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New cultural policy makes Marathi mandatory for 4 years in all schools

Updated on: Sep 24, 2024 08:44 AM IST

Maharashtra's new policy mandates four years of Marathi in schools, official Marathi websites, and promotes arts, conservation, and simpler communications

MUMBAI: The Mahayuti government on Monday approved the new cultural policy for Maharashtra which, among other things, has made it mandatory for Marathi to be taught in all schools for a minimum of four years. Websites in the Marathi language have also been made mandatory for government, semi-government and private institutes and organisations registered in Maharashtra.

The education department first issued an order to make Marathi compulsory in all schools, irrespective of the board, in 2020. (Praful Gangurde/HT Photo) (HT PHOTO)

The cultural affairs department under BJP minister Sudhir Mungantiwar submitted the new cultural policy to the cabinet on Monday. The policy focuses on 10 sectors, namely craftsmanship, language and literature, visual arts, forts and archaeology, folk arts, music, theatre, dance, films and spiritual culture, and has made several recommendations regarding these.

The education department first issued an order to make Marathi compulsory in all schools, irrespective of the board, in 2020. However, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, schools were allowed to treat the language as a graded subject, with concessions given to students in the eighth, ninth, and tenth grades for three years from 2022 to 2025. On September 13 this year, the government announced that Marathi would be a compulsory core subject in all schools starting from the academic year 2025-26. This decision marks the end of concessions previously given due to the pandemic, and the new cultural policy proposal ratifies this.

The policy proposes that the state government restart all the play theatres that have shut down, and allow the use of MLA funds for theatre-related issues. It also suggests a classical dance period in schools affiliated to all education boards, the revival of single-screen film theatres, inclusion of literature written by saints in school and college syllabi, documentaries on the state’s religious culture and a music university for the state.

The policy also says that schools should teach drawing as a mandatory subject till Class 8. If students choose to continue after that, they should get additional marks in their board exams on the lines of the marks given to students who do well in sports.

 
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