Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Delhi govt not to change nursery admission rules

- Heena Kausar

GOVT OFFICIALS SAID THE DECISION WILL AVOID POTENTIAL LEGAL CHALLENGES, WHICH HAVE PROLONGED THE ADMISSION PROCESS IN PREVIOUS YEARS

NEWDELHI: The Delhi government is likely to make no changes to the rules for nursery admissions in the next academic session, allowing each private school to finalise guidelines on its own, officials in the state education department said on Monday.

The admission schedule for over 1,700 recognised private unaided schools, which offer approximat­ely 1.25 lakh seats in nursery every year, is expected to be issued by early December.

Government officials said the decision not to intervene would avoid potential legal challenges, which have usually followed alteration­s to guidelines and prolonged the admission process in previous years.

“This time, we want to bring the admission schedule for all private unaided schools at one go. There will be no different guidelines or schedules issued for schools on government land. Schools will decide their own criteria,” a top official in the Delhi education department told Hindustan Times.

In January this year, the Delhi government issued a notificati­on asking 298 top schools built on Delhi Developmen­t Authority land to make residentia­l proximity the primary criterion for new admissions. According to the notificati­on, applicants living within one kilometre of the school would be given preference. If there were seats left, admissions would be given to applicants living between one and three kilometres of the school, and if the seats were still not filled, to students living between three and six kilometres of the school. The guidelines also abolished the management quota in these schools.

The notificati­on was immediatel­y challenged by the associatio­n for private schools on the grounds that it violated their autonomy. The Delhi high court ordered a stay, but the confusion lingered for weeks. The applicatio­n process, which was to finish in January, was finally completed in mid-february.

The case is still in court and the next date of hearing has been set for January 16, 2018.

The high court also told the government to make any changes in the guidelines for the next session at least three months before admissions were schedule to begin. That deadline has passed.

When told that the government was not likely to intervene this year, SK Bhattachar­ya, president of the Action Committee for Unaided Recognized Private School, said his body would welcome the move. “The government needs to keep a balance between autonomy of private schools and transparen­cy. If this is happening, it will ensure parents don’t face any confusion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India