Page 1
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
Rashi Sharma
Purabi Pattanayak
As per the National Education Policy 2020, “Given the explosive pace of technological development allied with the sheer
creativity of tech-savvy teachers and entrepreneurs including student entrepreneurs, it is certain that technology will impact
education in multiple ways, only some of which can be foreseen at the present time. New technologies involving artificial
intelligence, machine learning, block chains, smart boards, handheld computing devices, adaptive computer testing for
student development, and other forms of educational software and hardware will not just change what students learn in the
classroom but how they learn, and thus these areas and beyond will require extensive research both on the technological
as well as educational fronts.” Therefore, the future of the educational system will be determined by the expansion and
integration of technology which will serve the purpose of bringing efficiency in educational systems and transformative
reforms in the academic sphere.
Technology Integration for Quality Education
echnology is the predominant driver of
the 21
st
century which is affecting each
and every sphere of human life. The
impact of technology is such that the lines
between the physical, digital and biological spheres
are increasingly blurring and is rapidly changing
the way people live, work and communicate. The
word governance and e-governance have no longer
a clear distinction in terms of policies, institutions,
and implementation strategies. With the evolution
of digital technologies,
both administrations
and institutions
across the globe have
been conclusively
transformed structurally
and in terms of the
relationship between
the Governments
and citizens. These
observations are also
drawn from two decades
of analytical research
and the monitoring
of trends within the
framework of the United
Nations E-Government
Survey. While nearly
every country is
engaged in the process
of digitalisation, not all
have achieved the same
level of development,
and while institutions at
all levels are committed
T
to modernisation and digital transformation,
approaches and outcomes vary greatly. The
COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed digital
divides between and within countries and various
social groups. One of the key lessons learned during
the pandemic is that the future is hybrid and not
digital. In fact, the primary objective of technology
is to recognie and foster human potential and
support sustainable human development through
digitalisation.
Page 2
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
Rashi Sharma
Purabi Pattanayak
As per the National Education Policy 2020, “Given the explosive pace of technological development allied with the sheer
creativity of tech-savvy teachers and entrepreneurs including student entrepreneurs, it is certain that technology will impact
education in multiple ways, only some of which can be foreseen at the present time. New technologies involving artificial
intelligence, machine learning, block chains, smart boards, handheld computing devices, adaptive computer testing for
student development, and other forms of educational software and hardware will not just change what students learn in the
classroom but how they learn, and thus these areas and beyond will require extensive research both on the technological
as well as educational fronts.” Therefore, the future of the educational system will be determined by the expansion and
integration of technology which will serve the purpose of bringing efficiency in educational systems and transformative
reforms in the academic sphere.
Technology Integration for Quality Education
echnology is the predominant driver of
the 21
st
century which is affecting each
and every sphere of human life. The
impact of technology is such that the lines
between the physical, digital and biological spheres
are increasingly blurring and is rapidly changing
the way people live, work and communicate. The
word governance and e-governance have no longer
a clear distinction in terms of policies, institutions,
and implementation strategies. With the evolution
of digital technologies,
both administrations
and institutions
across the globe have
been conclusively
transformed structurally
and in terms of the
relationship between
the Governments
and citizens. These
observations are also
drawn from two decades
of analytical research
and the monitoring
of trends within the
framework of the United
Nations E-Government
Survey. While nearly
every country is
engaged in the process
of digitalisation, not all
have achieved the same
level of development,
and while institutions at
all levels are committed
T
to modernisation and digital transformation,
approaches and outcomes vary greatly. The
COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed digital
divides between and within countries and various
social groups. One of the key lessons learned during
the pandemic is that the future is hybrid and not
digital. In fact, the primary objective of technology
is to recognie and foster human potential and
support sustainable human development through
digitalisation.
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
The UNESCO definition (www.unesco.org) of
e-governance is stated as “E-governance is the public
sector’s use of information and communication
technologies with the aim of improving information
and service delivery, encouraging citizen
participation in the decision-making process and
making government more accountable, transparent
and effective. E-governance involves new styles of
leadership, new ways of debating and deciding policy
and investment, new ways of accessing education,
new ways of listening to citizens and new ways of
organising and delivering information and services.
E-governance is generally considered as a wider
concept than e-Government, since it can bring a
change in the way citizens relate to Government eco
system. E-governance can bring forth new concepts
of citizenship, both in terms of citizen needs and
responsibilities. Its objective is to engage, enable
and empower the citizen.” The pandemic amplified
the importance of e-government and digital
technologies as essential tools for communication
and collaboration between policy makers, private
sectors and societies across the globe. E-governance
has become the cornerstone for building effective,
accountable, resilient and inclusive institutions at all
levels, as called for in Sustainable Development Goal
(SDG) 16, and for strengthening the implementation
of Goal 17 (UN E-Government Survey, 2022).
With such revolutionary impact of technology,
education sector could not be left untouched
and during the COVID-19 pandemic, the pace of
integration of technology in teaching learning
processes has increased exponentially. During the
pandemic, digital technology played an indispensable
role in holding the civil society together by
supporting the provision of basic-fundamental
services in the field of health, education, and service
sector. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 gives
utmost importance to technology and states that
“The thrust of technological interventions will be
for the purposes of improving teaching-learning
and evaluation processes, supporting teacher
professional development, enhancing educational
access, and streamlining educational planning,
management, and administration etc. It also
recognises and addresses the issue of digital divide
and elucidates that “the benefits of online/digital
education cannot be leveraged unless the digital
divide is eliminated through concerted efforts, such
as the Digital India campaign and the availability of
affordable computing devices. It is important that
the use of technology for online and digital education
adequately addresses concerns of equity.”
