देश की नींव कमजोर करने की साजिश देश को २० साल पीछे करने की साजिश।,
Date: 18.05.2026
To:
Ministry of Education, Government of India
Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)
Prime Minister’s Office (PMO)
President’s Secretariat
Subject:
Urgent Review of the 3rd Language Policy and Need for Future-Ready Education in
Schools
Ref: PG Portal:
DOSEL/E/2026/0006538
Dt. 18.05.2026 Department of School Education and Literacy (DoSEL)
PRSEC/E/2026/0034028
Dt. 18.05.2026 (President’s Secretariat)
PMOPG/E/2026/0084413
Dt. 18.05.2026 (Prime Minister’s Office (PMO))
We, the concerned parents, citizens, and stakeholders of India’s education
system, respectfully submit this petition seeking a serious review of the
recently proposed educational changes, including the compulsory third-language
approach and the overall direction of school education.
Our Concern
India aspires to become a global economic and technological leader. However,
education policies must equip students with skills for the future rather than
increasing academic burden through frequent curriculum changes and additional
compulsory subjects without adequate relevance to future careers.
Many parents are
deeply concerned that repeated syllabus revisions, frequent textbook changes,
and mandatory additions may increase pressure on children without significantly
improving employability, practical knowledge, or career preparedness.
Key Issues
Requiring Immediate Attention
1. Lack of
Future-Ready Subjects in School Education
Students should receive early
exposure to practical and emerging sectors that contribute to national
development, innovation, and employment.
Schools should
gradually introduce age-appropriate awareness modules on:
·
Robotics
and Artificial Intelligence
·
Renewable
Energy (Solar, Wind, Hydroelectric Power)
·
Nuclear
Energy and Energy Security
·
Agriculture
Technology and Modern Farming Equipment
·
Cold
Storage and Food Supply Chain Management
·
Construction
and Infrastructure Technology
·
Automobile
and Electric Vehicle Technology
·
Disaster
Management (Floods, Earthquakes, Fire Safety, Tsunami Response)
·
Solid
Waste Management and Sustainability
·
Water
Conservation and River Linking Awareness
·
National
Infrastructure Missions and Engineering Achievements
2. Awareness of
India’s Scientific and Strategic Achievements
Students should develop pride
and understanding of India’s institutions and technological progress,
including:
·
Space
missions and scientific achievements of ISRO
·
Defense
innovations and missile systems
·
Indigenous
manufacturing and strategic technologies
·
Engineering
excellence and national infrastructure projects
3. Career Guidance
Must Begin Early
Many students complete
schooling without awareness of career pathways available in India.
Schools should
introduce structured career awareness sessions covering:
·
Civil
Services and Government Administration
·
Defense
Services (Army, Navy, Air Force)
·
Engineering
and Scientific Institutions
·
Banking
and Financial Sector Careers
·
Public
Sector Organizations
·
Research
and Innovation Careers
·
Technical,
vocational, and entrepreneurial opportunities
4. Need for
Curriculum Stability
Frequent changes in books and
syllabus create confusion for students, parents, and teachers.
We respectfully
recommend:
·
Major
syllabus revision once every 3 years
·
Supplementary
annual modules for emerging technologies and national developments
·
Pilot
testing before nationwide implementation of major curriculum changes
5. Review of
Mandatory Subject Burden
Education should balance
language learning with science, technology, creativity, and practical life
skills.
Before introducing
compulsory additional subjects, a detailed nationwide impact assessment should
be conducted regarding:
·
Academic
pressure on students
·
Mental
well-being
·
Time
available for core competencies
·
Regional
and linguistic diversity
·
Career
relevance
Our Appeal
We respectfully request the
Government of India and CBSE to initiate a transparent national consultation
involving parents, teachers, child psychologists, industry experts, scientists,
and education specialists before implementing major curriculum changes.
India’s children
deserve an education system that is balanced, future-ready, practical, and
aligned with the aspirations of a developed India.
Education should
empower children for the future, not overwhelm them.
We urge policymakers
to consider constructive reforms that prepare students not only for
examinations, but for life, innovation, employment, and nation-building.
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