2. One of the most important basic needs that
can change the complete scenario is “
EDUCATION ” and government is running
lots of education schemes and programmes
to improve statistics.
3. SCHEMES AND PROGRAMMES FOR
ELEMENTRY EDUCATION
Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
Mid Day Meal
Mahila Samakhya
Strengthening for providing quality education in
Madrassas ( SPQEM)etc
4. SCHEMES AND PROGRAMMES FOR
SECONDARY EDUCATION
Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan
National Council for Educational Research and
Training
( NCERT )
National Scheme of Incentives to Girls for
Secondary Education
Inclusive Education for Disabled at Secondary
Stage
Scheme of Vocational Education etc
5. SCHEMES AND PROGRAMMES FOR
HIGHER EDUCATION
All India Council for Technical Education
Scholarships
Department of Science and Technology grants and
fellowships
Sports Authority of India promotional Schemes
Scheme of Apprenticeship Training
Fellowship /scholarships /awards by Jawaharlal
Nehru University etc
7. INTEGRATED CHILD DEVELOPMENT SERVICES
(ICDS)
EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND EDUCATION
(ECCE )
AGANWADI
SARVA SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
MAHILA SAMAKHYA
EACH ONE TEACH ONE
RIGHT TO EDUCATION (RTE)
National Literacy Mission (NLM)
ADULT EDUCATION
8. INTEGRATED CHILD DEVELOPMENT
SERVICES (ICDS)
• ICDS was launched in
1975[6] in accordance to
the National Policy for
Children in India.
• provides
food, preschool education,
and primary healthcare to
children under 6 years of
age and their mothers.
• services are provided
from Anganwadi centres
established mainly in rural
areas and staffed with
frontline workers.
9. OBJECTIVES OF ICDS
• To raise the health and nutritional level of poor
Indian children below 6 years of age.
• To create a base for proper mental, physical and
social development of children in India.
• To reduce instances of mortality, malnutrition and
school dropouts among Indian children.
• To provide health and nutritional information and
education to mothers of young children.
10. EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND
EDUCATION (ECCE)
• provides early childhood care and education for
children of pre-school age.
• From September 2016, children are eligible for
the ECCE scheme if they are aged over 3 years
and not older than 5 and a half years.
11.
12. How the ECCE scheme is
provided
Sessional
services
DAYCARE
SERVICES
13. ANGANWADI
They were started by the
Indian government in
1975 as part of
the Integrated Child
Development
Services program to
combat child hunger
and malnutrition.
14. Worker functions
provide care for newborn babies and ensure that
all children below the age of 6 are immunized.
provide antenatal care for pregnant women and
ensuring that they are immunized against tetanus
provide post-natal care to nursing mothers.
They ensure that regular health and medical
check-ups for women 15- to 49-years-old take
place and that all women and children have
access to these check-ups.
15. Worker responsibilities
to conduct regular quick surveys of all families
organize pre-school activities
provide health and nutrition education to families
especially pregnant women on how to breastfeed
motivating families to adopt family planning
educating parents about child growth and
development
assist in the implementation and execution of
Kishori Shakti Yojana (KSY) to educate teenage
girls and parents by organizing social awareness
programmes
16. Supervision
Every 40 to 65 Anganwadi workers are supervised by
one Mukhya Sevika.
They provide on-the-job training.
guide the Anganwadi workers in assessing the age
and weight of children and how to plot their weights;
demonstrate effective methods like providing health
and nutrition education to mothers; and maintain
statistics of Anganwadis and the workers to determine
what can be improved
17. Mahila Samakhya Programme
The Mahila Samakhya programme was
launched in 1988 to pursue the objectives of the
National Policy on Education, 1986.
18. PARAMETERS OF MAHILA SAMAKHYA
• enhancing self-esteem and self-confidence of women;
• building a positive image of women by recognizing their
contribution to the society, polity and the economy;
• developing ability to think critically;
• fostering decision making and action through collective
processes;
• enabling women to make informed choices in areas like
education, employment and health (especially reproductive
health);
• ensuring equal participation in developmental processes;
• providing information, knowledge and skill for economic
independence;
• enhancing access to legal literacy and information relating to
their rights and entitlements in society with a view to enhance
their participation on an equal footing in all areas.