In the school education sector of India,
technology has been used both in governance
processes to improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of schooling system and also for enhancing quality of
education. Various governance related technological
interventions have been initiated and undertaken by
the Government which are given below:
(i) UDISE+(https://dashboard.udiseplus.gov.
in): It is a well-known fact that timely and
accurate data is the basis of sound and effective
planning and decision-making. Realising the
need of this, Ministry of Education (MoE) had
initiated Unified District Information System for
Education (UDISE) in 2012-13 integrating DISE
for elementary and secondary education which
is one of the largest Management Information
Systems for School Education covering more
than 1.5 million schools, 9.6 million teachers
and 264 million children.
UDISE+ is an updated and improved version
of UDISE. This is now online and has been
collecting data in real-time since 2018-19.
UDISE+ provides robust, real-time, and credible
information for an objective evaluation of
the system, which can be used for designing
evidence based specific interventions for
improvement in the school education sector.
Further, UDISE+ has a mandate of collecting
information from all recognised and
unrecognised schools which are imparting
formal education from Pre-primary to XII.
UDISE+, collects information through an online
Data Collection Form (DCF) on parameters
ranging from students, schools, teachers,
infrastructure, enrolments, examination results
etc. Ever since its introduction, UDISE+ has
acquired the status of the official database
of the MoE and is now operational in all the
districts of the country.
(ii) Performance Grading Index(PGI) (https://pgi.
udiseplus.gov.in): The PGI is a tool to provide
insights on the status of school education and
to catalyse transformational change in the
Page 3
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
Rashi Sharma
Purabi Pattanayak
As per the National Education Policy 2020, “Given the explosive pace of technological development allied with the sheer
creativity of tech-savvy teachers and entrepreneurs including student entrepreneurs, it is certain that technology will impact
education in multiple ways, only some of which can be foreseen at the present time. New technologies involving artificial
intelligence, machine learning, block chains, smart boards, handheld computing devices, adaptive computer testing for
student development, and other forms of educational software and hardware will not just change what students learn in the
classroom but how they learn, and thus these areas and beyond will require extensive research both on the technological
as well as educational fronts.” Therefore, the future of the educational system will be determined by the expansion and
integration of technology which will serve the purpose of bringing efficiency in educational systems and transformative
reforms in the academic sphere.
Technology Integration for Quality Education
echnology is the predominant driver of
the 21
st
century which is affecting each
and every sphere of human life. The
impact of technology is such that the lines
between the physical, digital and biological spheres
are increasingly blurring and is rapidly changing
the way people live, work and communicate. The
word governance and e-governance have no longer
a clear distinction in terms of policies, institutions,
and implementation strategies. With the evolution
of digital technologies,
both administrations
and institutions
across the globe have
been conclusively
transformed structurally
and in terms of the
relationship between
the Governments
and citizens. These
observations are also
drawn from two decades
of analytical research
and the monitoring
of trends within the
framework of the United
Nations E-Government
Survey. While nearly
every country is
engaged in the process
of digitalisation, not all
have achieved the same
level of development,
and while institutions at
all levels are committed
T
to modernisation and digital transformation,
approaches and outcomes vary greatly. The
COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed digital
divides between and within countries and various
social groups. One of the key lessons learned during
the pandemic is that the future is hybrid and not
digital. In fact, the primary objective of technology
is to recognie and foster human potential and
support sustainable human development through
digitalisation.
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
The UNESCO definition (www.unesco.org) of
e-governance is stated as “E-governance is the public
sector’s use of information and communication
technologies with the aim of improving information
and service delivery, encouraging citizen
participation in the decision-making process and
making government more accountable, transparent
and effective. E-governance involves new styles of
leadership, new ways of debating and deciding policy
and investment, new ways of accessing education,
new ways of listening to citizens and new ways of
organising and delivering information and services.
E-governance is generally considered as a wider
concept than e-Government, since it can bring a
change in the way citizens relate to Government eco
system. E-governance can bring forth new concepts
of citizenship, both in terms of citizen needs and
responsibilities. Its objective is to engage, enable
and empower the citizen.” The pandemic amplified
the importance of e-government and digital
technologies as essential tools for communication
and collaboration between policy makers, private
sectors and societies across the globe. E-governance
has become the cornerstone for building effective,
accountable, resilient and inclusive institutions at all
levels, as called for in Sustainable Development Goal
(SDG) 16, and for strengthening the implementation
of Goal 17 (UN E-Government Survey, 2022).
With such revolutionary impact of technology,
education sector could not be left untouched
and during the COVID-19 pandemic, the pace of
integration of technology in teaching learning
processes has increased exponentially. During the
pandemic, digital technology played an indispensable
role in holding the civil society together by
supporting the provision of basic-fundamental
services in the field of health, education, and service
sector. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 gives
utmost importance to technology and states that
“The thrust of technological interventions will be
for the purposes of improving teaching-learning
and evaluation processes, supporting teacher
professional development, enhancing educational
access, and streamlining educational planning,
management, and administration etc. It also
recognises and addresses the issue of digital divide
and elucidates that “the benefits of online/digital
education cannot be leveraged unless the digital
divide is eliminated through concerted efforts, such
as the Digital India campaign and the availability of
affordable computing devices. It is important that
the use of technology for online and digital education
adequately addresses concerns of equity.”
