Transforming early childhood care and education, Pg 10.
The NEP 2020 is reshaping India’s Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) system by integrating preschool classes in government schools, traditionally served only by Anganwadis.
NEP 2020 mandates universalisation of ECCE by 2030, targeting children aged 3–6 years.
Government schools are being equipped with Balvatika (preschool) classes, expanding public ECCE infrastructure.
States/UTs are using the Samagra Shiksha budget for establishing preschool classes, though unevenly.
Rising preference for schools over Anganwadis is triggering migration of 4–6-year-olds.
Shift of focus towards home-based care for 0–3-year-olds via home visits by Anganwadi workers.
The ‘Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi’ initiative aims to integrate nutrition and education in Anganwadi services.
Concerns raised about ‘schoolification’ of preschooling, risking play-based learning.
Detailed Insights:
Structural Expansion:
ECCE infrastructure is transitioning from a static Anganwadi system (14 lakh centres) to dynamic government school-led preschooling.
This requires training, recruitment, and deployment of qualified ECCE educators.
Shift in Parental Preferences:
Parents prefer schools for perceived better education, resulting in Anganwadi underutilisation.
This alters the traditional role of Anganwadis from educational hubs to auxiliary care centres.
Reorientation of Anganwadi Role:
A strategic policy opportunity exists to refocus Anganwadis on 0–3-year-olds and maternal care.
Home visits, shown to be effective in international and Indian studies, can bridge developmental gaps in early years.
Implementation Gaps:
Despite policy intent, many States have underutilised Samagra Shiksha provisions.
Anganwadi workers remain overburdened, limiting the efficacy of the proposed reorientation.
Concepts Involved:
ECCE (Early Childhood Care and Education): Integrated approach covering nutrition, health, and learning needs of children aged 0–6 years.
Balvatika: Preschool classes introduced under NEP for 3–6-year-old children in government schools.
Home Visits: Evidence-based method in ECCE to deliver individualised developmental support during early years.
Schoolification: A phenomenon where formal academic instruction displaces play-based early learning, often deemed counterproductive in preschool education.