The Architect and The Gardener: The National Council for Teacher Education in India and its Quest to Humanise the Modern Classroom
Main Article Content
Abstract
This research paper examines the role of the National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) in shaping India’s contemporary education landscape. Moving beyond a purely regulatory analysis, it frames the NCTE’s journey as a profound, albeit complex, endeavour to humanise the educational experience. Established to ensure standards and streamline teacher preparation, the NCTE’s evolution reflects a shifting paradigm—from a mechanistic, input-focused model to one increasingly conscious of the need for teachers who are not merely instructors but facilitators, counsellors, and empathetic guides. The paper argues that the NCTE’s policies, particularly post the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, have significant downstream effects on the human elements of education: teacher identity, student-teacher relationships, pedagogical creativity, and the socio-emotional climate of classrooms. Through an analysis of policy documents, curricular frameworks, and critical challenges, this study posits that while the NCTE has laid essential structural foundations for professionalising teaching, its ultimate success hinges on its ability to foster an ecosystem where teacher education cultivates not just competence, but also compassion, critical consciousness, and a deep respect for the human potential within every learner.
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
References
• Government of India. (1993). The National Council for Teacher Education Act, 1993.
• Government of India. (2020). National Education Policy 2020.
• National Council for Teacher Education. (2014). Norms and Standards for Various Teacher Education Programmes.
• National Council of Educational Research and Training. (2005). National Curriculum Framework 2005.
• Kumar, K. (2005). Political Agenda of Education: A Study of Colonialist and Nationalist Ideas. Sage Publications.
• Batra, P. (2005). “Teacher Empowerment and the Reform of Teacher Education.” Economic and Political Weekly.