-The Times of India JAIPUR: A day after TOI published a report, "Orphans in peril as RTE Mandates parents' income, caste certificates," the Rajasthan government's social justice and empowerment department has written to the education department to soon clarify the issue of certificates mandated under RTE for orphaned children. The report had highlighted how orphans were being asked documents like parents' income certificate, caste certificate, age certificate etc. to get admission in...
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Practise what you preach-Pranesh Prakash
The only way to fix the IT laws is to change the way they are made Laws in India relating to the internet are greatly flawed. The only way to fix them would be to fix the way they are made. The Cyber-Laws and E-Security Group in the Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DEIT, ‘DeitY’ according to their website) has proved incapable of making balanced, informed laws and policies. The...
More »RTE declares war on education entrepreneurship, feel PE investors-Ahona Ghosh & Saumya Bhattacharya
Entrepreneurs and investors , who had only recently found innovative ways to invest in education as a business , are concerned about the financial impact of the Supreme Court ruling last week upholding the Right to Education Act. All schools, except minority unaided ones , will now have to set aside 25% of seats for poor students . While most investors welcome the move , they also worry about funding the...
More »UN expert hails Indian court decision to uphold right of every child to education
-The United Nations An independent United Nations human rights expert today hailed a decision by the Indian Supreme Court to uphold a law which Mandates that a quarter of the places in the county’s private and public schools should be reserved for disadvantaged groups. “Exclusion and poverty remain the most important obstacles to the realization of the right to education in all regions of the world,” said the Special Rapporteur on the...
More »Right to Education Act burden will not be passed on to students: Kapil Sibal
-The Times of India After the Supreme Court this week upheld the constitutional validity of Right to Education Act, the government on Sunday allayed fears and dismissed suggestions that the burden which private schools will have to bear to implement the law will be passed on to students. The RTE Act Mandates schools to provide free education to 25% of students from economically weaker sections between 6 to 14 years of age. "I...
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