In the school education sector of India,
technology has been used both in governance
processes to improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of schooling system and also for enhancing quality of
education. Various governance related technological
interventions have been initiated and undertaken by
the Government which are given below:
(i) UDISE+(https://dashboard.udiseplus.gov.
in): It is a well-known fact that timely and
accurate data is the basis of sound and effective
planning and decision-making. Realising the
need of this, Ministry of Education (MoE) had
initiated Unified District Information System for
Education (UDISE) in 2012-13 integrating DISE
for elementary and secondary education which
is one of the largest Management Information
Systems for School Education covering more
than 1.5 million schools, 9.6 million teachers
and 264 million children.
UDISE+ is an updated and improved version
of UDISE. This is now online and has been
collecting data in real-time since 2018-19.
UDISE+ provides robust, real-time, and credible
information for an objective evaluation of
the system, which can be used for designing
evidence based specific interventions for
improvement in the school education sector.
Further, UDISE+ has a mandate of collecting
information from all recognised and
unrecognised schools which are imparting
formal education from Pre-primary to XII.
UDISE+, collects information through an online
Data Collection Form (DCF) on parameters
ranging from students, schools, teachers,
infrastructure, enrolments, examination results
etc. Ever since its introduction, UDISE+ has
acquired the status of the official database
of the MoE and is now operational in all the
districts of the country.
(ii) Performance Grading Index(PGI) (https://pgi.
udiseplus.gov.in): The PGI is a tool to provide
insights on the status of school education and
to catalyse transformational change in the
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 21 20
States/UTs on the basis of key indicators that
drive their performance and critical areas for
improvement.It grades all States/UTs on their
performance across 77 indicators on school
education and helps identify gaps thereby
enabling all States/UTs to design appropriate
interventions to bridge them. This was
introduced from 2018-19.
In addition to the State PGI, around 83
indicators have been developed for Districtsto
grade the performance in school education.
Combined report for the years 2018-19 & 2019-
20 can be accessed at https://pgi.udiseplus.gov.
in/#/home.
The exercise envisages that the Index will propel
the States/UTs towards undertaking multi-
pronged interventions that will bring about the
much-desired optimal education outcomes.
The purpose of this PGI therefore is to help the
States/UTs to pinpoint the gaps and accordingly
prioritise areas for intervention to ensure that
the school education system is robust at every
level.
(iii) Online survey platform for National
Curriculum Framework (NCF): With the arrival
of NEP 2020, the focus of education has
move towards learning about how to think
critically, solve problems, how to be creative
and multidisciplinary, and how to innovate,
adapt, and absorb new material in changing
fields. Pedagogy is expected to evolve to
make education more experiential, holistic,
integrated, inquiry-driven, discovery-oriented,
learner-centred, flexible, andenjoyable. To
make the above expectations a reality, a new
NCF is being developed by the NCERT. The
development of this framework is unique in
many ways as it is adopting a ‘bottom-up’
approach in which suggestions are invited from
all stakeholders on the basis of which new
NCF will be developed and on 29 July 2022, a
mobile/online survey for NCF was launched.
In addition, drawing insights from citizen-centric
process of development of NEP 2020, this
framework has also been made consultative. To
ensure participation of each and every citizen
of the country in this curriculum development
process, a citizen-centric Digital Survey
for National Curriculum - DiSanc has been
launched. Under this survey, suggestions and
feedback has been collected from the public at
large for the formulation of the NCFs.
(iv) NDEAR (National Digital Education
Architecture) (https://www.ndear.gov.in) and
Vidya Samiksha Kendra:
NDEAR has been launched with a larger vision to
create a unifying national digital infrastructure
to energise and catalyse the education
ecosystem. NDEAR has been conceived as
a unifying National Digital infrastructure to
energise and catalyse the education ecosystem.
The core idea of NDEAR is to facilitate achieving
the goals laid down by NEP 2020, through a
digital infrastructure for innovations in the
education ecosystem, ensuring autonomy and
participation of all the relevant stakeholders.
NDEAR will enable a common set of principles
and approaches to be followed in building,
using, and re-using technology for education.
Further, Vidya Samiksha Kendra (VSK) has
been set-up at national level at NCERT and is
aimed at leveraging data and technology to
bring a big leap in learning outcomes. VSK will
include Student, Teacher and School registry
which will bring synergy to the work being
done in the ecosystem by integrating data from
different datasets and empowers students,
teachers, and parents to bridge the gap. This
will cover the entire data of school eco-system
and will analyse by using big data analysis,
artificial intelligence and machine learning in
order to enhance the overall monitoring of
the education system and thereby improving
learning outcomes. All States and UTs have
been provided financial support under Samagra
Shiksha scheme for setting up VSKs.
(v) PRABANDH (http://samagrashiksha.in):
Department of School Education and Literacy
had launched PRABANDH - Project Appraisal,
Budgeting Achievements and Data Handling
System in 2020. This System has been developed
under Samagra Shiksha as a significant step
towards leveraging technology to enhance
efficiency and manage the implementation of
the Centrally Sponsored Integrated Scheme
Page 4
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
Rashi Sharma
Purabi Pattanayak
As per the National Education Policy 2020, “Given the explosive pace of technological development allied with the sheer
creativity of tech-savvy teachers and entrepreneurs including student entrepreneurs, it is certain that technology will impact
education in multiple ways, only some of which can be foreseen at the present time. New technologies involving artificial
intelligence, machine learning, block chains, smart boards, handheld computing devices, adaptive computer testing for
student development, and other forms of educational software and hardware will not just change what students learn in the
classroom but how they learn, and thus these areas and beyond will require extensive research both on the technological
as well as educational fronts.” Therefore, the future of the educational system will be determined by the expansion and
integration of technology which will serve the purpose of bringing efficiency in educational systems and transformative
reforms in the academic sphere.
