Forcing a third language in schools in AI age is unnecessary: TN CM M K Stalin
Press Trust of India | February 28, 2025 | 09:25 PM IST | 2 mins read
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin criticizes the imposition of a third language in schools, emphasizing that innovation, not linguistic imposition, drives true progress.
NEW DELHI: Asserting that true progress lay in innovation and not in linguistic imposition, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin on Friday said it was unnecessary to force any language as a third language in schools in the age of Artificial Intelligence.
Continuing his tirade on the Centre over the National Education Policy (NEP), he said in a post on the social media platform X "BJP leaders advocating Hindi insist, 'You must know Hindi to buy tea, pani puri, or use toilets in North India.'”
But in the Age of AI, forcing any language as a third language in schools was unnecessary. "Advanced translation technology already removes language barriers instantly. Students should not be burdened with extra languages," the Chief Minister contended. Instead, students should focus on mastering their mother tongue and English while gaining expertise in science and technology.
"If needed, they can learn any language later. True progress lies in innovation, not linguistic imposition. #Long Live Tamil #StopHindiImposition," Stalin, who is the president of the ruling DMK, said. Earlier, in a letter addressed to his DMK members, he said Tamil Nadu would not allow Hindi and Sanskrit to dominate Tamil.
Stalin's stance on NEP
The DMK will always be in the front in the struggle to protect the state and also its language, Stalin said and reminded them that the anti-Hindi agitation made the then Governor of Madras Province withdraw the imposition of Hindi in 1939.
"Although we have won the first language battle, the war is still going on. This is not just a language imposition but an invasion intended on Tamil culture with a conspiracy to Sanskritise this land," Stalin said in the letter. Reacting, BJP state chief K Annamalai said Stalin has not realised that his attempts to divert the 'misgovernance' in the state to a non-existent Hindi imposition has not appealed to anyone in Tamil Nadu except a few 'paint-dabba-carrying folks.'
Posting an old video of State Minister Duraimurugan saying one should be conversant in Hindi and English to speak in the Parliament, Annamalai said in a post on X "Thiru @mkstalin seemed to have missed this speech by his party's general secretary."
"It is him pushing Hindi. The NEP advocates for a three-language policy, with any Indian language as the third language.... why have two different rules in the state? A private school student is provided the opportunity to learn a third language, why is it deprived to our government school students?" Annamalai asked.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- From Rohith to Reform: UGC Equity Regulations 2026, born from tragedies, threaten caste dominance, not merit
- Law School For All: IGNOU is drawing lawyers, cops, CAs, even sitting judges with revamped legal courses
- ‘Autonomy Snatched’: Revised ISI Bill faces opposition in council; academics reject new MoSPI draft
- What are UGC Equity Regulations 2026 and why are they facing ‘general-category’ backlash?
- NITs plan multiple-entry, exit in BTech across institutes, research parks with ADB loan, PhD reform
- Environmental Law: NLU Odisha, Assam, Northeast law schools are making tribal rights core of curriculum
- ‘Generative AI knowledge limited to ChatGPT’: Why law schools are launching artificial intelligence centres
- LLB, LLM courses in English but for lawyers in lower courts, regional language command key to win cases
- Part-time law PhD enrolment on the rise as lawyers, aspiring academics embrace flexible courses
- Student Suicides: ‘Need accountability, not new law; it’s about well-being, not mental health,’ says NTF chief