
Telangana’s New Education Policy: A Game-Changer for Students’ Global Success
In a key meeting today, Telangana Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy unveiled plans for a fresh education policy that’s set to equip students with essential language skills, core knowledge, and practical abilities. The goal? To help young minds from Telangana compete on the world stage without missing a beat.
CM Revanth Reddy stressed that this new Telangana education policy draws from real-world needs, current studies, and what’s coming next for the future. "We want it to light the way for India’s education system," he said, making it clear that the policy will fix gaps in the current setup. Right now, many students miss out on strong language training, foundational learning, and hands-on skills—things the new plan will prioritize to boost global competitiveness.
This exciting initiative will also feature in the upcoming Telangana Rising Vision Document-2047, launching on December 9 this year. The CM urged education experts to form focused sub-committees based on their strengths and craft the strongest possible blueprint.
The government is going all-in on transforming Telangana’s education sector from top to bottom. With no easy fixes like handing out land or cash to fight poverty, Revanth Reddy called quality education the ultimate tool to lift the needy out of hardship. He pointed to India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, who kickstarted top institutions like universities and IITs because he knew education builds a nation’s future. Yet, the CM voiced worry that today’s system isn’t producing enough skilled talent to seize opportunities from economic reforms—both at home and abroad.
Take the software boom, for example. Thanks to a surge in engineering colleges, loads of Telangana youth shine in tech. But here’s the catch: Out of lakhs of engineering graduates each year, only about 10% land jobs. Why? A big skills gap, according to the Chief Minister.
Enrollment in government schools keeps dropping, even as the state pours in massive funds. Private schools hook parents early with nursery, LKG, and UKG classes, while government ones start at Class 1. Once kids get that personal attention in private setups, families hesitate to switch. Revanth Reddy highlighted how the government jumped into action right after taking office—hiring teachers to balance student-teacher ratios, handling promotions, and sorting transfers so educators stay laser-focused on quality teaching.
The CM reaffirmed the state’s commitment to pour money into education without holding back. Plans are underway for a dedicated Education Corporation to upgrade school infrastructure and raise teaching standards across Telangana. This push for better education in Telangana could be the spark that changes lives and drives the state’s growth.
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