The information was given by the state government pleader to a bench of Justices V M Kanade and Anil Menon who were hearing a public interest litigation taken up suo motu after child psychiatrist Dr Harish Shetty and other doctors attached copies of news reports with their letter to it on March 30.
In their letter to the high court, the doctors said that in denying the services of writers, the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) had allegedly violated child rights.
The government pleader informed the high court that the Government Resolution (GR) had been issued by the Maharashtra government on January 8 in which it been declared that writers would be provided to students with learning disability in the board examinations.
The state had also decided to introduce learning disability centres in medical colleges. Out of the 15 such centres to be set up, six had already come up in various places including Dhule, Chandrapur, Kolhapur, Miraj and Pune. The remaining would start from second week of this month, the high court was told.
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In Mumbai and Pune, additionally learning disability centres would be opened, the government told the high court.
As per details given by the government to the court earlier, there are a total of 37,358 school students found suffering from learning disability in the state.
In an earlier order, the high court had directed the
state to set up special centres to help students with learning disability to get their certificates and assessment done.
The court had suggested the state to set up one such centre in each district. Currently, there are only four centres - three in Mumbai and one in Pune. In other places, learning disability assessment and certificate issuance is the work of civil surgeons.
While a test in English existed, that of Hindi, Marathi and Gujarati were developed in 2008 by S.N.D.T funded by association of adoptive families, it said.