Technology Integration for Quality Education
echnology is the predominant driver of
the 21
st
century which is affecting each
and every sphere of human life. The
impact of technology is such that the lines
between the physical, digital and biological spheres
are increasingly blurring and is rapidly changing
the way people live, work and communicate. The
word governance and e-governance have no longer
a clear distinction in terms of policies, institutions,
and implementation strategies. With the evolution
of digital technologies,
both administrations
and institutions
across the globe have
been conclusively
transformed structurally
and in terms of the
relationship between
the Governments
and citizens. These
observations are also
drawn from two decades
of analytical research
and the monitoring
of trends within the
framework of the United
Nations E-Government
Survey. While nearly
every country is
engaged in the process
of digitalisation, not all
have achieved the same
level of development,
and while institutions at
all levels are committed
T
to modernisation and digital transformation,
approaches and outcomes vary greatly. The
COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed digital
divides between and within countries and various
social groups. One of the key lessons learned during
the pandemic is that the future is hybrid and not
digital. In fact, the primary objective of technology
is to recognie and foster human potential and
support sustainable human development through
digitalisation.
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
The UNESCO definition (www.unesco.org) of
e-governance is stated as “E-governance is the public
sector’s use of information and communication
technologies with the aim of improving information
and service delivery, encouraging citizen
participation in the decision-making process and
making government more accountable, transparent
and effective. E-governance involves new styles of
leadership, new ways of debating and deciding policy
and investment, new ways of accessing education,
new ways of listening to citizens and new ways of
organising and delivering information and services.
E-governance is generally considered as a wider
concept than e-Government, since it can bring a
change in the way citizens relate to Government eco
system. E-governance can bring forth new concepts
of citizenship, both in terms of citizen needs and
responsibilities. Its objective is to engage, enable
and empower the citizen.” The pandemic amplified
the importance of e-government and digital
technologies as essential tools for communication
and collaboration between policy makers, private
sectors and societies across the globe. E-governance
has become the cornerstone for building effective,
accountable, resilient and inclusive institutions at all
levels, as called for in Sustainable Development Goal
(SDG) 16, and for strengthening the implementation
of Goal 17 (UN E-Government Survey, 2022).
With such revolutionary impact of technology,
education sector could not be left untouched
and during the COVID-19 pandemic, the pace of
integration of technology in teaching learning
processes has increased exponentially. During the
pandemic, digital technology played an indispensable
role in holding the civil society together by
supporting the provision of basic-fundamental
services in the field of health, education, and service
sector. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 gives
utmost importance to technology and states that
“The thrust of technological interventions will be
for the purposes of improving teaching-learning
and evaluation processes, supporting teacher
professional development, enhancing educational
access, and streamlining educational planning,
management, and administration etc. It also
recognises and addresses the issue of digital divide
and elucidates that “the benefits of online/digital
education cannot be leveraged unless the digital
divide is eliminated through concerted efforts, such
as the Digital India campaign and the availability of
affordable computing devices. It is important that
the use of technology for online and digital education
adequately addresses concerns of equity.”
In the school education sector of India,
technology has been used both in governance
processes to improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of schooling system and also for enhancing quality of
education. Various governance related technological
interventions have been initiated and undertaken by
the Government which are given below:
(i) UDISE+(https://dashboard.udiseplus.gov.
in): It is a well-known fact that timely and
accurate data is the basis of sound and effective
planning and decision-making. Realising the
need of this, Ministry of Education (MoE) had
initiated Unified District Information System for
Education (UDISE) in 2012-13 integrating DISE
for elementary and secondary education which
is one of the largest Management Information
Systems for School Education covering more
than 1.5 million schools, 9.6 million teachers
and 264 million children.
UDISE+ is an updated and improved version
of UDISE. This is now online and has been
collecting data in real-time since 2018-19.
UDISE+ provides robust, real-time, and credible
information for an objective evaluation of
the system, which can be used for designing
evidence based specific interventions for
improvement in the school education sector.
Further, UDISE+ has a mandate of collecting
information from all recognised and
unrecognised schools which are imparting
formal education from Pre-primary to XII.
UDISE+, collects information through an online
Data Collection Form (DCF) on parameters
ranging from students, schools, teachers,
infrastructure, enrolments, examination results
etc. Ever since its introduction, UDISE+ has
acquired the status of the official database
of the MoE and is now operational in all the
districts of the country.
(ii) Performance Grading Index(PGI) (https://pgi.
udiseplus.gov.in): The PGI is a tool to provide
insights on the status of school education and
to catalyse transformational change in the
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 21 20
States/UTs on the basis of key indicators that
drive their performance and critical areas for
improvement.It grades all States/UTs on their
performance across 77 indicators on school
education and helps identify gaps thereby
enabling all States/UTs to design appropriate
interventions to bridge them. This was
introduced from 2018-19.
In addition to the State PGI, around 83
indicators have been developed for Districtsto
grade the performance in school education.
Combined report for the years 2018-19 & 2019-
20 can be accessed at https://pgi.udiseplus.gov.
in/#/home.
The exercise envisages that the Index will propel
the States/UTs towards undertaking multi-
pronged interventions that will bring about the
much-desired optimal education outcomes.
