launched in July 2021.[26]
- Teacher Capacity Building: Strengthening of over 300 District Institutes of Education and Training through annual training for 1.5 million teachers, including in-service programs via platforms like DIKSHA, which has registered 1.7 crore users by 2023.[1]
- Inclusive and Equity Measures: Support for children with special needs (CWSN), covering 3.2 million students with aids, assistive devices, and resource rooms; gender-focused initiatives like KGBV hostels for 400,000 girls; and transport for remote areas.[27]
- Infrastructure and Digital Integration: Construction and upgradation of 100,000 classrooms annually, provision of smart classrooms in 10% of schools, and broadband connectivity under Operation Digital Board, with 2.2 lakh schools equipped by 2022.[28]
- Vocational and Holistic Development: Introduction of skill courses from Class 6, reaching 10 million students by 2025, alongside sports facilities in 50% of schools and integration of arts, health, and environmental education.
Key Sub-Missions and Initiatives
Saakshar Bharat
Saakshar Bharat, launched on September 8, 2009, by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on International Literacy Day, served as the flagship adult education program under India's National Literacy Mission Authority, succeeding and subsuming prior literacy initiatives.[29][30] The scheme operationalized from October 1, 2009, after the National Literacy Mission's activities concluded on September 30, 2009, targeting functional literacy for non-literate adults aged 15 and above, with a primary emphasis on females constituting 80% of learners.[31][32] The program's core objectives included elevating the national literacy rate to 80%, narrowing the male-female literacy gap to 10 percentage points, and fostering a relapse-resistant learning environment through post-literacy and skill development components.[29] It prioritized districts where female literacy fell below 50% per the 2001 Census, covering 365 such districts initially, and integrated four pillars: imparting basic literacy and numeracy (reading, writing, arithmetic), awareness generation on social issues, post-literacy for retention, and vocational training for economic empowerment.[33][34] Implementation relied on decentralized delivery via village-level literacy centers, volunteer Preraks (facilitators) recruited locally, and state literacy mission authorities, with teaching materials including primers in regional languages and equivalency programs certified by the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS).[34][35] Progress monitoring involved concurrent audits, third-party evaluations, and NIOS-conducted proficiency tests assessing functional skills in the 3Rs (reading, writing, arithmetic), with certified neo-literates receiving NOCs (Newly Literate Certificates).[34][35] Funding was centrally sponsored, with states contributing shares, though challenges like volunteer retention and rural outreach persisted, as noted in government evaluations.[29] Outcomes included certification of approximately 7.64 crore adults as literate from 2009-10 to 2017-18, contributing to a cumulative 127.45 million literates under the broader National Literacy Mission framework, where 60% were females and 23% from Scheduled Castes/Tribes.[36][32] Studies in regions like Bihar and Himachal Pradesh indicated improved female participation and skill retention, though national evaluations highlighted uneven district-level progress and the need for sustained post-literacy support to prevent relapse.[37][38] The scheme was discontinued from the financial year 2018-19, transitioning to newer adult education frameworks under the Ministry of Education.[29]NIPUN Bharat Mission
The NIPUN Bharat Mission, formally the National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy, was launched by the Ministry of Education on 5 July 2021 to ensure every child achieves foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) skills by the end of Grade 3, targeting the academic year 2026-27.[39][40] This initiative addresses the learning crisis highlighted in national assessments, where a significant proportion of primary students lacked basic reading and arithmetic abilities prior to the COVID-19 disruptions, by focusing on children aged 3 to 9 years across government, aided, and private schools.[41] It operates as an integral component of the Samagra Shiksha scheme, emphasizing evidence-based interventions to build cognitive foundations essential for subsequent learning outcomes.[42] The mission's design incorporates a multi-pronged approach, including curriculum-aligned learning materials, capacity building for educators, and community engagement to foster an enabling environment for FLN acquisition.[43] Progress is tracked through tools like the Foundational Learning Study (FLS), which provides baseline data on student competencies in reading, writing, and numeracy across states.[44] While official reports indicate increased awareness and resource deployment, independent analyses note uneven implementation due to variations in state-level infrastructure and teacher preparedness.[45]Policy Framework
