homeeducation NewsKerala to introduce history chapters omitted from NCERT textbooks

Kerala to introduce history chapters omitted from NCERT textbooks

Kerala to introduce history chapters omitted from NCERT textbooks
Read Time2 Min(s) Read
Show More
Show More
Profile image

By CNBCTV18.com Apr 26, 2023 5:48:59 PM IST (Published)

The curriculum committee of SCERT took the stand that deleted portions should be taught to the students in Kerala. Going by the education minister’s recent comments, it looks like SCERT will get the green light to introduce supplementary textbooks on the omitted chapters.

The Education Department of the Kerala government has decided to continue teaching the chapters deleted from the NCERT textbooks of classes XI and XII. According to reports, the State Council of Education Research and Training (SCERT Kerala) will instruct the schools to include the portions deleted from history books issued by NCERT.

Recommended Articles

View All

After NCERT carried out the changes in its textbooks in April as a part of its syllabus rationalisation, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan slammed the Central government over the move.
Reportedly, the curriculum committee of SCERT took the stand that the deleted portions should be taught to the students in Kerala and supplementary textbooks will be released by SCERT soon.
ALSO READ |
SCERT has even sought permission from the state government before preparing and distributing supplementary textbooks dealing with the content excluded in NCERT’s Class 11 and Class 12 textbooks.
Kerala Education Minister V Sivankutty will decide whether the deleted portions, mainly pertaining to history, should be taught by introducing supplementary textbooks.
The chapters that have been dropped by the NCERT from the history and political science textbooks include the portions assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, Mughal courts, 2002 communal riots in Gujarat, the Naxalite movement, and Dalit writers.
While addressing a public meeting last week, V Sivankutty indicated that the state can print its own books if the Central government denies permission to teach omitted chapters. The minister had also expressed his strong reservations over NCERT’s move. He said, “Kerala will always uphold secular and constitutional values. We firmly believe omitted portions should be taught in schools. You cannot twist history like this. We are examining how to teach them. We can print textbooks independently.”
Going by the education minister’s recent comments, it looks like SCERT will get the green light to introduce supplementary textbooks on the omitted chapters.
Earlier this month, as many as 250 historians from leading Indian and foreign universities had also issued a public statement against NCERT’s contentious move to drop certain chapters from its social science, history, and political science textbooks of Classes 6 to 12.
Check out our in-depth Market Coverage, Business News & get real-time Stock Market Updates on CNBC-TV18. Also, Watch our channels CNBC-TV18, CNBC Awaaz and CNBC Bajar Live on-the-go!
View All

Most Read

Market Movers

View All
Top GainersTop Losers
CurrencyCommodities
CompanyPriceChng%Chng