The purpose of this PGI therefore is to help the
States/UTs to pinpoint the gaps and accordingly
prioritise areas for intervention to ensure that
the school education system is robust at every
level.
(iii) Online survey platform for National
Curriculum Framework (NCF): With the arrival
of NEP 2020, the focus of education has
move towards learning about how to think
critically, solve problems, how to be creative
and multidisciplinary, and how to innovate,
adapt, and absorb new material in changing
fields. Pedagogy is expected to evolve to
make education more experiential, holistic,
integrated, inquiry-driven, discovery-oriented,
learner-centred, flexible, andenjoyable. To
make the above expectations a reality, a new
NCF is being developed by the NCERT. The
development of this framework is unique in
many ways as it is adopting a ‘bottom-up’
approach in which suggestions are invited from
all stakeholders on the basis of which new
NCF will be developed and on 29 July 2022, a
mobile/online survey for NCF was launched.
In addition, drawing insights from citizen-centric
process of development of NEP 2020, this
framework has also been made consultative. To
ensure participation of each and every citizen
of the country in this curriculum development
process, a citizen-centric Digital Survey
for National Curriculum - DiSanc has been
launched. Under this survey, suggestions and
feedback has been collected from the public at
large for the formulation of the NCFs.
(iv) NDEAR (National Digital Education
Architecture) (https://www.ndear.gov.in) and
Vidya Samiksha Kendra:
NDEAR has been launched with a larger vision to
create a unifying national digital infrastructure
to energise and catalyse the education
ecosystem. NDEAR has been conceived as
a unifying National Digital infrastructure to
energise and catalyse the education ecosystem.
The core idea of NDEAR is to facilitate achieving
the goals laid down by NEP 2020, through a
digital infrastructure for innovations in the
education ecosystem, ensuring autonomy and
participation of all the relevant stakeholders.
NDEAR will enable a common set of principles
and approaches to be followed in building,
using, and re-using technology for education.
Further, Vidya Samiksha Kendra (VSK) has
been set-up at national level at NCERT and is
aimed at leveraging data and technology to
bring a big leap in learning outcomes. VSK will
include Student, Teacher and School registry
which will bring synergy to the work being
done in the ecosystem by integrating data from
different datasets and empowers students,
teachers, and parents to bridge the gap. This
will cover the entire data of school eco-system
and will analyse by using big data analysis,
artificial intelligence and machine learning in
order to enhance the overall monitoring of
the education system and thereby improving
learning outcomes. All States and UTs have
been provided financial support under Samagra
Shiksha scheme for setting up VSKs.
(v) PRABANDH (http://samagrashiksha.in):
Department of School Education and Literacy
had launched PRABANDH - Project Appraisal,
Budgeting Achievements and Data Handling
System in 2020. This System has been developed
under Samagra Shiksha as a significant step
towards leveraging technology to enhance
efficiency and manage the implementation of
the Centrally Sponsored Integrated Scheme
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 21 20
for School Education. PRABANDH System can
be accessed at www.samagrashiksha.in. It has
more than 10 lakh activated users and can be
accessed from the School, Block, District and
State Level.
A data visualisation dashboard has been
created in the PRABANDH System for display
of monthly status of physical and financial
progress under the major interventions of
Samagra Shiksha such as text books, uniforms,
transport allowance, status of civil works,
teaching learning materials etc.
Technology integration has also been an integral
part of enhancing quality of education. Various
initiatives have been undertaken to tackle this
challenging situation which are as follows:
(i) PM e-Vidya (https://pmevidya.education.
gov .in): The COVID-19 pandemic presented
a catastrophe for human civilisation but
at the same time it became catalytic
in bringing out various new strategies
and accelerating the pace of technology
intervention. PM e-vidya launched
during the time of pandemic is one such
comprehensive initiative which ensures
coherent access to digital education
through multimodal approach. The digital
platform of MoE ‘DIKSHA’ has been declared
as ‘One Nation, One Digital Platform’.
DIKSHA can be accessed by learners and
teachers across the country and currently
supports 30 Indian languages. Each State/
UT leverages this platform in its own way,
as it has the freedom and choice to use
the varied capabilities and solutions of
the platform to design and run programs
for teachers, learners and administrators.
DIKSHA policies and tools make it
possible for the education ecosystem
(educationist, experts, organisations,
institutions - government, autonomous
institutions, non-government and private
organisations) to participate, contribute
and leverage a common platform to
achieve learning goals at scale for
the country. In the times of COVID-19
pandemic, the platform has experienced
unprecedented rise in access by learners
and teachers across the country. There
have been more than 5 billion learning
sessions, 59 billion learning minutes, 22
billion-page hits. DIKSHA could smoothly
handle such traffic owing to its robust
tech-stack, futuristic design, and dedicated
groups of manpower.
DIKSHA currently hosts over 6,500
textbooks energised with QR codes,
including 359 NCERT textbooks and also
called Energised Textbooks (ETBs). There
are more than 3.01 lakh digital content
on DIKSHA which include audio-visual
content, reading and practice material,
interactive resources and lesson plans.
For digital content to aid in the teaching
and learning processes, a rich repository
of varied resources was contributed by
Schools/individual teachers, content
partners, NGOs, corporates under CSR
under VidyaDaan against the various
content requirements of NCERT/CBSE/
States/UTs. As on date, more than 40,000
content pieces have been contributed
under VidyaDaan. Further, NCERT has
recently entered into an MoU with
ISLRTC under which sign language videos
are being developed jointly. More than
3000 ISL videos have been recorded and
about 600 videos have been uploaded on
DIKSHA. For Children with Special Needs,
2970 Indian Sign language (ISL) based
content, Mukta Vidya Vani, an audio
streaming podcast and Radio Vahini, with
24x7 broadcast and talking books (in Daisy
format) for learners with Blindness and
Low Vision have been prepared and also
a total of 3424 Audio Books have been
developed. 10,000ISL dictionary words,
have been uploaded on DIKSHA.
