CM Sai Pushes Mother-Tongue Education Under NEP 2020
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai on Wednesday, 8 July 2026, reaffirmed his government's commitment to delivering education in mother tongues and local dialects across the state, citing the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 as the policy vehicle driving the initiative.
Context
In his post, CM Sai declared: 'मातृभाषा में शिक्षा, हर बच्चे का अधिकार' ('Education in the mother tongue — every child's right'), framing access to local-language schooling as a fundamental entitlement rather than a government favour. He stated that through effective implementation of the NEP, the state is ensuring that every child in Chhattisgarh receives education in their mother tongue and local dialects. He specifically named Bastar and Sarguja divisions as regions where lakhs of children are already learning in local languages.
Policy Backdrop
The National Education Policy 2020, approved by the Union Cabinet in July 2020, recommends the mother tongue or local language as the medium of instruction up to at least Grade 5. The policy marks a significant departure from the historically English- or Hindi-dominant classroom, aiming to improve foundational learning by anchoring early education in a child's first language.
Chhattisgarh is home to a substantial tribal population, and its two largest tribal belts — Bastar division in the south and Sarguja division in the north — are home to communities that speak languages such as Gondi and Halbi alongside regional dialects. For these communities, the gap between home language and classroom language has historically been a key driver of early school dropout and poor foundational literacy.
Stakeholders and Impact
Tribal children and indigenous language communities stand as the primary beneficiaries of this initiative. CM Sai noted that the effort is making the learning process 'simpler and more natural' for children while simultaneously carrying the state's 'rich linguistic heritage, culture and identity' to the next generation.
Beyond the classroom, the policy carries cultural preservation stakes: many of Chhattisgarh's local dialects lack robust written traditions, and integrating them into formal schooling creates both documentation pressure and institutional support for their survival. Teacher recruitment and training in these local dialects remain a logistical challenge that will shape how far the initiative can reach across the state's remaining divisions.
What's Next
The government's stated emphasis on 'effective implementation' signals that the focus is shifting from policy adoption to measurable delivery. Progress reports on NEP rollout in divisions beyond Bastar and Sarguja, alongside any state-level announcements on teacher training pipelines for local-dialect instruction, will be the next indicators of how deeply the initiative is taking root. Chhattisgarh's experience is being watched as a template for other tribal-majority states navigating the same multilingual education challenge under the NEP framework.