Stop Turning Language into a Battlefield: Why Making Multiple Languages a Board-Exam Burden Is a Policy Mistake
By Haru Mehra — Education Entrepreneur & Global Mobility Specialist In recent weeks, debates around language requirements under India’s evolving National Education Policy (NEP) implementation have intensified across social media, parent forums, and academic circles. Many parents are anxious. Teachers are divided. Students are confused. Beneath the emotional reactions lies a very real concern: Are we unintentionally increasing academic pressure and reducing mobility for Indian families in the name of cultural preservation? Having lived and worked across India and Europe for more than a decade — collaborating with schools in France, Finland, Spain, the Middle East, and Asia — I have observed how different education systems handle language learning. I have also worked closely with Indian families navigating school transitions, relocations, and high-stakes examinations. From that vantage point, one conclusion becomes clear: Promoting multilingualism is valuable.Making multiple languages compulsory at board-exam level is not. Encouragement builds curiosity. Compulsion builds resistance. What Parents Are Actually Saying: A Ground Reality Public reactions to language mandates are not simply ideological disagreements. They reflect practical realities of Indian life: These concerns are not anti-culture sentiments. They are concerns about feasibility, fairness, and student well-being. Culture vs Education: A Policy Confusion One major conceptual mistake in the debate is the assumption that academic language learning automatically creates cultural rootedness. Research suggests otherwise. Cultural identity develops primarily through: A UNESCO report on multilingual education emphasizes that language learning should support cognitive and social development, not become a barrier to educational access (UNESCO, Education in a Multilingual World, 2003). Students can remain culturally connected without academic mastery of multiple scripts. Millions of Indian diaspora families worldwide demonstrate this reality. Board Exams in India: A High-Stakes Environment Class 10 board exams are not ordinary assessments. They influence: Research in educational psychology shows that high-stakes testing environments increase anxiety and reduce intrinsic motivation among adolescents (Putwain & Daly, Educational Psychology Review, 2014). Adding additional compulsory subjects at this stage increases pressure without necessarily improving learning outcomes. Education policy should aim to reduce cognitive overload — not expand it. Mobility: The Most Ignored Policy Variable India is a highly mobile society. Consider a realistic scenario: Each relocation forces the child to learn a new script and language at an advanced academic level. This is not enrichment. It is disruption. The National Education Policy itself acknowledges the importance of flexibility and student-centric learning (NEP 2020, Ministry of Education). Language mandates that ignore mobility contradict this principle. Scripts Are Cognitive Workloads Learning a new language involves two dimensions: Neuroscience research shows that learning a new script activates additional cognitive processing demands compared to learning languages with familiar alphabets (Perfetti & Liu, Psychological Science, 2005). Expecting adolescents to master new scripts within short timeframes — especially under exam pressure — is unrealistic. Economic Reality: English and Global Languages Matter India’s economic growth has been significantly supported by its English-speaking workforce. According to the British Council’s English for Employability report, English proficiency improves access to higher-income employment opportunities in developing economies. Similarly, foreign language skills such as French, German, Japanese, and Spanish open doors in: If India aspires to become a global knowledge hub, language policy must expand functional choices rather than restrict them. International Comparisons Must Be Contextual Countries like Finland or the Netherlands are often cited as multilingual education success stories. However, their systems differ fundamentally: The OECD’s PISA reports consistently highlight that student well-being correlates with learning outcomes (OECD, PISA Well-Being Framework). Policy borrowing without contextual adaptation rarely succeeds. The Principle That Solves the Problem: Choice The core issue is not language learning itself. It is lack of choice. Students should have options to choose: Autonomy improves motivation and learning outcomes (Ryan & Deci, Self-Determination Theory, 2000). Choice is not dilution. Choice is empowerment. A Practical Policy Framework India could adopt a balanced approach: 1. Early Multilingual Exposure Primary school exposure through stories, songs, and cultural activities without exams. 2. Flexible Language Selection Middle school students choose among regional, national, or foreign languages. 3. Simplified Board Exams Only one or two languages contribute to board scores. 4. Mobility Protection Mechanism Bridge courses or exemptions for transferred students. 5. Credit-Based Certifications Languages offered as modular certifications rather than compulsory annual subjects. Such models exist globally and align with NEP’s flexibility goals. National Integration Does Not Come from Exams Forcing students to memorise grammar does not create unity. National integration grows through: Real interaction builds empathy. Exams build anxiety. Political Messaging vs Student Welfare Language policies often carry symbolic value. But education policy must prioritize child welfare over political optics. When parents perceive policies as ideological impositions rather than educational improvements, trust declines. Trust is essential for policy success. Psychological Impact on Students Adolescence is a sensitive developmental phase. Excess academic pressure can lead to: The World Health Organization notes that academic stress is a significant factor affecting adolescent mental health globally (WHO Adolescent Mental Health Report, 2020). Education systems should nurture resilience — not overwhelm students. India’s Diversity Is a Strength — But Policy Must Be Realistic India’s linguistic diversity is extraordinary and worth celebrating. But preservation should happen through: Not compulsory high-stakes exams. A policy designed to celebrate diversity should not unintentionally penalize students academically. A Personal Reflection Having worked with thousands of students traveling across cultures, I have observed something powerful: Students naturally become curious about languages when exposed to meaningful experiences. A student visiting France wants to learn French.A student collaborating with Japan wants to learn Japanese. Motivation grows from relevance — not compulsion. The Way Forward India stands at a crucial moment in its educational journey. We are moving toward: Language policy must align with this future. We need: Not additional board-exam pressure. Final Thought Promoting languages is a noble goal. But turning languages into compulsory exam burdens risks harming the very students we aim to empower. Education policy must ask one simple question: Does this decision help the child thrive? If the answer is uncertain, we must rethink. India’s strength has always been adaptability. Our education system must reflect the same wisdom. References


