23 May CBSE Three – Language Rule: NEP 2020 and Language Policy
This article covers “Daily Current Affairs”
SYLLABUS MAPPING : GS Paper 1 , 2 : Government policies and interventions , Society
FOR PRELIMS : NEP 2020, NCF-SE 2023, Three-Language Formula, Article 29 & 30, Article 32
FOR MAINS : The doctrine of legitimate expectation holds that a public authority must honour reasonable expectations created by its prior representations. Analyse how CBSE’s reversal of its April 2026 circular raises questions of administrative law and the role of judicial review in education policy. What are the limits of the State’s power to implement education policy changes without adequate transition timelines?
The Kothari Commission (1964–66) recommended the Three-Language Formula (TLF): (1) Mother tongue / regional language, (2) Hindi (in non-Hindi states) / another Indian language (in Hindi-speaking states), (3) English or a modern European language. This became part of the National Policy on Education, 1968 — the first formal codification of language in school education.
The National Policy on Education 1986 (revised 1992 under Rajiv Gandhi) reaffirmed the Three-Language Formula but acknowledged uneven implementation — especially in Hindi-speaking states where the “third language” was often another Hindi dialect rather than a genuinely different Indian language.
The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act, 2009 guaranteed free education for children aged 6–14 years. It established quality norms for schools but did not prescribe a specific language policy — leaving curriculum design to NCERT and boards like CBSE.
National Education Policy 2020 — India’s first education policy in 34 years — strongly endorsed the Three-Language Formula, emphasising that students should learn at least two Indian languages. Critically, NEP 2020 stated no language would be imposed on any state and children’s mother tongue / home language should be the medium of instruction up to Grade 5 where possible.
The National Curriculum Framework for School Education 2023 — developed by NCERT under the chairmanship of K. Kasturirangan — operationalised NEP 2020 for school curricula. Introduced the R1, R2, R3 language framework and recommended three languages be studied across school stages, with at least two being Indian languages.
CBSE clarified that the R3 (third language) requirement would NOT apply to Class 9 students until 2029–30, giving parents and students a multi-year runway to adjust. Schools and students planned their 2026–27 academic year based on this assurance.
CBSE reversed course — mandating three languages (R1, R2, R3) for Class 9 from July 1, 2026, with at least two being native Indian languages. Schools “could offer any language”, but at least two must be Indian. Foreign languages permissible only as R3 or as an optional fourth language.
Writ Petition (Yashica Bhandari Jain & Ors. v Union of India & Ors.) filed in SC under Article 32. Senior Advocate Mukul Rohatgi mentions before CJI Surya Kant’s Bench; matter to be listed next week. Challenge focuses on sudden implementation, academic burden, and reversal of April 9 assurance.
- The Kothari Commission (1964–66) first proposed the Three-Language Formula to promote national integration while respecting linguistic diversity
- Constitutional backing: Article 343 (Hindi as official language), Article 345–347 (state languages), Article 350A (mother tongue instruction at primary level), and 8th Schedule (22 recognised Indian languages)
- Article 29 & 30: Protect linguistic and cultural minorities’ right to conserve their language and establish educational institutions
- The Official Languages Act, 1963 recognised Hindi and English as official languages of the Union — forming the base for R1/R2 in most CBSE schools
- Hindi-speaking states (UP, Bihar, MP) often taught Sanskrit or another Hindi dialect as the “third language” — defeating the spirit of the formula which intended a genuinely different language
- Tamil Nadu has historically rejected the Three-Language Formula, insisting on a two-language policy (Tamil + English), refusing to teach Hindi — a decades-long political flashpoint
- The anti-Hindi agitations (1937, 1965) in Tamil Nadu demonstrated that language imposition triggers strong political and identity-based resistance
- NEP 2020 tried to resolve this by explicitly stating: “No language will be imposed” — yet the mandatory Indian language requirement in CBSE’s circular is seen by critics as indirect imposition
Class 9 students (July 2026) have no prior exposure to a third language. With Class 10 Board exams in 2027, there is no meaningful time for language acquisition — violating pedagogical principles of gradual language learning.