The policy framework of the NIPUN Bharat Mission, detailed in guidelines issued by the Ministry of Education on 11 July 2021, establishes FLN as a non-negotiable prerequisite for educational equity, mandating universal proficiency in reading simple texts with comprehension, basic arithmetic operations, and oral fluency by Grade 3.[40] It promotes activity-based, play-integrated pedagogy over rote memorization, with specific learning outcomes such as recognizing letters, forming words, and solving addition/subtraction problems up to 20, tailored for early childhood care and education (ECCE) through primary levels.[43] Institutional structures include district-level mission cells for planning, convergence with anganwadi centers for ages 3-6, and digital resources via platforms like DIKSHA for teacher training, aiming to train over 2 million educators annually.[41] Funding is allocated through Samagra Shiksha, with states required to develop five-year action plans incorporating formative assessments and parental involvement to monitor progress against 2026-27 benchmarks.[42]Implementation Studies and Reports
The Foundational Learning Study 2022, conducted under the mission, surveyed over 1 million students across 20 states, revealing that only 37% of Grade 3 children could read at Grade 2 level and 27% could perform basic subtraction, underscoring the pre-launch deficits exacerbated by pandemic-related school closures.[44] A 2025 qualitative case study across Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala reported moderate gains in FLN metrics post-intervention, attributing successes to localized teacher workshops but highlighting persistent gaps in rural areas due to resource shortages and multilingual challenges.[45] Another analysis from 2024 critiqued implementation for insufficient emphasis on student-centric pedagogy, noting that while enrollment remains high, actual proficiency rates lag targets, with recommendations for enhanced monitoring via real-time data dashboards.[46] Official mid-term reports emphasize scaling digital tools and inter-ministerial convergence, yet independent evaluations stress the need for rigorous impact audits to verify causal links between inputs and outcomes amid varying state capacities.[47]Policy Framework
The NIPUN Bharat Mission, formally known as the National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy, establishes its policy framework through guidelines issued by the Ministry of Education on July 5, 2021, directly aligning with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020's emphasis on achieving universal foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) as the highest priority for the education system.[40][23] The framework targets children aged 3 to 9 years, encompassing early childhood care and education (ECCE) through Balvatika levels and Grades 1 to 3, with an extension to Grades 4 and 5 for remediation of learning gaps.[40] It defines FLN as the foundational ability to read words and simple sentences with comprehension, write basic words and sentences, and apply numeracy skills such as number sense, operations, measurement, shapes, patterns, and data handling.[40] Central to the framework is a vision of creating an inclusive, equitable, and joyful learning ecosystem that leverages play-based, activity-based, and experiential pedagogies to foster holistic development across three developmental goals: health and wellbeing, effective communication, and involved learning.[40] Objectives include ensuring all children attain age-appropriate FLN competencies by the end of Grade 3, building teacher capacity through programs like NISHTHA, promoting multilingualism with mother-tongue instruction, and integrating digital tools such as the DIKSHA platform for content and assessments.[40] Strategies emphasize continuous formative assessments, child-centered approaches balancing phonics and whole-language methods, and community involvement via School Management Committees, while prohibiting grade repetition based solely on FLN attainment to avoid stigmatization.[40] The institutional structure operates under a five-tier model integrated with the Samagra Shiksha scheme: national-level oversight by the Ministry of Education with a dedicated Mission Director; state-level authorities led by education secretaries developing multi-year action plans; district and block resource centers for training and monitoring; and school-level implementation by teachers supported by print-rich environments and teaching-learning materials.[40] NCERT plays a pivotal role in curriculum development, training modules, and item banks, while PARAKH handles large-scale assessments like the National Achievement Survey (NAS) for baseline (2021), midline (2024), and endline (2027) evaluations.[40] Monitoring mechanisms include IT-enabled tracking via UDISE+ and DIKSHA, holistic progress cards, and stakeholder roles delineated for parents, NGOs, and private schools to ensure accountability and resource convergence.[40] The framework sets a verifiable target of universal FLN acquisition by 2026-27, informed by evidence that 85% of brain development occurs by age 6 and addressing pre-existing deficits where over 5 crore children lacked basic reading skills as of 2018 NAS data.[40][23]Implementation Studies and Reports
The Foundational Learning Study (FLS) 2022, conducted by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) under PARAKH, established a national baseline for the NIPUN Bharat Mission by evaluating foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) competencies among approximately 86,000 Grade 3 students across 10,000 schools in 20 languages.[48] [49] The assessment revealed that only 42% of students met global minimum proficiency standards in numeracy, with literacy outcomes varying sharply by language—Punjabi speakers achieving 51% proficiency while Tamil speakers scored at 9% exceeding benchmarks and 48% below basic levels.[50] India's overall FLN Index stood at 44.48, with 18 of 36 states and union territories surpassing the national average, highlighting regional disparities influenced by linguistic diversity and instructional mediums.