Play-Based Learning 

Why in News: The Government of India has launched Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi to transform Anganwadi Centres into vibrant early learning hubs, emphasising play-based and activity-oriented learning in line with NEP 2020.

  • India’s vision of Viksit Bharat @ 2047 depends on harnessing the full potential of its youngest citizens.
  • NEP 2020 recognises that 85% of brain development occurs before age six.
  • Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) is critical for cognitive, emotional, and social growth.

Scientific and Economic Rationale

  • CMC Vellore study: Children exposed to 18–24 months of ECCE gained up to 19 IQ points by age 5, sustained gains (5–9 points) by age 9.
  • James Heckman (Nobel Laureate): Early childhood investment yields 13–18% returns, higher than investments at later stages.
  • Global evidence shows: play-based learning improves school readiness, social adaptability, and lifelong learning capacity.

Government Initiatives

Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi

  • Transforms Anganwadi Centres into early learning hubs.
  • Anganwadi workers trained in activity-based, play-oriented pedagogy using local/indigenous materials.
  • Budget for teaching-learning materials increased; monthly ECCE days institutionalised.

Aadharshila (National ECCE Curriculum, 3–6 years)

  • Focus: holistic development — intellectual, emotional, physical, and social.
  • 5+1 weekly plan:
    • 30 mins free play, structured activities (language, creativity, motor skills, social skills).
    • Nutritious meal + rest.
    • Outdoor play and conversations for values & bonding.
  • Ensures school readiness in line with NEP 2020 (school entry age = 6 years).

Navchetna (Birth–3 years)

  • National framework for early childhood stimulation.
  • Empowers parents and caregivers with play-based, age-appropriate activities at home.
  • Bridges inequality between resource-rich and resource-poor households.

Holistic Development Approach

  • Intellectual: Language, problem-solving, creativity.
  • Physical: Motor skills, outdoor play, health and nutrition.
  • Emotional: Bonding, values, resilience.
  • Social: Peer learning, teamwork, communication.
  • Anganwadis evolving from nutrition-only centres → first schools.

Impact and Significance

  • Changing perceptions: Parents now view Anganwadis as stepping stones to education, not just nutrition hubs.
  • Inclusivity: Provides equal opportunities for children from disadvantaged households.
  • Foundation for Viksit Bharat: Strengthening ECCE ensures a smarter, healthier, productive generation.

Challenges Ahead

  • Capacity gaps: Training & workload of Anganwadi workers.
  • Infrastructure: Many centres lack proper space, sanitation, or resources.
  • Monitoring & evaluation: Ensuring quality and outcomes in diverse socio-economic settings.
  • Community awareness: Need to build parental trust and involvement at scale.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen Anganwadi infrastructure – digital tools, safe play spaces, modern teaching kits.
  • Capacity building – continuous ECCE training and incentives for Anganwadi workers.
  • Public-private partnerships – leverage NGOs, EdTech, and CSR for play-based innovations.
  • Parental engagement – large-scale awareness campaigns on Navchetna.
  • Outcome monitoring – standardised assessments of school readiness and holistic growth.

Conclusion

Play is not a luxury — it is foundational to learning. With NEP 2020, Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi, Aadharshila, and Navchetna, India has reimagined Anganwadis as the first schools of the nation.

GS Paper II

  • Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections (Anganwadi, Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi).

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This will close in 0 seconds

Scroll to Top