Modi government proposed the Bharatiya Shiksha Board to ensure standardisation of 'Indian traditional knowledge.
Yoga
guru Ramdev is gearing up to spearhead India's first
government-recognised board for Vedic education. A selection
committee on Saturday adjudged his Trust's bid for setting up the
proposed Bharatiya
Shiksha Board (BSB) as the best. Later this week, a five-member
panel’s recommendation will be considered by the governing council
of the Maharshi Sandipani Rashtriya Vedavidya Pratishthan (MSRVP),
headed by HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar. The MSRVP, a fully-funded
autonomous body under the HRD Ministry working on promotion of “Ved
Vidya”, has been entrusted with the responsibility of appointing a
private sponsoring body for putting the BSB in place.
Other
contenders included: The Ritnand Balved Education Foundation, which
runs the Amity group of institutions, and Pune-based Maharashtra
Institute of Technology were the other contenders.
How
the wind blew in Patanjali and Ramdev's favour
Rs
21 crore investment;
infrastructure;
and
location
The
three contenders had earlier made a presentation to the five-member
selection committee. According to Indian Express, Acharya Balkrishna,
who represented Patanjali
Yogpeeth offered to invest Rs 21 crore for the development of the
Board. He said that the Patanjali wanted to house BSB's headquarters
in Haridwar and that the Trust had the required infrastucture for the
Board. Balkrishna also informed the panel that the Trust would want
Ramdev appointed as the chairperson.
Interestingly,
three years ago, the HRD Ministry under Smriti Irani had rejected
Ramdev’s proposal for establishing a Vedic education board. Irani
had expressed reservations about the government recognising a private
school board.
What
you must know about the proposed Bharatiya Shiksha Board
Modi
government proposed the Bharatiya Shiksha Board to ensure
standardisation of “Indian traditional knowledge”, such as Vedic
education, Sanskrit education, Shastras and Darsanas, etc.
Purpose
of BSB
The
Board will draft syllabus, conduct exams, issue certificates and
recognise Gurukulas, pathshalas and schools that offer a blend of
Vedic and modern education. The Board will charge an affiliation fee
and examination fee from schools, just like CBSE does.
No comments:
Post a Comment