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NEW DELHI: For all those parents who had protested against the Delhi School Education Advisory Board's fixing of upper-age-limit and got it nullified days before admissions began, the relief has been incredibly short-lived. As they are going online or to schools to collect forms, parents with kids older than four years are finding that many schools have fixed the upper-age-limit anyway and they are ineligible to even apply.
"Of the 20 schools I had considered, there are only two schools that I'm sure will accept my application. At several, including Springdales (Dhaula Kuan), DPS (Dwarka), Bal Bharati Public School (Dwarka) and Maxfort, I am not even allowed to apply," says Anjali Gupta. She had tried last year as well and failed to secure a seat for her son. This year, when she discovered the age-limits online, she checked with the schools. "I asked them if being born in February instead of April will make my son so much smarter that he'll not fit into the class. How is the school deciding? The Directorate of Education hasn't fixed upper-limits," says Gupta. The other option is seeking admission into KG but at that level, seats are very few.
Pankaj Chhabra(Parent Member of AN.com) is in a similar situation. Last year, he had felt his son was too young to start school; this year he's too old from nursery in many schools. "My son is four-year-eight days. We made the rounds last year too but he was too small. This year, he is ineligible in 50% of the schools. In any case the points-system is hopeless for us. Whatever chances we did have are being crushed by this age-bar," says Chhabra. He also adds that attempts to talk to the schools haven't helped. "There's no feedback from them."
Ankush Jain, exploring options in central Delhi, finds that the can't apply to most of them. "This is the first time I'm trying. The only criterion through which I stood a chance was distance - not alumni or siblings. And now, about 70% of schools we are trying in have set age limit. At one school, I was asked to return in March. They said if there are seats vacant, they may take my kid," says Jain.
Only the minimum age for admissions into nursery, KG and Class I are fixed by law - three, four and five years. "Schools have the freedom to choose the criteria but are wrongly extending that to fixing upper age limit," says advocate Khagesh Jha. He refers to a statutory notification from 2007 on admission procedure which fixes the minimum age and also states categorically, "There is no bar to children older than the ages specified in this clause (three, four and five) being given admission to these classes."
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I am also facing the same situation my daughter will be 4 yr 1month on 31st march. most of the schools are not even providing the form they are state away saying not eligible for nursery apply in march for ukg . i am worried that nursery is the foundation class for a child and if base of the child is not strong the child will be the sufferer. doe should take due action soon as time is running out for parents like us.
Ruchi,we all parents should accept that private schools and Government benefits each other, not us.
Govt support them and they finanicial supports them!!!!!!!
i can understand the trouble of the parent's in this situation... I am really felling outrage that this situation is occurred in our country .. India where every body consider equally that "THERE IS NO AGE LIMIT TO GET THE EDUCATION" these kind of schools CAN ONLY provide the EDUCATION, and never the MORAL EDUCATION.
Gaurav,We are trying our best let's see if anything happens next week
I request u to do something soon for our children of 4 yrs.
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