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Ashish Dhawan
Articles by Ashish Dhawan

Breaking India’s Sisyphean cycle

ASER 2024 survey shows positive results. NIPUN Bharat has created momentum in education, this needs to be sustained

NEW DELHI, INDIA - January 13: Children attend a class under a Delhi Metro bridge at the Free School Under the Bridge, a school that provides free-to-cost classes to children from low income areas during the cold weather at near Akshardham Temple, in New Delhi India onJanuary 13, 2025. (HT Photo) (Hindustan Times)
Published on Jan 30, 2025 08:03 PM IST

For America, why India is not China

As Trump starts his second term, experts advise excluding India from tariffs, citing strong, mutually beneficial trade ties unlike those with China.

FILE PHOTO: A worker arranges sugar bags in a net to load them onto a cargo ship at the Deendayal Port in Kandla, in the western state of Gujarat, India, September 25, 2024. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo (REUTERS)
Updated on Jan 22, 2025 08:27 AM IST

New cadre of unicorns to build developed India

Governments are partnering with non-profits for population-level impact to address pressing development challenges. These system-support organisations drive change and ensure long-term impact at the grassroots

Jaipur, India-July 18: Children have Mid-day meal at a government school, in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India on Thursday, July 18, 2013. (photo by - Himanshu Vyas/Hindustan Times) (Hindustan Times)
Published on Jul 10, 2024 09:22 PM IST

India must get more active. Here is a plan

If India wants to reap its demographic dividend and boost its economic growth by India@100, we need to ensure that every individual is physically active by 2047

Significant work has been done by the government to widen the opportunity for sport and physical activity interventions and take it from the elite to the grassroots. Fit India has also been an enabling movement, which can be further built upon (Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Updated on May 20, 2023 08:25 PM IST

A plan for states to propel the economy

Five Indian states account for around 40% of GDP. Other states can emulate their high-performance trajectory by announcing aspirational targets, and focusing on import, industrialisation, pro-business reforms and urbanisation

India’s structural transformation has been slow, so, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka must reduce the labour force in agriculture and increase the share of services and industry (Shutterstock)
Updated on Sep 07, 2022 07:39 PM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

The future of school education lies in learning beyond classrooms

Drawing from what we’ve learnt in the past couple of years — and given that repeated school closures are here to stay — these shifts (and their acceptance) could lead to a learning revolution in 2022 and beyond: Digital innovation; learning beyond schools; and multi-sector collaborations

In India, a decentralised model of education might better reflect local education needs and improve access. (HTPHOTO)
Updated on Jan 18, 2022 11:41 AM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

A step towards solving India’s learning crisis

Many of us assume that higher classes and board examinations are the only critical parts of a child’s education journey. However, this assumption couldn’t be further from the truth. It is the early school years, between the ages 3-8 years, which are the most important

Representational image. (HT Archive)
Updated on Aug 03, 2021 06:45 PM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

NEP can help make India a knowledge-based economy | Opinion

Its emphasis on foundational learning, a new assessment model, tech, and role of private schools is important

Successful implementation of the Foundational Literacy and Numeracy mission has the potential to make India an economic powerhouse(Shutterstock)
Updated on Aug 03, 2020 10:14 PM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

To tackle the learning crisis, put the states to the wheel

States need to be empowered to create three-to-four year plans (as opposed to the current annual planning cycle) that can meet the unique needs of their children.

From a political point of view, quality reforms in education have been a hard sell, especially since there is less certainty about what works, while the results are even harder to measure.(HT Photo)
Published on Apr 24, 2019 08:46 AM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

Use data-based solutions to improve learning levels

Robust data can help states identify the gaps that need to be addressed and customise the solutions accordingly.

International research and pedagogical experts have pointed out that to ensure that every child is able to read with meaning by the age of eight is one of the most critical education challenges of our times.(Hindustan Times)
Published on Feb 09, 2019 03:24 PM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

India must invest in quality education to become an economic superpower

India can learn from our neighbours in East Asia who have invested in social capital and moved up the economic ladder

Economic progress has been directly correlated with investments in delivering quality education.(Ravi Choudhary/HT)
Published on Sep 08, 2016 09:19 AM IST
ByAshish Dhawan and Shaveta Sharma-Kukreja

Technology the way forward for Indian education

India’s education system is in a crisis. And it’s a crisis that we believe technology can play a critical role in solving.

There is tremendous potential for technology to improve the quality of education and student learning levels.(Repesentative image)
Updated on Dec 02, 2015 02:58 AM IST
BySal Khan and Ashish Dhawan

We have to be on a constant learning curve

The government should reorient its role from education provider to that of a regulator for improving the quality of schools.

Updated on Aug 24, 2014 10:20 PM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

India is wasting its demographic dividend

We are a nation of 350 million children aged 4 to 17, many of whom although enrolled in school will never get past Class 8. Investing in our children’s future requires adequate preparation at every stage of their educational journey. Ashish Dhawan writes.

HT Image
Updated on Nov 25, 2013 12:53 AM IST
ByAshish Dhawan

India must ensure children are learning, too

Now that the global dialogue is moving to the creation of a post-2015 vision, we must ensure that in education we emphasise the quality of learning from early childhood through secondary education, writes Ashish Dhawan.

HT Image
Updated on Oct 24, 2013 12:46 AM IST
ByAshish Dhawan
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