Private schools in K’taka seek to draft their own textbooks
PTI, Nov 25, 2022, 10:54 AM IST
The High Court of Karnataka has reserved for judgment a 1995 petition challenging the various provisions of the Karnataka Education Act, 1983.
The provisions challenged include the reservation for appointment of staff in unaided schools and prescription of syllabus by the State government.
On Thursday, the HC reserved the case for judgment after the government failed to file any objections.
Private schools in Karnataka have approached the High Court of Karnataka, seeking among other things, permission to draft textbooks on their own.
The Karnataka Unaided Schools Managements’ Association (KUSMA) in their petition have sought ”the State government ought not to prescribe any particular publication or textbook as the sole and exclusive reading material in private unaided schools; and that, private unaided schools are free to choose a textbook of their choice so long as such textbooks adhere to the syllabus prescribed by the State government.” The provisions of the Karnataka Education Act, 1983 in this regard has been challenged.
KUSMA has also challenged several other provisions of the Karnataka Education Act including Section 5 read with Section 41(3), which prescribes reservation in the matter of appointment of teaching and non-teaching staff in private unaided schools.
It has sought for the striking down of this Section as unconstitutional.
The petition also seeks direction to the State government not to enforce the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education, which imposes reservation of seats in favour of weaker sections and disadvantaged groups in private unaided schools.
Another challenge is made to Section 7(1)(f) of the same Act. The petition states that private unaided educational institutions should be allowed to ”determine a reasonable fee structure and to not be subject to a rigid and stereotypical fee structure imposed by the government.” The petition came up for hearing before the division bench of Justice Alok Aradhe and Justice Vishwajit Shetty on Thursday.
The advocate for KUSMA, K V Dhananjay pointed to the recent controversy about Savarkar in Karnataka government text books.
He also cited the example of the 1984 Sikh riots and said even Sikh schools cannot teach them.
The case has been reserved for judgment.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Puttur: Abandoning labourer’s body — three, including prime accused, arrested
Dr. D. Veerendra Heggade sets record for ‘Largest Single-Man Collection of Antiques’
Bantwal: Three arrested in Thumbe temple theft case
Bengaluru: BBMP garbage truck driver dies after tree branch falls on him
Six junior artists of Kannada film ‘Kantara’ injured in accident in Karnataka
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Cheetah Neerva gives birth to cubs in MP’s Kuno National Park
Sensex reclaims 80k mark; Nifty surges over 1% after BJP-led Mahayuti’s win in Maharashtra
IT employee, lover arrested in murder of Kochi woman
IPL Auction 2025 | GT buy Washington Sundar for Rs 3.20 crore; Shaw, Shardul go unsold
ED conducts raids in Delhi-NCR in real estate ‘fraud’ linked money-laundering case
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.