[50] The Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM)'s 2023 Foundational Literacy and Numeracy Report corroborated these baselines, documenting declines in national learning outcomes from 2017 to 2021—for instance, Grade 3 language scores dropping from 336 to 323—primarily due to COVID-19 disruptions, though Punjab registered an 8.35-point improvement amid widespread stagnation.[50] State-specific analyses, such as Uttar Pradesh's implementation case, indicated progress from a low 2018 baseline where it ranked poorest among major states in FLN metrics, through targeted interventions like teacher capacity building and Lakshya Soochi outcome tracking, yet persistent gaps in rural and linguistically diverse areas remained evident.[51] Subsequent evaluations, including a 2024 randomized controlled trial by Central Square Foundation in Haryana, demonstrated that teacher-directed edtech tools improved FLN outcomes by enhancing playful learning engagement, though scalability challenges persisted due to infrastructure variances.[52] Official monitoring via the NIPUN Bharat planning templates tracks state-wise progress toward 2026-27 universality goals, emphasizing diagnostics, teacher training under NISHTHA FLN, and holistic progress cards, with recommendations prioritizing mother-tongue instruction, community involvement, and remedial digital resources like DIKSHA to mitigate learning losses.[41] [40] Independent assessments, such as those referencing ASER 2023 data, underscore ongoing deficits in basic reading and arithmetic among 3-9-year-olds, validating the need for intensified pedagogical reforms despite mission-wide resource mobilization.[46]Other Integrated Programs
The National Education Mission, through Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan, integrates Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA), a program launched in 2009 to enhance the quality of secondary education and increase enrollment rates from 52% in 2005-2006 to 75% within five years by improving infrastructure, teacher training, and equity measures. RMSA supports states in universalizing access to secondary schooling for children aged 14-18, including provisions for upgradation of schools, new constructions, and integration of ICT tools, and was subsumed into Samagra Shiksha in 2018 to align with a holistic school education continuum.[3] Teacher Education forms another core integrated component, focusing on pre-service and in-service training to address shortages and upgrade skills per the Right to Education Act 2009 and National Curriculum Framework for Teacher Education 2010.[1] This includes the Integrated Teacher Education Programme at elementary levels and training for untrained teachers via the National Institute of Open Schooling, supporting institutions like District Institutes of Education and Training (DIETs) and State Councils for Educational Research and Training (SCERTs).[53] In Mizoram, for instance, it encompasses 10 teacher education institutions operational since subsumption in 2018.[53] Vocational education initiatives under the mission aim to integrate skill-based learning with general academics from classes 6-12, targeting preparation of employable youth for economic needs, with provisions for exposure to trades like agriculture, IT, and healthcare in at least 50% of schools by 2020 under earlier guidelines.[1] Digital initiatives, including the DIKSHA platform launched in 2017, provide curated digital content and training resources for over 1.5 million teachers, facilitating technology-enabled pedagogy aligned with National Education Policy 2020 objectives.[1] Additional programs encompass inclusive education for children with special needs (CWSN), offering aids, appliances, and resource centers; Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas (KGBVs) for residential schooling of underprivileged girls; and self-defense training under RAKSHA to promote girls' safety.[1] Sports and physical education grants support infrastructure for movement skills development, while Swachh Vidyalaya ensures sanitation facilities, all funded through state-specific allocations within the scheme's 60:40 center-state sharing ratio for most states.Implementation and Governance
Funding and Budget Allocation
The funding for the National Education Mission is channeled primarily through the Samagra Shiksha scheme, an integrated centrally sponsored program launched in 2018 that consolidates earlier components such as Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan for elementary education and Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan for secondary education.[54] The scheme operates on a cost-sharing basis, with the central government contributing 60% of funds for general category states and union territories with legislatures, 90% for northeastern and certain special category states, and 100% for other union territories without legislatures.[54] This pattern aims to incentivize state participation while ensuring central oversight, though actual releases depend on state compliance with performance-linked criteria approved by the Project Approval Board. Budget allocations for Samagra Shiksha have increased steadily to support mission objectives, reflecting priorities in school infrastructure, teacher training, and equity-focused interventions. The total approved outlay for the scheme from FY 2021-22 onward is ₹2,94,283 crore.[54] However, expenditure has often lagged behind allocations, with historical data indicating utilization rates below 80% in several years due to implementation delays and administrative bottlenecks at the state level.[55]| Fiscal Year | Budget Estimate (₹ crore) | Actual Expenditure (₹ crore) |
|---|---|---|
| 2023-24 | 37,499.99 | 32,829.70 |
| 2024-25 | 37,010.00 | (Revised: 37,010.00) |
| 2025-26 | 41,250.00 | N/A |