UGC drafts guidelines on starting Indian heritage and culture courses, enrolling artists in HEIs
UGC has invited comments on draft guidelines on courses on Indian heritage and culture, empanelling artists as artist-as-residence in colleges, universities.
Vagisha Kaushik | March 17, 2023 | 11:47 AM IST
NEW DELHI : The University Grants Commission (UGC) has issued draft guidelines for introducing courses on Indian heritage and culture and empaneling artists as artist-in-residence in higher educational institutions. The commission has invited feedback on the draft “guidelines for introducing courses based on Indian heritage and culture and “guidelines to empanel local artists/artisans as artist-as-residence in higher educational institutions” by March 31, 2023.
“The draft ‘Guidelines for introducing courses based on Indian heritage and culture’ are available on the UGC website www.ugc.ac.in . Feedback/suggestions are invited from the stakeholders and the same may be sent on the ugc.heritage.culture@gmail.com latest by 31.03.2023,” said UGC in an official notice.
Also Read | 61 student suicides in IITs, NITs, IIMs in last 5 years: Education Ministry
The commission added that in line with the National Education Policy (NEP), it has come up with these guidelines on courses such as universal human values, vedic mathematics, yoga, ayurveda, sanskrit, Indian languages, music and classic dance forms to attract international students to India. The guidelines will allow colleges and universities to offer customized courses to students as credit-based modular programmes.
In another notice, UGC stated, “The draft ‘guidelines to empanel local artists/artisans as artist-as-residence in higher educational institutions’ are available on the UGC website www.ugc.ac.in . Feedback/suggestions are invited from the stakeholders and the same may be sent on the ugc.localartist@gmail.com latest by 31.03.2023.”
Also Read | AICTE to lift ban on new engineering colleges, improve admissions in core branches
The commission said that the guidelines on empaneling local artists will let HEIs “harness the creative talent and intellectual resources available within the country” which are not formally connected to the education system. This will help improve the quality of teacher training and research.
“Art forms are an integral part of human civilization. The National Education Policy (NEP-2020) emphasises to bridge gap between higher education and arts (kala),” said UGC. Accordingly, it has prepared the draft guidelines.
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
]- NTA Overhaul: 1,000 secure exam centres, biometrics to prevent fraud, question paper changes, suggests panel
- What changes in NEET UG? Experts’ panel suggests multi-stage exam, security overhaul, simpler process to NTA
- Use KVs, JNVs as NEET, JEE Main exam centres: High Level Committee on NTA
- Maharashtra cluster universities may now comprise only self-financed colleges; government tables Bill
- National Testing Agency exam count dropped by over 50% in 2024; lowest in 5 years
- NIOS Exams: Over 35,000 cheating cases reported since 2022, education ministry tells Lok Sabha
- South Asian University plans more online degrees, course, to start arts, management faculties
- ‘Take action’ on 22,298 unrecognised schools in UDISE Plus by March: Education ministry to states
- Study Abroad: Italy’s new student visa rules may cause delays for Indian student
- Board Exams: States agree to equivalence; no question paper ‘jumbling’ from next year, says PARAKH CEO