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Vijetha S.N
Most private unaided schools in the city are so livid that they are considering the possibility of taking legal recourse against the nursery admission guidelines released by the Lieutenant-Governor’s office on Wednesday. The water-tight criteria and the specific weightage prescribed to each has been termed “ludicrous,” and “arbitrary”, while the Lieutenant-Governor’s office has been accused of ignoring the opinion of respected educationists.
“We have written, made phone calls and also appealed to meet the L-G, but we have been consistently ignored just because we are not sitting on a dharna. Educationists who have been honoured nationally have submitted their opinion which has been ignored and the guidelines have been issued arbitrarily thoughtlessly,” said National Progressive School Conference executive chairman Ameeta Mulla Wattal, who is also the principal of Springdales School.
She was very clear that the “management quota” which most activists sought to colour with suspicion was not something that her organisation - which has the membership of most private schools in the city - was actually bothered about and it was the points that were awarded to each criteria and the manner in which they were supposed to go about it, that was harmful for the school, the parent and the child.
“The order prescribes that neighbourhood which has to be allotted 70 points be measured only up to 6 km, this is ludicrous in a city like Delhi. There are about 10 schools located within the area of our school and in some areas there are no schools at all. Places like North Delhi hardly have any schools and other areas like the East and South have about 40 to 50 schools between them. Where are children who have no schools in the neighbourhood supposed to go?” she asked adding that in the past the schools usually adjusted the criteria based on the profiles of their applicants. “It is disadvantageous to those whose siblings have already been admitted last year. If we admitted a child who was living 7 km away last year, we will not be able to admit the brother who applies this year.”
The issue of just a five per cent quota for girls was also a sore point. “Around 80 per cent of the children who apply are boys. The quota for girls in the new order is also done through neighbourhood among them and this is severely disadvantageous to the girl child. I speak from experience which unfortunately along with the experience of other educationists like me has just been brushed aside. We will be forced to take legal recourse if we continue to be ignored like this,” she said.
“Neighbourhood which has been allotted 70 points doesn’t fit well with areas such as Chhatarpur, Sainik Farms and the remote areas and some areas of East and Central Delhi where hardly any good school falls within the six kilometre radius. The minimum radius should have had been 10 km. Also, if a first child studies at a school situated 10 km away from home and the parents want to admit their second child in the same school they then will be allotted only 20 points that are prescribed under the sibling criteria,” said Sumit Vohra of admissionsnursery.com.
Manash Pratim Gohain & Shreya Roy Chowdhury,TNN | Dec 20, 2013, 05.48 AM IST
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Hi,
How can alumni be ignored after all they have spent there life in delhi and would like to see there children go to same school - why single them out ?
what about first being a boy child ?
i was witness to a lottery last year i tell it was manual exercise and totally unfair, they just picked bunch of application from one corner of the basket.
there should be suitable weigtage to all criteria distance , girl , first child , alumni, i can understand inter-state transfer being a sour issue but other case derve a thought
thanks
We will like to add here though we empathise with parents losing due to distance point but imagine parents like us would not get point inspite the fact that schools are less than half a kilometre.
Also the schools which do not have density of enough students are alternative for people who not getting sufficient points due to distance as they will qualify under the draw of lots as there will be a tie.
! Send me some school that will be nearby usI have a boy single child he will be 4 on feb. 10, and we are live in vaishali and shifted to east delhi by april then what are our chance or which address shoukd we gave
I agree with Mr.Vohra's demand regarding neighbourhood criteria. If we increase radial distance from 6 km to 10 km parents too will more school options and siblings too can be accommodated in the same school.
Ya....that would increase the chances for parents like us having no good schools nearby..
I agree but till last year due to too many categories, even admission in a nearest neighbourhood schools were difficult.
If there are no school under this 6 km radius so what does it mean we have no right to admission our child which school we want. It should be atleast 10 instead off 6
and suddenly they have sympathy for kids from najafgarh and burari and other areas..which were blacklisted by the elite schools in past. coz they will not be able to "sell" the seats to them....
Yes Mahesh .earlier they were avoiding these areas.
Lets look the fact that children who are not in 6 km range are not exempted to apply.
Eg A parent living 7 km away from school is not debarred from admission application however this child will not get get 70 points for admission. So once the general seats does not get full these students will be still considered for offer of admission and with no management quota school will have to do a lottery draw and not sell the seats.
Regarding the fairness of draw it is people from us who try to wrigle the system and find flaw. Unless there is a vested interest why will someone create a bundle and keep it in the side of basket.
Saying this I have seen schools which were not sought a decade back are now most wanted schools. Similarly brands today are left as brands and not delivering academics. So u need to decide what do u want.
Lastly think of these parents who live closer to school and do not get admission in that school.
yes mam... its quite obvious ...this is all about 'commerce and not "education". if schools will run with such a mind set then this will not be a true education...
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