The Deshbhakti curriculum is going to be taught in schools from Wednesday (September 29). Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said, “from now on our education system will produce patriotic engineers, advocates, doctors. They will not think about earning money, but about how they can serve the country through their professions.”
The Curriculum, launched at the Chhatrasal Stadium here, intended to bring the spirit of patriotism in each citizen to the fore — in this case schoolchildren. A live musical performance by singer-composer Palash Sen was also a part of the event.
Every child in Delhi, Mr. Kejriwal said, would be a “deshbhakt (patriot) in the truest sense”, thanks to the curriculum. Deshbhakti, he added, had to be a “continually evolving feeling” even as he called for the development of Deshbhakt professionals.
“We need to develop an environment wherein we all and our children constantly feel patriotic at every step they take. We can only imagine what the future would look like if this happens,” he said.
The curriculum will be rolled out from nursery to Class XII as and when the schools reopen and it will have no textbooks for students but for facilitators teaching it.
“This is a big day for our country. This is not just going to talk about Deshbhakti, but inculcate a passion for it,” Deputy CM Manish Sisodia said. “This will not be preaching moral values, but expect the students to retrospect towards their own patriotism.”
Delhi chief minister Kejriwal earlier said that the deshbhakti curriculum will not be based on rote learning and there will be no tests. “It will be activity-based and students will be told stories about independence and the nation’s pride,” he said. “Children will be made to realise their responsibilities and duties towards the country.”
The framework of the ‘Deshbhakti’ curriculum submitted by a government-appointed panel was approved by the governing council of the state council of educational research and training (SCERT) on August 6. The chief minister of Delhi made the public announcement of the curriculum on the 73rd Independence Day in 2019, expressing his hope that in the future, this curriculum will be taught in schools across the country.