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Maharashtra: Second class students

EducationWorld March 15 | EducationWorld

CHARGES THAT CHILDREN FROM poor families admitted into upscale private unaided schools under s.12 (1) (c) of the Right to Free & Compulsory Education Act, 2009, are being maltreated and discriminated against, have generated a stir among academics and NGOs in the industrial city of Pune (pop.4.5 million), which prides itself as the cultural and education capital of Maharashtra, India™s most industrialised state. S.12 (1) (c) obliges private schools to reserve a 25 percent quota in class I for œchildren belonging to the weaker sections and disadvantaged groups in the neighbourhood and provide free and compulsory education till its completion. According to a report in the Pune Mirror (February 14), 40 RTE quota students admitted into the St. Ramanand Chidakashi English Medium School, Pimpri, affiliated with the Maharashtra State Secondary Certificate exam board, were barred from the school™s annual day function held on January 26. Parents also complain that s.12 children are relegated to the backbenches in classrooms and are disproportionately subjected to corporal punishment. œWe have registered a complaint. But we need to check with higher authorities on what besides tuition, has been made free for children admitted into private schools under the RTE Act, comments Usha Ubale, education officer of the Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation (PCMC). This is not the first complaint of discrimination against s.12 children. Last September, Tree House High School, Karve Nagar (affiliated with the Delhi-based Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations) was charged with schooling s.12 children in an altogether separate section. Eminent educationists in the city say that discrimination is inevitable given the deep fissures within the education system and society. œPrivate schools have resisted inclusion of children from economically and socially disadvantaged sections of society ever since the RTE Act became law on grounds of ambiguity, lack of funds, etc. However, the major impediment to inclusive education is the class-obsessed mindset of India™s middle and upper classes, says Dr. John Kurrien, director emeritus at the Centre For Learning Resources, Pune and a member of Action for the Rights of Children (ARC). That s.12 children suffer humiliation and discrimination in private schools which accept them resentfully, is confirmed by Human Rights Watch (HRW, estb. 1978), a New York-based international NGO. In a 77-page report titled They Say We™re Dirty: Denying Education to India™s Marginalised (April 2014), HRW says that instead of being brought into the education mainstream as stipulated by the RTE Act, students from disadvantaged sections œface discrimination, get segregated in class and are insulted in public. Far from being embarrassed by media expos©s, a rising number of private school managements justify partial exclusion of s.12 children, arguing that the tuition fees reimbursed by government for educating them doesn™t cover the cost of co-curricular and extra-curricular activities. œThe reimbursement we get is very low compared to the expense incurred by us per student. The government has promised to reimburse Rs.14,000 per RTE quota student per annum. But schools which provide excellent infrastructure and holistic education charge non-s.12 children Rs.30,000-40,000 per annum. Therefore,

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