sub-imageதினமலர் டிவி
sub-imagePodcast
sub-imageiPaper
sub-imageசினிமா
sub-imageகோயில்கள்
sub-imageபுத்தகங்கள்
sub-imageSubscription
sub-imageதிருக்குறள்
sub-imageகடல் தாமரை
Dinamalar Logo

சனி, அக்டோபர் 04, 2025 ,புரட்டாசி 18, விசுவாவசு வருடம்

டைம்லைன்


தற்போதைய செய்தி


தினமலர் டிவி


ப்ரீமியம்


தமிழகம்


இந்தியா


உலகம்


வர்த்தகம்


விளையாட்டு


கல்விமலர்


டீ கடை பெஞ்ச்


/

செய்திகள்

/

Kalvimalar

/

News

/

CBSE makes mother tongue education mandatory till class 5

/

CBSE makes mother tongue education mandatory till class 5

CBSE makes mother tongue education mandatory till class 5

CBSE makes mother tongue education mandatory till class 5


UPDATED : செப் 29, 2025 08:54 PM

ADDED : செப் 29, 2025 08:56 PM

Google News

UPDATED : செப் 29, 2025 08:54 PM ADDED : செப் 29, 2025 08:56 PM


Google News
Latest Tamil News
நிறம் மற்றும் எழுத்துரு அளவு மாற்ற

New Delhi: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has directed all its schools to make mother tongue education compulsory till Class 5, a move widely welcomed by educationists.

According to the new guidelines, children joining school should be taught in their mother tongue at least till Class 2. If that is not possible, the state language may be used as the medium of instruction. From Classes 2 to 5, students may continue in the same medium or switch to another language.

More than 28,000 schools function under the CBSE. As part of this initiative, NCERT has already prepared textbooks in mother tongues up to Class 2 and is in the process of preparing books up to Class 5.

Educators argue that primary education in the mother tongue makes learning easier, particularly in subjects like mathematics, science, and social studies, which otherwise tend to be memorised without full understanding. “Language plays a key role in learning. Knowledge grows when a child fully understands what is being taught, and this is best achieved through the mother tongue,” said a senior teacher.

While teachers have raised concerns over the practical challenges of allocating classes and recruiting staff for different mother tongues, experts believe these issues can be resolved in the long run.

Educationists stress that the mother tongue forms the foundation of learning during the crucial ages of 6 to 10. Without it, they warn, a student's academic growth may remain incomplete even in higher education.

imgpaper

Advertisement



Trending





      Dinamalar
      Follow us