19. SARVA SHIKSHA ABHIYAN
• Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan is government of
India’s flagship programme for achievement
of Universalization of Elementary Education
(UEE)
• It involves Panchayati Raj Institutes , School
Management Committee , Village and Urban
Slum Level Education Committees, Parent
Teacher and Mother Teacher Association and
Basic level structure.
20. OBJECTIVES
• Open new schools in areas which donot have
them and to expand school infrastructure.
• Address inadequate teacher numbers and
provide training for existing teachers
• Provide quality elementary education
including life skills with a special focus on the
education of girls and children with special
needs
• Focus on elementary education of satisfactory
quality with emphasis on education for life.
21. Each One Teach One
• This phrase originated in the United States
during slavery ,when Africans were denied
education ,even learning to read.
• Another source for creating this saying is cited
by Christian missionary , Dr Frank Laubach
,who utilized the concept to help address
poverty and illiteracy in Phillipines.
• Basically EACH ONE TEACH ONE is a African
American proverb.
22. ROLE OF THE GOVERNMENT
• The government is taking various measure to
ensure proper education in the country by
taking up various plans, projects and schemes
like:
• Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
• Mid Day Meal
• Right to Education
• National Literacy Mission and many more..
23. RIGHT TO EDUCATION ACT
'Right to Education Act also known as RTE',
is an Act of the Parliament of India enacted
on 4 August 2009, which describes the
modalities of the importance of free and
compulsory education for children between 6
and 14 in India under Article 21A of
the Indian Constitution
24. • India became one of 135
countries to make education a
fundamental right of every
child when the act came into
force on 1 April 2010.
• . ‘Compulsory education’ casts
an obligation on the
appropriate Government and
local authorities to provide
and ensure admission,
attendance and completion of
elementary education by all
children in the 6-14 age group.
25. • The Act requires all private schools(except the
minority institutions) to reserve 25% of seats
for the poor and other categories of children (to
be reimbursed by the state as part of the public-
private partnership plan)
• It also prohibits all unrecognised schools from
practice, and makes provisions for no donation
or capitation fees and no interview of the child
or parent for admission.
• The Act also provides that no child shall be
held back, expelled, or required to pass a board
examination until the completion of elementary
education.
26. National Literacy Mission
The National Literacy Mission (NLM) is a
nationwide program started by Government
of India in 1988.
27. • It aims to educate 80 million adults in the age
group of 15 - 35 over an eighty-year period.
• By "literacy", the NLM means not only learning
how to read, write and count but also helping
people understand why they are deprived and
helping them move towards change.
• NLM works under the guidance of the National
Literacy Mission Authority, an independent wing
of the Ministry of Human Resources and
Development.
28. • NLM initially had two flagship programs - "Total
Literacy" and "Post literacy". The initiative was
revitalized on 30 September, 1999, when they
were combined as a single program: 'Literacy
Campaigns and Operation Restoration‘
• NLM works with NGOs across the country,
providing financial assistance for those that
actively participate.
• NLM releases funds for each district. While the
ratio between centre and state is 2:1, it is 4:1 for
tribal sub-plan districts.
29. ADULT EDUCATION
• Adult education is a practice in which adults
engage in systematic and sustained self–
educating activities in order to gain new forms of
knowledge, skills, attitudes, or values.
• Adult education reflects a specific philosophy
about learning and teaching based on the
assumption that adults can and want to learn,
that they are able and willing to take
responsibility for that learning, and that the
learning itself should respond to their needs
30. Adult learning can be in any of the three contexts:
• Formal – Structured learning that typically takes
place in an education or training institution, usually
with a set curriculum and carries credentials;
• Non-formal – Learning that is organized by
educational institutions but non credential. Non-
formal learning opportunities may be provided in
the workplace and through the activities of civil
society organizations and groups;
• Informal education – Learning that goes on all the
time, resulting from daily life activities related to
work, family, community or leisure (e.g. community
baking class)