Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Coaching institute, dummy school nexus driving students away from mainstream?

- HT Correspond­ent letters@htlive.com FOR REPRESENTA­TION

LUCKNOW : With CBSE board cracking whip on 20 dummy schools across India last month, the mainstream schools in Lucknow voice for more stringent rules to be put in place to check the growing foothold of dummy institutio­ns.

The coaching institutes in Lucknow, that prepare students for IIT JEE and NEET, have entered a tie-up with a number of ICSE and CBSE schools that are not doing well to enroll coaching students as dummy candidates by paying certain amount of fees that makes them eligible to write board exams. At dummy schools, it is not mandatory for students to attend school regularly, while they continue their studies at the coaching institute.

“In Lucknow alone, nearly 10,000 students are being mentored by coaching institutio­ns by getting them enrolled in dummy schools which is more than 10 in the state capital. The arrangemen­t suits all stakeholde­rs--parents, coaching and dummy schools, which have affiliatio­n but do not have students. It is a good bargain for such institutio­ns,” said a franchise officer of

At dummy schools, it is not mandatory for students to attend classes regularly, while they continue their studies at the coaching institute.

a coaching institute that has a strong network in many cities of UP. Rekha Agarwal (name changed) goes to a prominent all girl school affiliated to ICSE/ISC board. She appeared in class 10 board exam this year. Her parents were weighing various options to prepare for IIT-JEE. In their pursuit, they reached a coaching institute that arrived in Lucknow recently. There she was encouraged not to study class 11, 12 from any regular school. Instead, opt for a dummy school with which the coaching institutio­n has already arranged for writing board exams.

Strong the nexus

The coaching institutes in Lucknow are encouragin­g

meritoriou­s students to leave their regular school and get admission to a dummy school wherein they will be required to pay a nominal fees upto Rs 5000 per month and more than Rs 1.5 lakh annually to coaching institute.

On March 22, 2024, CBSE cracked the whip on 20 such schools in India including 3 from UP. A surprise inspection was conducted in CBSE schools across the country to check whether the schools are running as per the provisions and norms contained in affiliatio­n and examinatio­n by-laws. After thorough inquiry, CBSE decided to disaffilia­te them, said Himanshu Gupta, secretary, CBSE Board in a press release.

Deputy secretary of Council for the Indian School Certificat­e Examinatio­ns, Sangeeta Bhatia said, “ICSE, ISC board adopted zero tolerance policy against dummy institutio­ns. If there was a complaint against such schools, we would crack the whip. But the number of ICSE, ISC schools is far too less than CBSE schools in the country.”

Parents opting for dummy schools

School principals said they are getting requests from parents to exempt their child from 70% attendance as they will prepare for JEE from a coaching institute. Principal of La Martiniere Girls College Aashrita Dass said, “A parent requested me to let her child study as a dummy student. I told them this is not done. Children must come to school regularly. More than the child, it is their parents who are motivating their kids to study as dummy.”

ICSE Lucknow coordinato­r and principal Hoerner College, Mala Mehra said, “Some schools are struggling to get good students in class 11, as parents are increasing­ly opting for dummy schools.”

Pleading anonymity, a former CBSE official said, “This is the manifestat­ion of commercial­isation and commodific­ation in school education. This existed earlier also but is rampant now. This is there in most boards and is done by schools in collusion with coaching institutio­ns.”

“Coaching institutio­ns have expanded so much now that they have become bigger than the formal schooling system. Most of the data sent by many schools to boards is fake, unreliable and in some cases, may not even exist. We need to take strong measures to stop this practice. It will be good if CBSE by-laws becomes an act so that strong punitive measures can also be taken besides downgradin­g and disaffilia­tion of schools,” he said.

Sarvesh Goel, chairman, GD Goenka Public School, said that a dummy school doesn’t make much of a sense. CBSE has been cracking the whip against those schools which is a welcome step.

However, parents blame schools for not having good science teachers.

This is the main reason parents are tempted to withdraw their child from mainstream schools and push them to study at coaching where they can prepare simultaneo­usly for JEE or NEET and their boards too.

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