📢 Major Curriculum Overhaul

The Central Board of Secondary Education has announced a significant three‑language policy as part of its new curriculum for the 2026‑27 academic session, aligning with the National education Policy 2020 and the National Curriculum Framework for school Education. Under this reform, students will study three languages (R1, R2 and R3) instead of the current two, with the third language becoming compulsory up to Class 10 by 2031.

📚 What the Policy Says

🧠 New Three‑Language Framework

¡ R1 (First Language): The primary language of study.

¡ R2 (Second Language): A different language from R1.

¡ R3 (Third Language): Must be different from both R1 and R2.
At least two of the three languages must be Indian languages.

📖 Compulsory from Class 6

· The third language (R3) will be introduced as a mandatory subject from Class 6 starting the 2026‑27 academic session.

¡ students will continue learning this subject each year as part of their curriculum.

📅 Phased Rollout Till 2031

· The policy will be implemented in phases — beginning in Class 6 in 2026‑27 and gradually extended to the senior secondary stage.

¡ students in the Class 10 board exams of 2031 will be the first cohort required to appear for exams in all three languages under this system.

📘 Why This Change?

According to CBSE, the new policy aims to:
✔ Promote multilingual proficiency and communication skills.
✔ Strengthen students’ cognitive abilities and cultural understanding.
✔ Encourage familiarity with both national and regional languages, supporting diversity.
✔ Better align with the NEP 2020’s emphasis on language learning till Class 10.

🧩 Impact on students & Schools

📌 What students Must Do

¡ students will study and be assessed in three languages.

¡ All three languages must be passed by the time students reach Classes 9 and 10 to remain eligible for board examinations.

🏫 School Preparations

¡ Schools will offer language options and prepare students for all three levels.

¡ Textbooks and syllabi are being updated to fit the new language structure, and teachers will be trained accordingly.

🧠 Challenges and Considerations

While the policy is designed to expand language skills, it may also require:

¡ Careful planning for additional subject time in already busy school schedules.

¡ Training more language teachers to support diverse language options.

¡ Ensuring students adapt smoothly to learning a new language from Class 6 onwards.

📊 What This Means for the Future

This shift marks one of the most significant curriculum changes in CBSE’s recent history, with a long‑term goal of making students more multilingual and globally competitive, while strengthening India’s rich linguistic heritage.

📌 Quick Recap

Policy: New three‑language requirement
Start: Academic session 2026‑27 (Class 6)
Goal: Mandatory three languages up to Class 10 by 2031
Purpose: Enhance multilingual proficiency, align with NEP 2020

 

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