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HC stays AAP govt's new nursery admission norm | Kalvimalar - News

HC stays AAP govt's new nursery admission norm- 15-Feb-2017

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New Delhi: The Delhi High Court stayed the AAP government's new nursery admission norm based on neighbourhood criteria, saying "a student's educational fate can't be relegated to only his/her position on a map".
 
Terming the criteria as "arbitrary and discriminatory", Justice Manmohan said it benefits only those parents who live close to good private schools.
 
There was a "potential of abuse" of the condition as many rich parents would either shift to areas close to the school they want their children to study in or would get "sham" rent receipts or documents from owners or relatives and friends to show they reside in such areas when they do not, he said.
 
The court noted that no mechanism to curb or examine the possibility of abuse was provided in the Directorate of Education's (DoE) January 7, 2017 notification by which it had enforced a clause in the DDA allotment letter which made it mandatory for 298 private unaided schools here to admit students from their neighbourhood.
 
It said that under the Constitution and Universal Declaration of Human Rights, parents have a right to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their children, but this notification makes such a right "an empty formality" as neighbourhood is virtually the sole admission criteria.
 
"State cannot impose restriction on choice just because it thinks it will be more beneficial for the child," it said and added that the effect of the notification appears to be to reserve seats for a certain section of children who stay in the immediate neighbourhood without taking into account their socio-economic or cultural status.
 
"Under the impugned notification, the affluent persons living close to good schools stand to benefit... Reservation for a section of the society that is neither socially nor economically or educationally backward or Scheduled Castes / Scheduled Tribes/Minorities is prima facie unconstitutional," the court said.
 
It said the primary cause of the nursery admission chaos is the "lack of adequate number of good quality public schools and uneven distribution of good private unaided schools" in Delhi, and this coupled with the high population density of the city, results in seats being "exhausted" on the immediate distance criteria of zero to three kilometer where private schools on DDA land are concerned.
 
Till the quality of all public schools improves, the disparity between demand and supply will remain and "a lot more needs to be done before the public schools come at par with good private unaided schools in public perception", it said.

The court said that under the Right to Education (RTE) Act, the schools were responsible for admitting students from the neighbourhood only with regard to the 25 per cent seats reserved for the economically weaker section (EWS) and disadvantaged group (DG) categories to address the issue of dropouts of such children if they are made to travel long distances for schooling.
 
However, the issue of dropouts is not applicable to the general category fee-paying students in private unaided schools, it said.
 
"Thus, the concept of neighbourhood, meant primarily for lowering dropout rates of EWS children, cannot prima facie be made applicable, that too as a sole criteria, for admission of general category students," it said in its 58-page order.
 
The court said that under the RTE Act, the private schools were free to admit students living within or outside its neighbourhood in the remaining 75 per cent seats as "an incentive to entrepreneurs to establish more and more private unaided schools".
 
"Further, the prima facie view that neighbourhood intake is limited to twenty-five per cent of the students is in consonance with the Government of India, the Ministry of Human Resource Development, the Department of School Education and Literacy's guidelines dated 25th July, 2011," it said.
 
The court said that while the government can regulate the private educational institutions, the notification under challenge completely takes away the private unaided schools' right to admit students and lay down a fair, reasonable, transparent and non-exploitative procedure/criteria for admissions, leaving them with no say in their admission whatsoever.
 
"Such term or notification which imposes a restriction that is absolute and prohibitory does not seem prima facie to be a reasonable restriction on the fundamental right of petitioners (schools) under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution," it said.
 
"Consequently, this court is of the prima facie view that any attempt to regulate the admission in the remaining 75 per cent general category seats, would be an unreasonable restriction and a violation of Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution," it added.
 
The Delhi government and DoE had defended its decision by saying it was taken in the larger public interest, but the court disagreed with the contention and said "children are uniformly affected by alleged factors of public interest and it cannot be said that public interest is to be served only in the case of children going to 298 schools and not to the other 1400-odd schools".
 
The court said if traffic congestion, pollution or health of a child, which are of public interest, were not compelling reasons for imposing neighbourhood criteria on the 1400 schools not on DDA land, then how can public interest be served by imposing the restriction on the 298 schools.

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