In a far-reaching decision, the government adopted scrapped management quota and all other reservations except the EWS category in private schools for nursery admissions and warned that erring institutions can be taken over by the Education department.
Reputed private schools including Amity International, Springdales and Delhi Public School, did not comment saying "they are yet to receive a formal order in this regard".
"There was a judgement by a single bench of High Court granting autonomy to schools for deciding quotas. Government had challenged the judgment seeking a stay before a double bench but the matter is still pending. Such an announcement at this stage when the matter is sub-judice amounts to contempt of court," said S K Bhattacharya, President of Action Committee for Unaided Private Schools which has 400 schools registered with it.
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"The larger issue is with the autonomy of schools, the
government's move is a direct intervention in autonomy which is granted to schools by the constitution," Sehgal added.
RC Jain, Chairperson of Delhi State Public Schools' Management Association which has over 2000 schools as its members, said, "having management quota or not having it is schools' autonomy, the government can't snatch that right. If there is any corruption in name of quota or there is exchange of money, the government can impose a check but why scrap it altogether?"
Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal today announced the decision calling the management quota a breeding ground for "biggest scandal" in the education sector in the country and said his government will not be a "mute spectator" to it.
The government also scrapped 62 "arbitrary and discriminatory" criteria listed by the schools on their websites for admissions. However, the 25 per cent quota for the Economically Weaker Section (EWS) will stay.
The decision came in the midst of the admission process for nursery classes in over 2,500 private schools in the capital.