In a conference on Sunday, parents of students from the All India Parents' Association (AIPA) made certain demands before the government with respect to education, including that children of government employees be mandatorily admitted to government schools.
"Laws should be enacted to regulate fees and other charges in private schools, besides bringing all minority schools in the country within the ambit of the Right to Education," the AIPA quoted to have said in a PTI report.
The Delhi-based organisation, with members consisting of parents from 18 Indian states, sought the enactment of a national law on the lines of the Allahabad High Court judgement in August 2015, which directed that all government employees to send their children to the government schools.
"We should have a new and better education policy to realise the dream of our former President APJ Abdul Kalam, who wanted primary teachers to inculcate creativity in schoolchildren," said AIPA member Indrani Banerjee.
She also noted that the kind of education being provided in schools has been declining since post liberalisation. The quality of education is further going down due to "commercialisation" in the sector.
Schools run by the government would continue to remain "bureaucratic exercises" unless the government spends more on education like in the UK and France, said another AIPA member.
It was due to lack of "holistic development" in school curriculum, causing rise in the number of drop-outs from public schools and increase in the number of private schools, he added.
Moreover, the President of AIPA, Ashok Agarwal, said, "We want a central regulatory body for fee structuring with a decent representation of parents."
"The government should amend the Right to Education Act to make schooling compulsory up to class 12 instead of 8th standard. Also, school education should be made completely free," he said.
[Source: India Today]
-- "Laws should be enacted to regulate fees and other charges in private schools, besides bringing all minority schools in the country within the ambit of the Right to Education," the AIPA quoted to have said in a PTI report.
The Delhi-based organisation, with members consisting of parents from 18 Indian states, sought the enactment of a national law on the lines of the Allahabad High Court judgement in August 2015, which directed that all government employees to send their children to the government schools.
"We should have a new and better education policy to realise the dream of our former President APJ Abdul Kalam, who wanted primary teachers to inculcate creativity in schoolchildren," said AIPA member Indrani Banerjee.
She also noted that the kind of education being provided in schools has been declining since post liberalisation. The quality of education is further going down due to "commercialisation" in the sector.
Schools run by the government would continue to remain "bureaucratic exercises" unless the government spends more on education like in the UK and France, said another AIPA member.
It was due to lack of "holistic development" in school curriculum, causing rise in the number of drop-outs from public schools and increase in the number of private schools, he added.
Moreover, the President of AIPA, Ashok Agarwal, said, "We want a central regulatory body for fee structuring with a decent representation of parents."
"The government should amend the Right to Education Act to make schooling compulsory up to class 12 instead of 8th standard. Also, school education should be made completely free," he said.
[Source: India Today]
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