Tamil Nadu committee recommends doing away with college entrance exams: Report
State Education Policy Tamil Nadu: The committee has recommended the state uses a composite of scores in Classes 11 and 12 for admissions.
Team Careers360 | July 1, 2024 | 07:28 PM IST
NEW DELHI : The high-level committee formed to frame the State Education Policy of Tamil Nadu has recommended that the state does away with entrance examinations in higher education institutions, according to a report by the New Indian Express.
It has also rejected the multiple-entry multiple-exit scheme, by which students can choose to enter and exit a course in any year of its duration, proposed in the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.
The committee headed by former Justice D Murugesan has submitted the draft State Education Policy to Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin on Monday.
Tamil Nadu has long opposed the NEP 2020 with chief minister MK Stalin announcing on multiple occasions that the state will reject the policy and formulate its own. The high-level committee to draft the policy was formed in June 2022.
Class 11, 12 marks for admission
According to the reports, the committee has opposed entrance examinations and recommended consolidated marks based on Class 11 and Class 12 results as a metric for college and university admission. It has suggested not introducing the multiple-entry multiple-exit scheme saying that it will do more harm than good to the future of higher education. However, the four-year undergraduate programme has found favour with the committee which has suggested its introduction along with additional infrastructure.
The committee has also suggested that children above 5 years of age be allowed for Class 1 admissions. NEP 2020 proposes that Class 1 admission requires a child to be above 6 years of age. The Tamil Nadu State Education Policy has also recommended one percent reservation to orphan students in higher education institutions.
Tamil Nadu is not the only state to reject recommendations in the NEP 2020 as opposition-led states such as West Bengal and Kerala have already come up with drafts of their own state policies which have crucial distinctions from the central one. Karnataka has formed a high-level committee to draft its state education policy, which is expected to be out by August.
The Tamil Nadu State Education Policy was initially supposed to be released in September 2023 but was riddled with delays, one of which was the disqualification of then higher education minister K Ponmudy for breaching the model code of conduct.
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
]NEP push for liberal arts education in public universities hobbled by lack of teachers, space
NEP 2020 proposed the liberal arts education structure for public universities. But shortage of teachers, infrastructure, funds are massive hurdles as seen in Delhi University, Punjab and Karnataka universities.
Atul KrishnaFeatured News
]- Co-author of TISS report on ‘illegal’ Bangladeshi, Rohingya migrants under scanner for harassment, abuse
- NCTE to relaunch 1-year B.Ed, M.Ed with NTA-run admission test; drafts rules on syllabus
- ‘Used like guinea pigs’: Sarvodaya Vidyalaya parents want IB syllabus withdrawn, write to LG
- NCH relaxes teacher norms for PG departments in homeopathy colleges
- IIT Kanpur Suicide: No TA-duty for PhDs, review of labs, investigation – students make 11 demands
- ‘Beyond Kota and IIT exams’: Student suicides have more than board exams, academic pressure behind them
- NITI Aayog suggests HEFA-like agencies, fee hike, self-financed courses for state universities
- Education Loan: Over 50,000 NPAs in credit guarantee scheme, but repayment rate encouraging, says minister
- Zero Samagra Shiksha funds to Kerala, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu: Government
- Agriculture courses in Maharashtra see 8% uptick in UG admissions, but job prospects remain grim