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Inviting Inputs on Draft Guidelines for Recognition of the Awarding Bodies

Inviting Inputs on Draft Guidelines for Recognition of the Awarding Bodies
Start Date :
Sep 09, 2020
Last Date :
Sep 30, 2020
23:45 PM IST (GMT +5.30 Hrs)
Submission Closed

The National Council for Vocational Education and Training (NCVET) was notified as an overarching skills regulator on 5th December 2018 vide notification No. SD-17/113/2017-E&PW ...

The National Council for Vocational Education and Training (NCVET) was notified as an overarching skills regulator on 5th December 2018 vide notification No. SD-17/113/2017-E&PW

The NCVET will regulate the functioning of entities engaged in vocational education and training, both long & short-term, and establish minimum standards for the functioning of such entities.

Pursuing its mandate, NCVET has developed a draft of the ‘Guidelines for Recognition of the Awarding Bodies’. These guidelines are an attempt to standardize operations and outcomes of the Awarding Bodies (ABs) in the skills ecosystem. This will lead to improvement in quality and market relevance of skill development programs lending credibility to vocational education and training, encouraging greater private investment and employer participation in the skills space.
Guidelines define scope, criteria, tenure and detailed process of recognition as an AB. A robust mechanism of monitoring and evaluation based on well-defined parameters forms integral part of the guidelines.
The AB guidelines are structured as eligibility criteria and continuance criteria. The eligibility criteria ensures that ABs demonstrate required sustainable capacity earmarking the basic minimal organizational requirements and necessities. The continuation criteria ensures continuity of an awarding body based on its performance against the monitoring and evaluation parameters.

Comments are invited from public on the proposed guidelines.

Click here to read ‘Guidelines for Recognition of the Awarding Bodies’

Last date of submission is 30th September 2020

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Showing 405 Submission(s)
LAXMI PRASAD BODA
LAXMI PRASAD BODA 5 years 9 months ago
Already many answers are on record. A civilian award doesn’t necessarily mean that a person from Armed Forces can’t get it. Anyone who has made a seminal change is entitled to be considered.
LAXMI PRASAD BODA
LAXMI PRASAD BODA 5 years 9 months ago
Every citizen of the Republic of India has the right to suggest names for these awards and the duty, too. This way, it reduces chances of corruption (or appearance of so) and includes citizens of India into deciding the persons who should get the highest civilian honors. It reduces chances of leaving behind the persons eligible of honors.
Riyal Tank
Riyal Tank 5 years 9 months ago
But the people of the village believe that even if there is no symptom of corona, the doctor calls it corona and takes it to the hospital.And Korona kept him in hospital for 15 days and close it.we are try to change the mindset and people thinking about doctor and hospital
anil kumar sharma
anil kumar sharma 5 years 9 months ago
The awarding bodies when award certificates on the basis of acquiring of skills and competencies must ascertain whether the skills attained or not.So learning outputs must be evaluated time to time.The institutions 's infrstructures must be tri-checked annually. There should be drive to strengthen the equipments and infrastructure.The working hours/ periods must be reframed .At least 32 periods in a week must be included for teaching staff.The result liability should be made staff responsible
Manav Joshi
Manav Joshi 5 years 9 months ago
To increase literacy in the country, there should be counseling of many children. By this more and more children will go to school.