At present, 12 PM eVIDYA DTH TV
channels (One Class, One Channel from
classes I to XII), are functioning that
delivers class-wise contents on 24x7 basis
are linked to DIKSHA through QR codes. A
Podcast called Shiksha Vani of the CBSE is
also being effectively used by learners of
grades 9 to 12.
Page 5
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
Rashi Sharma
Purabi Pattanayak
As per the National Education Policy 2020, “Given the explosive pace of technological development allied with the sheer
creativity of tech-savvy teachers and entrepreneurs including student entrepreneurs, it is certain that technology will impact
education in multiple ways, only some of which can be foreseen at the present time. New technologies involving artificial
intelligence, machine learning, block chains, smart boards, handheld computing devices, adaptive computer testing for
student development, and other forms of educational software and hardware will not just change what students learn in the
classroom but how they learn, and thus these areas and beyond will require extensive research both on the technological
as well as educational fronts.” Therefore, the future of the educational system will be determined by the expansion and
integration of technology which will serve the purpose of bringing efficiency in educational systems and transformative
reforms in the academic sphere.
Technology Integration for Quality Education
echnology is the predominant driver of
the 21
st
century which is affecting each
and every sphere of human life. The
impact of technology is such that the lines
between the physical, digital and biological spheres
are increasingly blurring and is rapidly changing
the way people live, work and communicate. The
word governance and e-governance have no longer
a clear distinction in terms of policies, institutions,
and implementation strategies. With the evolution
of digital technologies,
both administrations
and institutions
across the globe have
been conclusively
transformed structurally
and in terms of the
relationship between
the Governments
and citizens. These
observations are also
drawn from two decades
of analytical research
and the monitoring
of trends within the
framework of the United
Nations E-Government
Survey. While nearly
every country is
engaged in the process
of digitalisation, not all
have achieved the same
level of development,
and while institutions at
all levels are committed
T
to modernisation and digital transformation,
approaches and outcomes vary greatly. The
COVID-19 pandemic has further exposed digital
divides between and within countries and various
social groups. One of the key lessons learned during
the pandemic is that the future is hybrid and not
digital. In fact, the primary objective of technology
is to recognie and foster human potential and
support sustainable human development through
digitalisation.
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 19 18
The UNESCO definition (www.unesco.org) of
e-governance is stated as “E-governance is the public
sector’s use of information and communication
technologies with the aim of improving information
and service delivery, encouraging citizen
participation in the decision-making process and
making government more accountable, transparent
and effective. E-governance involves new styles of
leadership, new ways of debating and deciding policy
and investment, new ways of accessing education,
new ways of listening to citizens and new ways of
organising and delivering information and services.
E-governance is generally considered as a wider
concept than e-Government, since it can bring a
change in the way citizens relate to Government eco
system. E-governance can bring forth new concepts
of citizenship, both in terms of citizen needs and
responsibilities. Its objective is to engage, enable
and empower the citizen.” The pandemic amplified
the importance of e-government and digital
technologies as essential tools for communication
and collaboration between policy makers, private
sectors and societies across the globe. E-governance
has become the cornerstone for building effective,
accountable, resilient and inclusive institutions at all
levels, as called for in Sustainable Development Goal
(SDG) 16, and for strengthening the implementation
of Goal 17 (UN E-Government Survey, 2022).
With such revolutionary impact of technology,
education sector could not be left untouched
and during the COVID-19 pandemic, the pace of
integration of technology in teaching learning
processes has increased exponentially. During the
pandemic, digital technology played an indispensable
role in holding the civil society together by
supporting the provision of basic-fundamental
services in the field of health, education, and service
sector. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 gives
utmost importance to technology and states that
“The thrust of technological interventions will be
for the purposes of improving teaching-learning
and evaluation processes, supporting teacher
professional development, enhancing educational
access, and streamlining educational planning,
management, and administration etc. It also
recognises and addresses the issue of digital divide
and elucidates that “the benefits of online/digital
education cannot be leveraged unless the digital
divide is eliminated through concerted efforts, such
as the Digital India campaign and the availability of
affordable computing devices. It is important that
the use of technology for online and digital education
adequately addresses concerns of equity.”
In the school education sector of India,
technology has been used both in governance
processes to improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of schooling system and also for enhancing quality of
education. Various governance related technological
interventions have been initiated and undertaken by
the Government which are given below:
(i) UDISE+(https://dashboard.udiseplus.gov.
in): It is a well-known fact that timely and
accurate data is the basis of sound and effective
planning and decision-making. Realising the
need of this, Ministry of Education (MoE) had
initiated Unified District Information System for
Education (UDISE) in 2012-13 integrating DISE
for elementary and secondary education which
is one of the largest Management Information
Systems for School Education covering more
than 1.5 million schools, 9.6 million teachers
and 264 million children.
UDISE+ is an updated and improved version
of UDISE. This is now online and has been
collecting data in real-time since 2018-19.
UDISE+ provides robust, real-time, and credible
information for an objective evaluation of
the system, which can be used for designing
evidence based specific interventions for
improvement in the school education sector.
