DEVI Sansthan’s Report Outlines Blueprint for National Literacy by 2026

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Lucknow: As India strives to achieve universal foundational literacy and numeracy, DEVI Sansthan has released a groundbreaking report, “Making India Literate in Weeks,” on the nation’s 78th Independence Day. The report highlights the ALfA (Accelerating Learning for All) initiative, which can help India achieve NIPUN goals before its deadline.

NIPUN, the National Initiative for Proficiency in Reading with Understanding and Numeracy, was launched by the Union Ministry of Education on July 5, 2021. The aim is to ensure that every child in the country attains foundational literacy and numeracy skills, by 2026-27.

The ALfA programme is being successively rolled out in 15,000 schools. Some 150,000 students have participated in research implementations, demonstrating remarkable learning gains. Third-party measurement of test scores in various districts improved, on average, from 32 per cent to 59 per cent in just 45 days. The impressive results in Shamli district have featured in a chapter of a book edited by Prof. Fernando Reimers and the team from Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Beyond individual studies showing examples of success, the macro-picture data also tells a powerful story. The government’s own NIPUN Assessment Test in UP found disproportionately high scores in blocks and districts implementing ALfA. For instance, one of UP’s largest districts, Unnao, had just 15 per cent of schools pass the NIPUN benchmark. Yet, one of its blocks, Hilauli, scored more than triple the district average, with 47 per cent of schools NIPUN. The secret? Hilauli adopted ALfA for all its 155 (100 per cent) schools, just two months before the test. Meanwhile, Shamli, a formerly low-performing district, reached a rank of 18 out of UP’s 75 districts. ALfA had been implemented in 210 (41 per cent) schools of Shamli.

These strong improvements are a breath of fresh air amidst a gloomy national picture, with successive Annual Status of Education Reports showing that reading and numeracy performance has stagnated and even declined from 2012 to 2022. Despite renewed government efforts since the COVID crisis, we have not yet recovered to pre-pandemic learning levels, when less than half the children of Grade V were able to read a Grade II text with understanding.

Speed is critical. The conventional education system takes three years or more to make a child literate – which ALfA achieves in under three months. We do not have time to tinker around with old pedagogies that have not produced major progress. Achieving NIPUN goals will require a mission-minded approach from the government, embracing the new pedagogy, not just tightening the bolts.

Dr. Sunita Gandhi, Founder of DEVI Sansthan, commented, “The new report, ‘Making India Literate in Weeks,’ showcases a groundbreaking teaching and learning process. All children deserve a better education from the first day, and not gap-filling year after year over decades. Blocks and districts have shown impressive learning gains with ALfA, but rapid progress will be unlocked only with the system-wide ALfA adoption by State and UT governments. This is possible without any additional costs to their budget. Beyond meeting the dream of a NIPUN Bharat before its deadline of 2026, this will pave the way for quality education for all as per SDG4. It will make India an example to the rest of the world.”

In just two years since ALfA’s launch, DEVI Sansthan has signed MoUs with several State & UT Governments, including Uttar Pradesh, Ladakh and Himachal Pradesh – the latter signing up for State-wide implementation. DEVI is also partnering with Governments and NGOs for women and adult literacy programmes in Mizoram, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand, and West Bengal.

Rajnath Singh, Honourable Defence Minister of India, recently expressed his hopes that the ALfA programme would expand dramatically throughout the country. Dr MK Sundaram, Principal Secretary of Education, Uttar Pradesh, while attending a July training of teachers from 580 schools of Lucknow district, expressed his intention to scale ALfA to at least one lakh schools in Uttar Pradesh.

The excitement is spreading beyond UP, too. A delegation of 54 officials from Madhya Pradesh visited Lucknow to witness the ALfA pedagogy in action. They left determined to try it out in their state. Earlier, a 130-member delegation from the Ministry of Education, Maldives, came to study the ALfA model. They have since completed a UNICEF-supported research project, producing exciting results. ALfA is spreading in other nations too, including Kenya, Peru and the USA.

The new report concludes that India can become literate within weeks – it need not take years or decades.