
English curriculum for DElED prog being updated to align with NEP
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Prayagraj: In a significant step towards modernising teacher education in Uttar Pradesh, the English curriculum for the Diploma in Elementary Education (DElEd) programme is undergoing a major update.
Offered in 67 govt-run District Institutes of Education and Training (DIETs) and nearly 3,000 private colleges, the DElEd programme prepares aspiring teachers for primary and upper primary schools. The initiative of overhauling the curriculum aligns with the vision of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.
The responsibility of making the desired changes was entrusted to the subject experts at the English Language Teaching Institute (ELTI), Prayagraj.
The current syllabus, developed in 2014 when DElEd was still called the Basic Training Certificate (BTC), became outdated, particularly in light of the NEP's inclusion of pre-primary education and its emphasis on early childhood learning.
"Over 3.25 lakh applications were received for the 2024 DElEd session," said officials at the Exam Regulatory Authority, underlining the programme's immense popularity. Skand Shukla, Principal of ELTI-Prayagraj, said, "With English taught in the second and fourth semesters, the need for an updated, effective curriculum is more pressing than ever, especially when NCERT books have been introduced at the primary level," said Shukla.
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Besides, the use of AI and language labs in learning has also been incorporated, which was taken from computer-assisted language learning (CALL), and the course will be beneficial both for lecturers and trainee teachers alike, he added. Moreover, ELTI interacted with the students and officials of DIET, and their feedback too contributed to the updated curriculum. "We have taken feedback from trainees across DIETs to ensure that the course reflects real classroom challenges and learning needs," said Shukla.
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"The revised curriculum is designed to be more inclusive, integrating new-age elements like artificial intelligence, digital tools, and computer-assisted language learning," he said. Another key consideration is the introduction of NCERT textbooks tailored for Uttar Pradesh schools. These books, now used up to Class 3 and soon to be extended to Class 8, bring new content structures and require innovative teaching strategies, prompting the need for specialised workbooks and revised pedagogy in DElEd training.
The Rajya Hindi Sansthan in Varanasi developed authentic Hindi textbooks for all four DElEd semesters—a first in the programme's history.

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