"We will have a committee headed by an eminent educationist in around ten days....We are discussing some names but we also have to ask them whether they are ready because they will also have to work for three to four months," HRD minister Prakash Javadekar told PTI in an interview.
Talking about the process of formulating the NEP, Javadekar said the ministry has already held comprehensive discussions with all stakeholders including the states, educational institutes, parliamentarians and experts, and the recommendations of TSR Subramanian committee will also be considered as an "input".
The Minister also maintained that Subramanian Committee's mandate was to work on evolution of a national education policy, indicating that the Committee was not mandated to draft the final policy.
He said 90-100 suggestions were given by his panel out of which whatever was relevant should have been implemented, whatever needed more discussion should have been debated and whatever was not relevant should have been rejected. "I don't know how else a policy is couched," he added.
The T S R Subramanian committee, set up by former HRD minister Smriti Irani, was entrusted with preparing a new draft education policy.
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