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Bridging Traditions and Modernity: Government Efforts to Integrate Madrasa Education with Mainstream Learning in India

Bridging Traditions and Modernity: Government Efforts to Integrate Madrasa Education with Mainstream Learning in India

&NewLine;<p>India&&num;8217&semi;s education system is a diverse landscape shaped by history&comma; culture&comma; and faith&period; Among its many streams&comma; the madrasa education system holds a special place&comma; especially for sections of the Muslim community&period; Traditionally focused on religious studies such as Quran&comma; Hadith&comma; and Islamic jurisprudence&comma; madrasas have played a crucial role in preserving cultural and spiritual identity&period; However&comma; in a rapidly changing world driven by science&comma; technology&comma; and global competition&comma; the need to integrate modern education with traditional learning has become increasingly important&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Recognizing this gap&comma; both the Government of India and various state governments have introduced several schemes over the years to modernize madrasa education&period; These initiatives aim not to replace religious teachings&comma; but to complement them with subjects like science&comma; mathematics&comma; languages&comma; and computer education&comma; thereby opening doors to higher education and employment opportunities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>One of the earliest structured efforts was the Madrasa Modernisation Programme&comma; introduced in 1993&period; Its primary goal was to introduce modern subjects such as mathematics and science into madrasa curricula&period; Teachers were appointed to teach these subjects&comma; and honorariums were provided to support their engagement&period; This initiative marked a significant shift in policy thinking&comma; acknowledging that religious education alone may not be sufficient for students to compete in the broader socio-economic landscape&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>A major milestone came with the launch of the Scheme for Providing Quality Education in Madrasas &lpar;SPQEM&rpar; during the 2009-10 period under the Ministry of Human Resource Development&period; This scheme became one of the most important pillars of madrasa modernization in India&period; Financial assistance was provided to madrasas that agreed to introduce modern subjects as well as support was given for hiring qualified teachers for these subjects&period; Teaching-learning materials&comma; science kits&comma; and computer labs were funded&period; The core idea was simple yet powerful&comma; allowing students to pursue religious education while also gaining academic proficiency equivalent to formal schooling &lpar;Classes I-XII&rpar;&period; For many families&comma; this meant their children no longer had to choose between faith and future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Running parallel to SPQEM was the Infrastructure Development in Minority Institutions &lpar;IDI&rpar; scheme&comma; launched around 2008-09&period; While SPQEM focused on curriculum and teaching&comma; IDMI addressed the physical conditions of institutions&period; Funds were allocated for building classrooms&comma; laboratories&comma; and libraries&period; Facilities like drinking water&comma; sanitation&comma; and electricity were improved&period; Modern infrastructure helped create a better learning environment&period; Together&comma; SPQEM and IDMI formed part of a broader umbrella scheme known as Scheme for Providing Education to Madrasas&sol;Minorities &lpar;SPEMM&rpar;&comma; which aimed at holistic development of minority educational institutions&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>While central schemes laid the foundation&comma; state governments played a key role in implementation and innovation&period; In 2015&comma; Uttarakhand Government introduced its own Madrasa Modernization Scheme&comma; focusing largely on infrastructure and basic facilities&comma; working on key benefits including provision of furniture&comma; computers&comma; and libraries&comma; construction of classrooms and sanitation facilities and improved access to clean drinking water and electricity&period; This scheme recognized that without proper infrastructure&comma; even the best curriculum reforms cannot succeed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Maharashtra Government implemented the Dr Zakir Husain Madrasa Modernisation Scheme in October 2013&comma; which encouraged madrasas to teach subjects like science&comma; mathematics&comma; English&comma; and regional languages alongside religious studies&period; This initiative also included scholarships and monitoring mechanisms to ensure quality education delivery&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Uttar Pradesh&comma; home to one of the largest madrasa networks in India&comma; has taken steps to align madrasa education with mainstream boards&period; In recent years&comma; efforts have been made to introduce standardized curriculum and improve employability outcomes for students&period; Additionally&comma; teachers appointed under modernization schemes were paid honorariums for teaching modern subjects&comma; highlighting the government&&num;8217&semi;s commitment to integration&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>A significant recent development is the Uttarakhand Minority Education Bill &lpar;2025&rpar;&comma; which aims to integrate madrasas directly into the state&&num;8217&semi;s formal education system&period; Under this reform&comma; Madrasas are to be affiliated with the state education board&comma; curriculum alignment with the National Education Policy &lpar;2020&rpar; is ensured and students gain access to standardized education along with broader opportunities&period; This marks a shift from parallel systems to a more unified educational framework&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>While policies and schemes are important&comma; their real success lies in how they affects lives&period; For many students in madrasas&comma; these initiatives have been transformative&period; A child who once studied only religious texts can now&semi; learn computer skills&comma; understand scientific concepts&comma; compete in board examinations and aspire for careers in engineering&comma; medicine&comma; or civil services&period; Parents&comma; especially from economically weaker backgrounds&comma; find reassurance in knowing that their children can stay rooted in their faith while also building a secure future&period; Teachers&comma; too&comma; benefited from training and financial support&comma; enabling them to deliver a more balanced education&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Despite all these efforts&comma; challenges such as irregular funding&comma; delays in honorariums have affected teacher motivation in some cases&comma; implementation of these schemes varies widely across states&comma; resistance from some institutions due to fear of losing traditional identity and lack of trained teachers for modern subjects in rural areas are remain in front of us&period; These issues highlight the need for consistent policy support&comma; better monitoring&comma; and community engagement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The integration of madrasa education with modern learning is a social transformation more than an educational reform&period; It promotes inclusivity&comma; reduces educational inequality&comma; and empowers a large section of society&period; Going forward to accomplish it&comma; our focus should be on&semi; strengthening teacher training programs&comma; ensuring timely funding&comma; proper accountability&comma; encouraging digital learning&comma; skill development and building trust within communities through dialogue etc&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>India&&num;8217&semi;s journey towards bridging the gap between traditional madrasa education and modern scientific learning reflects a thoughtful balance between heritage and progress&period; Schemes like SPQEM&comma; IDMI and various state-level initiatives demonstrate that meaningful change is possible when policy meets purpose&period; At its heart&comma; this effort is about giving every child&comma; regardless of background&comma; the opportunity to learn&comma; grow&comma; and succeed&period; It is about ensuring that education becomes a bridge&comma; not a barrier&comma; between tradition and modernity&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>-Insha Warsi<br>Francophone and Journalism Studies&comma;<br>Jamia Millia Islamia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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