News Brief
World Bank office in Washington DC.
The Central government, the World Bank and the Government of Andhra Pradesh have signed the legal agreements for $250 million loan for a project which aims to improve quality of learning for over 50 lakh students in the state, an official release said on Tuesday (23 November).
The project will benefit around 40 lakh students (between the age of six and fourteen) in over 45,000 government schools, and over 10 lakh children (between the age of three and six) enrolled in Anganwadis (Integrated Child Development Centers), and about 1,90,000 teachers, and more than 50,000 Anganwadi workers.
The agreement was signed on 18 November by Rajat Kumar Mishra, Additional Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance on behalf of the Government of India; Budithi Rajsekhar, Principal Secretary, Department of School Education on behalf of the Government of Andhra Pradesh; and Junaid Ahmad, Country Director, India on behalf of the World Bank.
The Supporting Andhra's Learning Transformation Project will encourage professional development of teachers; provide remedial learning courses for children impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic; and pay special attention to students from marginalized groups, including children with special needs, scheduled tribes, and girls, the Union Ministry of Finance said in a release on Tuesday (23 November).
“Providing universal access to quality education is central to India's economic and social development. The Project will support the state of Andhra Pradesh in fulfilling its vision of transforming government schools into vibrant institutions focused on foundational learning for young children, including addressing learning losses for children impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic," stated Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance.
According to the Finance Ministry release, Andhra Pradesh has adopted a new competency-based teaching-learning approach.
The project will improve teaching practices through classroom-based mentorships, need-based teacher training for teachers of all grades and subjects, Personalized Adaptive Learning (PAL) methods, and other forms of remedial education linked to standardised school-based assessments.
The focus on foundational learning would be through short-term in-service training courses for Anganwadi workers and early grade (Grade 1 and 2) teachers and the supply of pedagogically appropriate Teaching Learning Material (TLM) across these centres and schools.
Such attention to foundational learning will improve the readiness of schools in preparing children with the cognitive, socio-behavioural, and language skills needed for future labour markets.
The project will introduce a one-year preschool-level course in 3,500 schools in the tribal blocks. It will help address the issue of low learning levels amongst the tribal community, the ministry said.
With the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, home-based learning opportunities for students are of top priority for the state.
Given the low availability of digital devices amongst students, the focus will be on developing physical learning kits and content for television and radio broadcasts, the ministry said.
It will help in reducing the learning losses that children are likely to face due to school closures because of the ongoing pandemic, future natural disasters, or other disruptions related to climate change, it added.