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Kolkata, Aug 6 : Batting for the Right to
Education (RTE), a top government official Monday said the 25 percent
reservation of seats in schools for the economically deprived was a move
to enhance social inclusion in educational institutions.
"It is
unfortunate to find that the debate on the RTE has been reduced to 25
percent reservation of seats. The rationale behind such a provision is
social inclusion. Every school should have a heterogeneous background of
children," Vikram Sahay, director for RTE, in the human resource
development ministry, said here.
Addressing a seminar titled "RTE
- Bane or Boon", Sahay said the provision for reservation was aimed at
transforming elementary education's welfare approach to a rights
approach, instead of shifting the responsibility from government to
private institutions.
Quoting a Supreme Court order, wherein it
has held that RTE Act would not apply to unaided minority institutions,
Sahay said it was the discretion of the respective state governments to
decide which educational intuitions were under the ambit of the act.
Advocating
the no-detention policy provided by the act, Sahay said: "If there is
right of providing compulsory education to a child, you cannot have
detention at the same time."
A national-level benchmark for teachers across the country through the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) has been set up, he added.
© IANS
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