Class 9–10 is already high-pressure. Adding a third language alongside Science, Mathematics, Social Studies and existing language subjects increases cognitive load — particularly for students with learning difficulties.
CBSE’s April 9, 2026 circular had explicitly deferred R3 to 2029–30 for Class 9. Schools and families made academic plans accordingly. The May 15 reversal constitutes a breach of legitimate expectation — a doctrine recognised in Indian administrative law.
Students who had chosen French, German, Spanish, or Japanese as their language subject are now effectively penalised — foreign languages are pushed to a third or fourth slot only after two Indian languages are completed.
Most CBSE schools do not have trained teachers for regional Indian languages beyond Hindi. Requiring Tamil schools to offer a third Indian language or vice versa creates infrastructure gaps schools cannot bridge in weeks.
Mandating at least two Indian languages could be seen as in tension with Article 29 (right of minorities to conserve their language) and NEP 2020’s own assurance against language imposition.
| Body | Nature | Key Function |
|---|---|---|
| CBSE (Central Board of Secondary Education) | Autonomous body under MoE | Conducts Board exams (Class 10 & 12) for ~28,000 affiliated schools; prescribes curriculum and scheme of studies; issues circulars like Acad-33/2026 |
| NCERT (National Council of Educational Research and Training) | Statutory body under MoE | Develops curriculum frameworks (NCF), textbooks, and teaching guidelines; the NCF-SE 2023 forms the basis of CBSE’s language policy change |
| MoE (Ministry of Education) | Union Ministry | Policy apex — formulates NEP 2020; oversees CBSE, NCERT, UGC, AICTE; Education is on the Concurrent List (Entry 25), allowing both Centre and States to legislate |
| UGC (University Grants Commission) | Statutory body | Regulates higher education; not directly involved in school education but sets the academic framework students enter post-Class 12 |
| State Boards (e.g., TNSB, GSEB, MSBSHSE) | State statutory bodies | Conduct state-level Board exams; may have different language policies — Tamil Nadu’s two-language policy has persisted despite central TLF recommendations |
| CABE (Central Advisory Board of Education) | Advisory body | Highest advisory body on education — advises Centre and States; NEP 2020 was presented to CABE before finalisation. Chaired by the Union Education Minister. |
| NEP 2020 Provision | Detail & Significance |
|---|---|
| Three-Language Formula | Endorses learning of at least three languages, of which at least two must be native to India. Reaffirms Kothari Commission’s original vision but explicitly states “no language will be imposed on any State” — creating a tension with CBSE’s mandatory circular. |
| Mother Tongue as Medium | Recommends mother tongue / home language as medium of instruction up to at least Grade 5, preferably Grade 8. Aims to reduce early cognitive burden of learning in a non-native language — aligned with UNESCO and UNICEF recommendations on multilingual education. |
| Classical Languages | NEP 2020 promotes availability of Sanskrit and other classical languages (Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia) as R3 options — seeking to revive classical heritage while meeting the Indian language requirement. |
| Flexibility in Language Choice | NEP states that languages need not be taught only as subjects — integration of language across disciplines (content and language integrated learning) is encouraged. Also allows two-way exchange: Hindi-speakers learn a southern language; Tamil-speakers may learn Hindi — neither imposed. |
| NCF-SE 2023 Operationalisation | K. Kasturirangan Committee developed NCF-SE 2023 to translate NEP goals into curriculum design. Introduced the R1–R2–R3 framework for language subjects across school stages (Foundational, Preparatory, Middle, Secondary) — currently the direct basis for CBSE’s contested circular. |
| No Board Exam for R3 (Class 10) | CBSE clarified that R3 performance will be reflected in CBSE certificate internally, but no separate board examination exists for Class 10. This is a mitigating factor cited by the government — though petitioners argue even internal assessment is a burden without adequate preparation time. |
- Education is on the Concurrent List (Entry 25, Seventh Schedule) — both Parliament and State Legislatures can legislate, but in case of conflict, Central law prevails (Article 254)
- CBSE is a central board — its writ runs over ~28,000 affiliated schools across India including in states with divergent language policies (e.g. Tamil Nadu)
