Delhi schools to set nursery admission criteria, parents jittery (Second lead)
December 15th, 2010 - 9:08 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Dec 15 (IANS) Heeding to pressure from schools, the Delhi government Wednesday allowed them to set the criteria for nursery admissions but said they must reserve a quarter of their seats for poor families. Parents, however, feared the freedom will be misused.Announcing the guidelines, Education Minister Arvinder Singh Lovely said 25 percent of nursery seats will have to be kept aside for children whose parents’ annual income is less than Rs.100,000. Schools can randomly select from applicants in this category.
As for the remaining 75 percent, Lovely said schools will be free to formulate their policy for admission but it should include a criteria for categorisation of the applicants.
“The schools will be free to base their criteria like sibling, alumni, single parent, transfer case or neighbourhood. They will be asked to formulate their plan and submit it to the education department. The schools should consider that categorisation should be rational, reasonable and just,” Lovely told reporters.
He also said there should not be profiling of the child based on the parents’ educational qualification and income.
The parents, however, had doubts over the implementation.
Ashok Aggrawal, president of All India Parents Association, said the guidelines were in favour of schools and it seemed that the government had succumbed to their pressure.
“The rights of children and parents should have been protected, but this is not the case in the new guidelines. If the need arises, we will knock the doors of the court to get justice,” he added.
“Everything should not have been left to schools to decide on the admission. The control should always lie in the government’s hands,” said Meena Agrawal, who is trying to secure admission for her toddler.
According to the guidelines, all the schools - both which are built on government land and others - will have to reserve 25 percent of their seats for the poor. At present, schools built on government land provide a quota of 15 percent to the economically weaker sections.
Lovely said the government will reimburse the amount to these schools for providing additional 10 percent seats.
For schools not built on government land, the reimbursement amount will be announced within a week, he said.
Schools, meanwhile, welcomed the decision.
“The government has done justice to all the schools and we will implement the decision on reserving 25 seats for economically weaker sections,” president of Delhi Public Schools Management Association R.C. Jain said.
The Delhi government guidelines come a day after the human resource development (HRD) ministry clarified the meaning of “random” used in the Right to Education Act.
Delhi has around 2,000 schools. The admission process will begin Jan 1, 2011 and will be completed by March 31, 2011.
“The government will ensure that no child will be left without admission in Delhi but there is a possibility that parents may not get a school of their choice,” Lovely said.
Another controversial point in nursery admission - management quota of 20 percent - has been left untouched.
- Delhi schools free to formulate nursery admissions criteria (Lead) - Dec 15, 2010
- Notice issued over nursery admission guidelines - Dec 17, 2010
- Mixed response to quota in nursery admissions - Feb 11, 2011
- Over 10,000 violations of Right to Education in Delhi - Dec 21, 2010
- Once again, nursery admissions no child's play for parents (With Images) - Jan 06, 2012
- School admission procedure should be rational, transparent - Nov 26, 2010
- Parents await Delhi's new nursery admission system - Dec 14, 2010
- Delhi nursery admissions to balance point, lottery systems - Dec 15, 2010
- Release nursery admission guidelines, Delhi government told - Nov 22, 2010
- Delhi court allows nursery admissions at 3-plus - Jan 27, 2012
- Delhi nursery admission guidelines out Wednesday - Dec 13, 2010
- 25 percent seats for poor under education act upheld (Second Lead) - Apr 12, 2012
- SC upholds seats for poor under Right to Education (Second Lead) - Apr 12, 2012
- Court notice to Kendriya Vidyalayas on admitting poor students - Feb 09, 2012
- Government's view sought on poor students' admission to KVs - Mar 10, 2012
Tags: admission criteria, agrawal, ashok, children and parents, delhi government, doors, doubts, education department, education minister, educational qualification, favour, government land, neighbourhood, New Delhi, parents association, poor families, rights of children, sibling, single parent, transfer case