Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Prescribed only NCERT, SCERT texts: Govt to HC

- Richa Banka richa.banka@htlive.com

NOT JUST ACCESS Govt says need to provide equal conditions of success as well

NEWDELHI: The Delhi government on Wednesday informed the High Court that it has prescribed only NCERT and SCERT textbooks for students studying in its schools so that the “children may be restrained from burdening to read unnecessar­y study material and references”.

Justice C Hari Shankar was informed that the two bodies are the academic authoritie­s empowered by the Right to Education Act (RTE) to decide the curriculum for the students and that the Delhi government has decided to follow its guidelines.

The reply stated that publishers and vendors inside the school shop/tuck shopkeeper­s cannot supplant and replace the academic authority to decide the school curriculum for child.

The submission were made on an affidavit given to the court while replying to a plea by plea filed by Federation of Educationa­l Publishers in India challengin­g the circular of the Delhi government issued on November 28 that fixed the weight limit for the school bags.

The affidavit detailed that to promote equality it will be necessary to provide equal opportunit­y for all, not only in access but also in the conditions of success.

“Besides, awareness of the inherent equality of all will be created through the core curriculum. The purpose is to remove prejudices and complexes transmitte­d through the social environmen­t and the accident of birth,” it said.

The city government also asserted that vendor’s or publishers cannot step into the shoes of the Academic Authority which is a statutory body.

It said that the petition is not maintainab­le and liable to be dismissed.

The plea, filed through advocate Kumar Vaibhav and Aayushi Sharma, had contended that by prescribin­g a fixed weight of bags and instructin­g schools to follow NCERT, SCERT and CBSE books, the city government was trying to indirectly achieve a “compulsory enforcemen­t” of NCERT books, which it is not allowed to do.

The petition also claimed that the circular is directing the use of a particular set of books, thereby violating of the bylaws of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE).

“By putting a cap on the weight of the bag and directing the schools to see that NCERT, SCERT and CBSE prescribed books are brought to the school, the Delhi government is taking the choice of the schools/students from following books of private publishers and is restrictin­g the students to a single textbook,” it added.

 ?? FILE ?? The academic authoritie­s decide curriculum.
FILE The academic authoritie­s decide curriculum.

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