Further, UDISE+ has a mandate of collecting
information from all recognised and
unrecognised schools which are imparting
formal education from Pre-primary to XII.
UDISE+, collects information through an online
Data Collection Form (DCF) on parameters
ranging from students, schools, teachers,
infrastructure, enrolments, examination results
etc. Ever since its introduction, UDISE+ has
acquired the status of the official database
of the MoE and is now operational in all the
districts of the country.
(ii) Performance Grading Index(PGI) (https://pgi.
udiseplus.gov.in): The PGI is a tool to provide
insights on the status of school education and
to catalyse transformational change in the
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 21 20
States/UTs on the basis of key indicators that
drive their performance and critical areas for
improvement.It grades all States/UTs on their
performance across 77 indicators on school
education and helps identify gaps thereby
enabling all States/UTs to design appropriate
interventions to bridge them. This was
introduced from 2018-19.
In addition to the State PGI, around 83
indicators have been developed for Districtsto
grade the performance in school education.
Combined report for the years 2018-19 & 2019-
20 can be accessed at https://pgi.udiseplus.gov.
in/#/home.
The exercise envisages that the Index will propel
the States/UTs towards undertaking multi-
pronged interventions that will bring about the
much-desired optimal education outcomes.
The purpose of this PGI therefore is to help the
States/UTs to pinpoint the gaps and accordingly
prioritise areas for intervention to ensure that
the school education system is robust at every
level.
(iii) Online survey platform for National
Curriculum Framework (NCF): With the arrival
of NEP 2020, the focus of education has
move towards learning about how to think
critically, solve problems, how to be creative
and multidisciplinary, and how to innovate,
adapt, and absorb new material in changing
fields. Pedagogy is expected to evolve to
make education more experiential, holistic,
integrated, inquiry-driven, discovery-oriented,
learner-centred, flexible, andenjoyable. To
make the above expectations a reality, a new
NCF is being developed by the NCERT. The
development of this framework is unique in
many ways as it is adopting a ‘bottom-up’
approach in which suggestions are invited from
all stakeholders on the basis of which new
NCF will be developed and on 29 July 2022, a
mobile/online survey for NCF was launched.
In addition, drawing insights from citizen-centric
process of development of NEP 2020, this
framework has also been made consultative. To
ensure participation of each and every citizen
of the country in this curriculum development
process, a citizen-centric Digital Survey
for National Curriculum - DiSanc has been
launched. Under this survey, suggestions and
feedback has been collected from the public at
large for the formulation of the NCFs.
(iv) NDEAR (National Digital Education
Architecture) (https://www.ndear.gov.in) and
Vidya Samiksha Kendra:
NDEAR has been launched with a larger vision to
create a unifying national digital infrastructure
to energise and catalyse the education
ecosystem. NDEAR has been conceived as
a unifying National Digital infrastructure to
energise and catalyse the education ecosystem.
The core idea of NDEAR is to facilitate achieving
the goals laid down by NEP 2020, through a
digital infrastructure for innovations in the
education ecosystem, ensuring autonomy and
participation of all the relevant stakeholders.
NDEAR will enable a common set of principles
and approaches to be followed in building,
using, and re-using technology for education.
Further, Vidya Samiksha Kendra (VSK) has
been set-up at national level at NCERT and is
aimed at leveraging data and technology to
bring a big leap in learning outcomes. VSK will
include Student, Teacher and School registry
which will bring synergy to the work being
done in the ecosystem by integrating data from
different datasets and empowers students,
teachers, and parents to bridge the gap. This
will cover the entire data of school eco-system
and will analyse by using big data analysis,
artificial intelligence and machine learning in
order to enhance the overall monitoring of
the education system and thereby improving
learning outcomes. All States and UTs have
been provided financial support under Samagra
Shiksha scheme for setting up VSKs.
(v) PRABANDH (http://samagrashiksha.in):
Department of School Education and Literacy
had launched PRABANDH - Project Appraisal,
Budgeting Achievements and Data Handling
System in 2020. This System has been developed
under Samagra Shiksha as a significant step
towards leveraging technology to enhance
efficiency and manage the implementation of
the Centrally Sponsored Integrated Scheme
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 21 20
for School Education. PRABANDH System can
be accessed at www.samagrashiksha.in. It has
more than 10 lakh activated users and can be
accessed from the School, Block, District and
State Level.
A data visualisation dashboard has been
created in the PRABANDH System for display
of monthly status of physical and financial
progress under the major interventions of
Samagra Shiksha such as text books, uniforms,
transport allowance, status of civil works,
teaching learning materials etc.
Technology integration has also been an integral
part of enhancing quality of education. Various
initiatives have been undertaken to tackle this
challenging situation which are as follows:
(i) PM e-Vidya (https://pmevidya.education.
gov .in): The COVID-19 pandemic presented
a catastrophe for human civilisation but
at the same time it became catalytic
in bringing out various new strategies
and accelerating the pace of technology
intervention. PM e-vidya launched
during the time of pandemic is one such
comprehensive initiative which ensures
coherent access to digital education
through multimodal approach. The digital
platform of MoE ‘DIKSHA’ has been declared
as ‘One Nation, One Digital Platform’.
DIKSHA can be accessed by learners and
teachers across the country and currently
supports 30 Indian languages. Each State/
UT leverages this platform in its own way,
as it has the freedom and choice to use
the varied capabilities and solutions of
the platform to design and run programs
for teachers, learners and administrators.
