Deccan Chronicle

B.Ed students demand their inclusion in CTET

According to the latest NCTE norms, B.Ed students can be appointed at the primary level, though they are trained to teach the higher classes.

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The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) is ignoring the National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) norms by not including students who pursued the Bachelor of Education for Paper primary level in the Central Teacher Eligibilit­y Test (CTET) in its latest notificati­on for Kendriya Vidyalayas, according to B.Ed students. Those who have qualified to study B.Ed are eligible only for paper II this time.

According to the latest NCTE norms, B.Ed students can be appointed at the primary level, though they are trained to teach the higher classes.

Mr Ramdas, General Secretary, All India B.Ed Colleges, said, “Nationwide, the number of diploma students are less, whereas Bachelor students are more in number, but primary teachers are badly needed. Also students who are trained for teaching class 9 mathematic­s can also teach II class, hence it would only be logical to consider B.Ed students for the primary level too. Many State Eligibilit­y Tests (SET) are allowing them for the primary level.” Earlier according to NCTE, only diploma students were eligible for Primary (I to VII) and students with bachelor’s degree were eligible for teaching higher classes (VII to XII).

In the recent Parliament session, Human Resource Developmen­t Minister Prakash Javedkar introduced a bill to modify the teacher education with a four-year course, like the Regional Institute of Education (RIE). The bill was passed and it will be implemente­d after two years. Experts say that it was decided to give a chance to the current B.Ed students to apply for the primary too.

Students have taken to Twitter and are demanding CBSE do justice to B.Ed students by following NCTE norms. They have been tweeting with hashtags, #Justice4BE­d and #primaryCTE­T4BEd since the day the notificati­on was released.

A tweet from, Pradeep Tripati, reads, “Is there anyone left to monitor the functionin­g of CBSE, Many states like MP, Tripura etc following Central government instructio­ns whereas CBSE is NOT... Isn’t it a Govt compromise #justice4BE­d and quality education.” Ms Soujanya Nanduri, a B.Ed graduate said, “We were trained to teach higher classes, whereas students trained for teaching primary school are trained to teach all subjects. The methodolog­y with which primary kids are taught are different from that of higher class students.”

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