- Article 350A directs every State to endeavour to provide instruction in mother tongue at primary stage — suggesting early education in vernacular is a constitutional aspiration
- State boards (e.g. TNSB) are free to set their own language policies — Tamil Nadu’s two-language policy remains valid for its state board schools
- Tamil Nadu has consistently rejected the Three-Language Formula since the 1937 anti-Hindi agitation under Periyar and the Congress government
- The state follows a two-language policy: Tamil (compulsory) + English; Hindi taught only optionally
- CBSE schools in Tamil Nadu will face direct conflict — students studying only Tamil and English who must now add a third Indian language from Class 9
- The petitioners include parents from Chennai — making this a live Centre-State conflict embedded in the Supreme Court petition
- This echoes the 1965 anti-Hindi agitation — any perception of language imposition triggers strong political reactions in the state
- Multilingualism is a cognitive advantage — research consistently shows bilingual/multilingual children perform better in executive function, problem-solving, and memory tasks
- Aligning with NEP 2020 is a constitutional and pedagogical imperative — India’s language diversity is an asset; NEP’s vision of three languages promotes national integration
- No board exam for R3 in Class 10 substantially reduces pressure — internal assessment allows schools flexibility in depth and mode of language instruction
- India has 22 Scheduled languages and 1,600+ mother tongues — promoting multilingualism preserves endangered linguistic heritage
- Sudden reversal of April 9, 2026 assurance violates the doctrine of legitimate expectation — a well-established principle in administrative law where public bodies must honour stated commitments
- Pedagogically, effective language learning requires years of exposure — introducing a language at Grade 9 with only one year before Board exams contradicts language acquisition science
- The infrastructure gap is severe — most CBSE schools lack teachers proficient in regional Indian languages beyond Hindi, making implementation hollow
- Effectively penalises foreign language learners (French, German, Japanese) who have studied their chosen language for years and built career pathways around it
- Phased, consultative rollout: The original April 2026 timeline of 2029–30 for Class 9 was sound — a phased approach starting from Class 6 (as originally planned) allows genuine language learning rather than checkbox compliance. The Supreme Court should be presented with a concrete phased roadmap.
- Teacher capacity first: CBSE and MoE must audit teacher availability for regional language instruction across affiliated schools. No mandate should precede teacher training — recruit and train regional language teachers under a dedicated PM SHRI Schools framework before enforcement.
- Respect NEP’s no-imposition clause: The spirit of NEP 2020’s explicit assurance against language imposition must be operationalised. States and schools should have flexibility in which Indian language is chosen as R3 — including Sanskrit — without creating a de facto Hindi-imposition pathway.
- Foreign language protection: Students with established foreign language proficiency (DELF, Goethe-Zertifikat, JLPT-certified students) should be exempted from R3 Indian language requirement or allowed to satisfy it through equivalence testing, protecting years of prior learning investment.
- CABE-led consensus: The Central Advisory Board of Education (CABE) — the apex education advisory body — should convene a special session with state education ministers (especially Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtra) to build genuine consensus on language policy before any central mandate is enforced on state-based CBSE schools.
- Technology-aided learning: Where teachers are unavailable, AI-powered language learning platforms (like DIKSHA, integrated with regional language modules) can bridge the gap — making language learning engaging rather than a burden, especially for less-common Indian languages.
“India’s Three-Language Formula has historically been a vision deferred rather than a policy implemented.” In the context of CBSE’s controversial three-language mandate for Class 9 (2026), critically examine the constitutional, pedagogical, and Centre-State dimensions of language policy in India’s school education system. What reforms can make multilingual education both aspirational and practical? (15 M)
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