
Asian Development Bank advises Pakistan to adopt Modi’s policy
The Asian Development Bank has asked Pakistan to adopt the same policy adopted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to uplift the society educationally.
According to the report of Moqar Qaumi newspaper, this policy has been named Understanding of Lifelong Learning for All in Society (ULLAS), said in a statement issued from the headquarters of the Asian Development Bank in Manila, the capital of the Philippines. Pakistan needs to ensure the improvement of education sector.
The quality of education and training in Pakistani society seems to be very uncertain, the education system is suffering from serious defects. The Asian Development Bank has given this advice in response to the request for financial assistance to Pakistan.
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This request is made to address the shortcomings of the education system and help students who are deprived of education at the school level. The Asian Development Bank has suggested that the Government of Pakistan should adopt a multi-stakeholder consultation system and in this regard Try to adopt standard policies adopted worldwide.
In India, a good effort has been made to raise the standard of education at the general level through the ongoing projects with the support of the central government. Federal Secretary Education Mohiuddin Wani, who as the Chief Secretary, has ensured extraordinary changes in education in Gilgit-Baltistan. Credit is given for making, assistance has been requested from the Asian Development Bank to develop a mechanism for central education scheme.
In Pakistan under the current constitution, education is a provincial matter, since the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, there has been a demand across the country that a uniform curriculum should be adopted across the country. In India, a scheme called ULLAS has been approved by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. has given for five years under which every effort will be made to ensure education for all.
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This program is primarily not only to make people literate but also to keep them in tune with the rapidly changing environment of the 21st century.
President of the Asian Development Bank Masitsugu Isakawa is going to visit Pakistan. He will meet stakeholders in Pakistan. A report of the Planning Commission has stated that the public education system in all 134 districts of the country, except Islamabad, is suffering from severe defects.
The report expressed concern that people in Pakistan are entering the job market with either little or no education.