'Concerned over language': Dharmendra Pradhan on Arvind Kejriwal’s ‘junkyard’ comment
Vagisha Kaushik | September 7, 2022 | 05:05 PM IST | 2 mins read
Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan informed cabinet has approved Rs 27,360 crore scheme for setting up over 14,000 PM-SHRI schools.
NEW DELHI : Taking a jibe at Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal’s ‘junkyard’ comment regarding government schools, Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan expressed concern over the kind of language being used in the world of education. The minister was addressing the cabinet meeting with sports minister Anurag Thakur today. The Cabinet has given approval to the Prime Minister Schools for Rising India (PM SHRI) scheme with a budget of Rs 27,360 crore today.
Also Read | Delhi LG asks Arvind Kejriwal to release Rs 212 crore education grant 'pending' for 2 years
Pradhan first thanked the teachers who were felicitated with the National Awards to Teachers on Teachers Day 2022 for taking care of the schools as well as students way better than their own homes.
Presenting some ‘facts’ on the table, Pradhan said that Delhi’s expenditure is less than other states as the union government takes care of the expenditure. Pointing out to the Aam Aadmi Party, the education minister said that the enrolment ratio in government schools has reduced since "these people" came into power.
NAS 2021, model schools
Pradhan said that when AAP was contesting for elections in 2015, it had said in its manifesto that it will build 500 model schools. Referring to a page of India Today dated August 29, Pradhan said that according to an Right To Information (RTI), only 63 such schools have been started, leave alone 500.
Further commenting on the qualitative status of the schools in Delhi, the Union education minister referred to the results of the National Assessment Survey (NAS) 2021 and said that the government schools in Delhi scored much less than the national average in all classes which were assessed.
Also Read | Around 11% Class 3 students cannot do basic maths: Education Ministry Study
Dharmendra Pradhan finally stated that a party which in its reign, despite having funds, is not appointing principals, cannot open schools and provide salaries is calling schools as junkyards. “Therefore, I don’t take these ‘bayanveer’ seriously,” he said.
Kejriwal wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi alleging that more than 80 per cent of government schools in the country are worse than junkyards. Continuing from Tuesday when he had termed the prime minister's decision to modernise 14,500 schools "a drop of water in the ocean", Kejriwal again pushed for a plan to upgrade all 10 lakh government schools in the country.
PM Modi recently announced that 14,500 schools across the country would be developed and upgraded under the 'PM-SHRI Yojana'.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- From Rohith to Reform: UGC Equity Regulations 2026, born from tragedies, threaten caste dominance, not merit
- Law School For All: IGNOU is drawing lawyers, cops, CAs, even sitting judges with revamped legal courses
- ‘Autonomy Snatched’: Revised ISI Bill faces opposition in council; academics reject new MoSPI draft
- What are UGC Equity Regulations 2026 and why are they facing ‘general-category’ backlash?
- NITs plan multiple-entry, exit in BTech across institutes, research parks with ADB loan, PhD reform
- Environmental Law: NLU Odisha, Assam, Northeast law schools are making tribal rights core of curriculum
- ‘Generative AI knowledge limited to ChatGPT’: Why law schools are launching artificial intelligence centres
- LLB, LLM courses in English but for lawyers in lower courts, regional language command key to win cases
- Part-time law PhD enrolment on the rise as lawyers, aspiring academics embrace flexible courses
- Student Suicides: ‘Need accountability, not new law; it’s about well-being, not mental health,’ says NTF chief