Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Decision to shut 690 schools was taken in haste, accepts govt

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab government has accepted that its decision to merge government primary schools in close vicinity of each other by closing down 690 such schools was taken without properly looking into vital parameters such as availabili­ty of classrooms, toilets and drinking water, and thus it was kept on hold.

This informatio­n was given by the office of the Punjab director general, school education (DGSE), in response to a demand notice sent by advocate and RTI activist HC Arora.

Though the state education department, with the prior approval of education minister Sikander Singh Maluka, had given the green signal for the merger of schools on the basis of parameters of vicinity, infrastruc­ture, teachers and the neighbourh­ood of children on March 26, but on April 9, the decision had to be kept in abeyance. The merger decision was taken on the basis of reports submitted by district-level committees headed by district education officers.

On March 26, the education department had ordered the closure of 690 government primary schools by merging them with other such schools which are within a distance of less than 1km or in the same revenue village so as to overcome the shortage of teachers.

However, in one such case, a primary school at Gujarpura village was ordered merged with another primary school, at Kot Mahana Singh village (Amritsar district), which is 2.5km away.

The DGSE’s reply states that at a meeting of district education officers on April 6, it had been decided that district-level committees must again review every case of primary school merger in such a manner that the children and their parents should not face any problem after the merger.

It was then that the field officers were communicat­ed on April 9 not to go ahead with the merger decision and to send a detailed proposal to the DGSE.

Arora, in his demand notice, had suggested to the government that since it was a general perception that only children of very poor people were studying in these schools, the merger of such schools with distant schools for the sake of saving a few posts of teachers and funds would not be a genuine criteria. Citing the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General’s report of sharp increase in the number of Punjab village school dropouts even when the schools were available at students’ threshold, Arora had submitted that forcing such students to travel longer distance would worsen the condition.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India