The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 marks a significant transformation in India’s educational landscape by shifting the focus from rote learning to a holistic, skill-based approach. Developed through extensive consultation, NEP 2020 envisions an equitable, flexible, and multidisciplinary education system that nurtures creativity, critical thinking, and practical competence from the foundational stage to higher education. One of its core features is the integration of vocational and skill-based learning from Class 6 onwards, aiming to ensure that at least 50% of learners gain employable skills by 2025. Schools, being centres of diverse learning experiences, play a crucial role in fostering academic, social, emotional, and physical development through structured teaching methodologies, academic competitions, and co-curricular activities. Skill-based education emphasizes hands-on learning, real-life application, teamwork, communication, and problem-solving. Research studies highlight the growing need for such education to build a competent, future-ready workforce. National agencies like CBSE, NCERT, CIET, and various innovators including Arvind Gupta, Manish Jain, and professional storytellers have significantly contributed to advancing skill-oriented pedagogies and teacher training. Additionally, the success stories of India’s skill-driven personalities—from scientists and entrepreneurs to artists, athletes, and storytellers—demonstrate how skill mastery leads to personal excellence, career success, and societal contribution. Sports skills, in particular, contribute immensely to discipline, teamwork, mental resilience, physical fitness, and leadership, shaping well-rounded individuals. Overall, the skill-based educational framework strengthens personal growth, social understanding, professional readiness, and national development. The NEP 2020, supported by NCF 2023, positions India on the path toward self-reliance by promoting experiential learning, innovation, and vocational competency. This study aims to examine how skill-based curriculum and educational activities complement each other and collectively contribute to preparing responsible, confident, and skilled citizens capable of driving national progress.
Mridu Prakash Saxena (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: