Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

The Good, Bad and Key Takeaways From 2017 Budget However, the current version of the MHRD initiative is focused towards higher Education.

By Prateek Bhargava

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Pixabay

Budget 2017 does come with many positive initiatives to bring about the much needed revolution in the education sector. However, like most other initiatives under the NaMO regime, the implementation is the key worry. For instance, the budgets focus on the Swayam initiative is welcome. However, the current version of the MHRD initiative is focused towards higher Education.

The need is to focus towards leveraging technology at the school level. This would make quality education accessible to millions. The need of the hour is to focus on digital literacy given the focus towards digital India and also, keeping in mind that India is one of the youngest democracy in the world. The start needs to be made at the school level to start bridging the skill gap between academia and industry. The focus of discussions needs to shift from "Reservations" to making "Quality Education" available to all. Given the digital revolution, this is now a possibility and govt. needs to make adequate investments to equip large number of govt. school to host technology enabled learning.

Another case, in point, is the introduction of a system of measuring annual learning outcomes, innovation fund for secondary education. This initiative of the govt. is in the right direction. However, even before measuring learning outcomes, the emphasis has to be put on quality of education provided. We know significant gaps exist in the delivery of education, infrastructure in schools, adoption of technology and latest methods of learning. Till these issues are addressed, measuring learning outcomes will not be effective.

This initiative has to be driven with adequate focus towards substantial investments towards upgrading the process of imparting education. Leverage technology towards learning, evaluating the skills of the student and mapping students to the right programs suited to their skill set are important pre-requisites before such measures. Not all of India's millions are required to become engineers, doctors or college professors. Recent governments have made great strides with regards to upskilling India but when you're looking at employment for a working population of 860 million by 2020, radical approaches are required.

Overall, from an education sector perspective, the budget is silent about some key expectations and requirements for the education sector such as -:

- Infra upgradation

- Teacher training

- All round assessment of schools

- Influx of technology in teaching

- Career planning and skill-individual mapping

- Skill development implementation

- School-industry collaboration

These are important pre-requisites to making any transformational change in this sector:

Coming from the perspective of startups, the Union Budget did have some good news on the taxation front but I guess what's more important for start-ups is an overall eco-system which is conducive to do business. StartUp-India campaign by the PM had some very promising propositions, but all of it is yet to see the light of execution. There was no mention of this aspect in the budget which has been raised by most DIPP recognised start-ups across multiple forums. There has been lot of noise about the tax benefits for start-ups but honestly, as founders, we are looking at initiatives which can support innovation, make access to capital easier and increase speed to market.

In the ed-tech space, there are immense opportunities and there are multiple innovations which are ripe to drastically improve the quality of education being offered. What is required is adequate budgets with government bodies to adopt these innovations and make it accessible to millions of students.

The Finance Minister in his speech mentioned focus on IT in education and also, an innovation fund for secondary education which is a step in the right direction; but we need to keep in mind that the pre-requisites to makes this a reality would be adequate infrastructure, focus on teacher training, career planning and skill-individual mapping and emphasis on digital literacy. The focus on micros is equally important in the education sector because that's the pre-requisite for all major initiatives to be a success.

Prateek Bhargava

CEO and Founder, Mindler.com

Prateek Bhargava is the founder and CEO of Mindler.com. Mindler.com is a technology driven platform that helps students and parents choose the most appropriate career path.
Leadership

How to Break Free From the Cycle of Overthinking and Master Your Mind

Discover the true cost of negative thought loops — and practical strategies for nipping rumination in the bud.

Leadership

How a $10,000 Investment in AI Transformed My Career and Business Strategy

A bold $10,000 investment in AI and machine learning education fundamentally transformed my career and business strategy. Here's how adaption in the ever-evolving realm of AI — with the right investment in education, personal growth and business innovation — can transform your business.

Side Hustle

These Brothers Had 'No Income' When They Started a 'Low-Risk, High-Reward' Side Hustle to Chase a Big Dream — Now They've Surpassed $50 Million in Revenue

Sam Lewkowict, co-founder and CEO of men's grooming brand Black Wolf Nation, knows what it takes to harness the power of side gig for success.

Business News

Now that OpenAI's Superalignment Team Has Been Disbanded, Who's Preventing AI from Going Rogue?

We spoke to an AI expert who says safety and innovation are not separate things that must be balanced; they go hand in hand.

Business News

A University Awarded a Student $10,000 for His AI Tool — Then Suspended Him for Using It, According to a New Lawsuit

Emory University awarded the AI study aid the $10,000 grand prize in an entrepreneurial pitch competition last year.

Science & Technology

3 Major Mistakes Companies Are Making With AI That Is Limiting Their ROI

With so many competing narratives around the future of AI, it's no wonder companies are misaligned on the best approach for integrating it into their organizations.