DIKSHA policies and tools make it
possible for the education ecosystem
(educationist, experts, organisations,
institutions - government, autonomous
institutions, non-government and private
organisations) to participate, contribute
and leverage a common platform to
achieve learning goals at scale for
the country. In the times of COVID-19
pandemic, the platform has experienced
unprecedented rise in access by learners
and teachers across the country. There
have been more than 5 billion learning
sessions, 59 billion learning minutes, 22
billion-page hits. DIKSHA could smoothly
handle such traffic owing to its robust
tech-stack, futuristic design, and dedicated
groups of manpower.
DIKSHA currently hosts over 6,500
textbooks energised with QR codes,
including 359 NCERT textbooks and also
called Energised Textbooks (ETBs). There
are more than 3.01 lakh digital content
on DIKSHA which include audio-visual
content, reading and practice material,
interactive resources and lesson plans.
For digital content to aid in the teaching
and learning processes, a rich repository
of varied resources was contributed by
Schools/individual teachers, content
partners, NGOs, corporates under CSR
under VidyaDaan against the various
content requirements of NCERT/CBSE/
States/UTs. As on date, more than 40,000
content pieces have been contributed
under VidyaDaan. Further, NCERT has
recently entered into an MoU with
ISLRTC under which sign language videos
are being developed jointly. More than
3000 ISL videos have been recorded and
about 600 videos have been uploaded on
DIKSHA. For Children with Special Needs,
2970 Indian Sign language (ISL) based
content, Mukta Vidya Vani, an audio
streaming podcast and Radio Vahini, with
24x7 broadcast and talking books (in Daisy
format) for learners with Blindness and
Low Vision have been prepared and also
a total of 3424 Audio Books have been
developed. 10,000ISL dictionary words,
have been uploaded on DIKSHA.
At present, 12 PM eVIDYA DTH TV
channels (One Class, One Channel from
classes I to XII), are functioning that
delivers class-wise contents on 24x7 basis
are linked to DIKSHA through QR codes. A
Podcast called Shiksha Vani of the CBSE is
also being effectively used by learners of
grades 9 to 12.
Kurukshetra December 2022 Kurukshetra December 2022 23 22
(ii) Capacity Building of Teachers through
NISHTHA online (https://itpd.ncert.gov.
in): The NEP 2020 clearly focuses on
empowering teachers by spelling out
the role at different levels of expertise/
stage and competencies required. The
policy has stated that each teacher will be
expected to participate in at least 50 hours
of Continuous Professional Development
(CPD) program every year for their own
professional development, driven by their
own interests. CPD will systematically
cover the latest pedagogies regarding
foundational literacy and numeracy,
assessment, competency-based learning,
experiential learning, arts-integrated,
sports-integrated, and storytelling-based
approaches, etc. National Initiative for
School Heads’ and Teachers’ Holistic
Advancement (NISHTHA), an integrated
training programme was initiated covering
all the recommended areas and aims at
holistic development of teachers. Under
NISHTHA face-to- face training during
2019-20, 23,137 SRGs and 17,74,728
teachers and head teachers working in
schools run by States/UTs were covered
from 33 States/UTs.During the pandemic,
NISHTHA was launched online at DIKSHA
to ensure Under NISHTHA 1.0, about 24
lakh school teachers and head teachers at
elementary education level (Classes 1-8)
across 34 States/UTs and 8 Autonomous
Bodies under MoE, Ministry of Defense
(MoD) and Ministry of Tribal Affairs
(MoTA) had completed training and
were certified. Subsequently, NISHTHA
2.0 for Secondary teachers, NISHTHA
3.0 for Foundational stage teachers, and
NISHTHA 4.0 for training of master trainers
of ECCE have been launched for building
capacities of teachers at all levels. Around
7.5 lakh secondary teachers and 12 lakh
pre-primary and primary teachers have
completed NISHTHA 2.0 and NISHTHA 3.0
training respectively.
Realising the need of digital education during
COVID-19, the Government decided that the
impetus for the education for 2022-23 would
be on digital mode of learning to reverse the
learning loss caused by the academic disruption
due to the COVID pandemic situation. The
following initiatives have been announced in
Budget 2022-23 to expand the scale and scope
of digital technology and to ensure learning for
all, with equity, to cover all students at all levels
of education, keeping in view India’s scale,
diversity, complexity and device penetration.
(i) 200 TV Channels: Due to learning
gaps caused by the pandemic-induced
closure of schools, the need to impart
supplementary teaching and to build
a resilient mechanism for education
delivery. For this purpose, the ‘one class-
one TV channel’ program of PM e-VIDYA
will be expanded from 12 to 200 TV
channels. This will enable all states to
provide supplementary education in
regional languages for classes 1-12.
(ii) Virtual Labs: NEP 2020 recommends
creating virtual laboratories so that all
students have equal access to quality
practical, critical thinking and hands-
on experience for teaching-learning of
Science, Mathematics and Vocational
Skills. To support this around 750 virtual
labs in science and mathematics, and 75
skilling e-labs for the simulated learning
environment, will be set up in 2022-23.
(iii) High Quality E-Content: High-Quality
e-content in all spoken languages will be
developed for delivery via internet, mobile
phones, TV, and radio through Digital
Teachers.
(iv) Competitive Mechanism For E-Content:
A competitive mechanism for the
development of quality e-content by the
teachers will be set up to empower and
equip them with digital tools of teaching
and facilitate better learning outcomes.
Conclusion
The NEP 2020 calls for investment in digital
infrastructure, online teaching platforms and tools,
virtual labs, digital repositories, online assessments,
technology and pedagogy for online teaching-
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