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Phase-2 of teacher training begins across State

Phase-2 of teacher training begins across State

Hans India21-05-2025

Hyderabad: For the second phase of teacher training that commenced on Tuesday, Telangana Education Department Secretary Dr Yogita Rana convened a virtual meeting to address key aspects of the programme.
Around 89,378 teachers across the State participated in the meeting. The first phase training was held from May 13 to 17. Around 17,771 teachers attended the training and the second phase training will be concluded on May 24. During the meeting, Dr Yogita Rana stated that all teachers should make the best use of this five-day training programme to improve students' learning outcomes. Every teacher must upgrade their teaching methodologies to suit the times so that public schools can gain the trust and confidence of the community.
The State government is planning to collect details from teachers who are implementing several best practices and soon organise a State level conclave with them. Based on this, a special action plan will be prepared to implement these best practices in all schools across the State and in order to enhance foundational learning standards at the primary level, special focus must be given to the Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) programme.
Instructions have been given to DEOs and training centre in-charges to ensure that all teachers receive necessary facilities and support so that they do not face any inconvenience during the training.

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In Telangana, teacher training is a continuous, classroom-centered process
In Telangana, teacher training is a continuous, classroom-centered process

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time03-06-2025

  • The Hindu

In Telangana, teacher training is a continuous, classroom-centered process

'A good teacher builds a better harvest than a good monsoon,' goes an old saying in Telangana's villages. Students thrive not just from resources or policy, but from skilled, supported, and trusted teachers and decades of research across the globe confirm this. Yet, despite this clear connection, effective teacher training has remained an elusive goal in India's education system. In recent years, many States have expanded their teacher training efforts. Yet, the challenge has remained: how to move beyond one-off workshops to truly empower teachers in classrooms. Telangana set out to answer that question — by reimagining teacher development not as an event, but as a continuous, classroom-centered process. Its experience offers important insights for the rest of the country. Teacher training a missed opportunity A large study by the Institute for Multi-sensory Education found that high-quality teacher development can boost student achievement by 21 percentage points. Another meta-analysis across 60 studies showed that structured coaching raised instructional quality by 20 percentage points, and student scores by 7–8 points—especially in critical early literacy skills. Yet, India's teacher training story has often been a litany of missed opportunities. A 2016 NCERT review found that most in-service trainings were one-off lectures, unconnected to teachers' real struggles. Needs assessments were sporadic, follow-up was rare, and cascade models — designed to spread training — often diluted quality by the time help reached classrooms. Telangana was no exception. Over almost a decade, despite running large-scale training sessions, learning levels remained stubbornly low with a declining trend. While the textbooks were thoughtfully designed, teachers struggled to bring them to life in the classroom, having never been trained to transact them in their true spirit—often rushing through content without knowing if real learning was taking place. It was clear: training teachers for a day wasn't enough. They needed to be equipped, supported, and trusted every day. In 2022, Telangana turned the mirror inward and asked its teachers a simple but powerful question: 'What do you need?' Their answers were poignant — and surprisingly simple. 'We have the textbooks and materials — we just don't know if we're using them the right way to actually help children learn.' The response led to a quiet revolution. A revamped training program First, new easy-to-use Teacher Handbooks in Telugu, Urdu, English, and Mathematics were launched to guide lesson delivery and make textbooks transactions easier. Paired with Student Workbooks aligned to Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) goals, this shift moved the system from rote curriculum coverage to competency-based learning, giving teachers a way to monitor student progress every day. Next, Telangana redesigned how it trained its teachers. In 2023, building on this momentum, over 48,000 primary teachers participated in a revamped training program. For the first time, the focus was not on abstract theory but on real challenges. Teachers were encouraged to bring their handbooks into the training hall and refer to them throughout. Mandal-level trainers underwent in-depth orientations and received structured trainer kits with presentations, demonstration videos, and activities — shifting the format from lecture to dialogue. For instance, instead of simply being told how to 'teach place value,' trainers walked teachers through an actual classroom demonstration: using small sticks bundled in tens to make the concept tangible for young children. Teachers practiced these techniques themselves, received feedback, and were equipped to replicate them in their own classrooms. But the most radical change came after the workshops ended. Continuous professional development Instead of leaving teachers to fend for themselves, Telangana built a support system in the field. Middle management officials including the Mandal Educational Officers and the Complex Head Masters, visited classrooms, observed lessons, offered feedback, and nudged teachers toward excellence. Over one lakh classroom observations were conducted — not to police teachers, but to support them. Despite slight hiccups in 2024 — most rightly due to long-pending systemic reforms such as teacher transfers and promotions — the State stayed the course. These reforms, while temporarily slowing down classroom support and momentum, were critical for restoring fairness and morale in the system. And finally, in 2025, Telangana took the entire teacher development effort to the next level. 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This structured and tech-enabled approach ensured accountability while also respecting teachers as professionals. Today, around 78% of teachers show improvement in post-training assessments. Most importantly, teachers find themselves more confident to transact a lesson which would further have an impact on the student learning outcomes. To complement these efforts, Telangana has been working on a blended Continuous Professional Development (CPD) platform to empower teachers to continue their learning journeys, choosing courses based on their needs — a quiet nod to respecting teachers as professionals, not passive recipients. (Dr. IV Subba Rao is a retired IAS Officer and Senior Advisor, Central Square Foundation. Suresh Ghattamaneni is an Associate Director at Central Square Foundation)

Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan inaugurates temporary KV building, lays foundation for permanent campus in Dhenkanal
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time23-05-2025

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Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan inaugurates temporary KV building, lays foundation for permanent campus in Dhenkanal

Dhenkanal (Odisha) [India], May 23 (ANI): In a step toward strengthening foundational education, Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan inaugurated a temporary building for Kendriya Vidyalaya (KV) on Friday and laid the foundation stone for its permanent campus in Dhenkanal, Odisha. The occasion also reaffirmed the government's commitment to implementing the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 across all states. Speaking to ANI, Pradhan emphasised the NEP's focus on regional languages in early education. 'Under the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, we have decided that in all the states of India--in the foundational and preparatory stages, in Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN), and in the NIPUN Bharat Mission--education must be provided in the children's mother tongue in the initial years,' he said. He noted that the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has already issued a circular directing schools across the country to commence school education in regional languages. 'This move aligns with NEP's vision to make learning more inclusive and effective for young students,' Pradhan stated. 'To take our country's new generation to the global level, we must fully implement the National Education Policy,' Pradhan added, underlining the importance of culturally rooted yet globally competitive education. Earlier in the day, Dharmendra Pradhan also inaugurated the newly constructed auditorium at the Odisha University of Agriculture and Technology (OUAT) in the Chiplima region of Sambalpur district. According to his post on the social media platform X, Rs 10.5 crores were invested to upgrade the auditorium. 'OUAT, Chiplima will be a bridge between 'Developed Odisha' and 'Developed India'.I am happy to inaugurate the new state-of-the-art auditorium of OUAT Chiplima Agricultural College in Sambalpur. This auditorium will be of great help in the intellectual development of the students and in enhancing the skills of the farmers of Sambalpur and the surrounding districts. I thank the Chief Minister @MohanMOdisha for taking steps to upgrade this auditorium with an investment of about Rs 10.5 crore,' Pradhan post on X read. He also thanked Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi for his efforts in facilitating the auditorium's development. (ANI)

Phase-2 of teacher training begins across State
Phase-2 of teacher training begins across State

Hans India

time21-05-2025

  • Hans India

Phase-2 of teacher training begins across State

Hyderabad: For the second phase of teacher training that commenced on Tuesday, Telangana Education Department Secretary Dr Yogita Rana convened a virtual meeting to address key aspects of the programme. Around 89,378 teachers across the State participated in the meeting. The first phase training was held from May 13 to 17. Around 17,771 teachers attended the training and the second phase training will be concluded on May 24. During the meeting, Dr Yogita Rana stated that all teachers should make the best use of this five-day training programme to improve students' learning outcomes. Every teacher must upgrade their teaching methodologies to suit the times so that public schools can gain the trust and confidence of the community. The State government is planning to collect details from teachers who are implementing several best practices and soon organise a State level conclave with them. Based on this, a special action plan will be prepared to implement these best practices in all schools across the State and in order to enhance foundational learning standards at the primary level, special focus must be given to the Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) programme. Instructions have been given to DEOs and training centre in-charges to ensure that all teachers receive necessary facilities and support so that they do not face any inconvenience during the training.

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