Kerala Minister seeks Centre's intervention into textbook shortage in Kendriya Vidyalayas
Press Trust of India | July 20, 2025 | 02:34 PM IST | 1 min read
Sivankutty said state schools got textbooks before the academic year, calling NCERT’s delay unacceptable and alleging a push towards online and private sales.
NEW DELHI: Kerala General Education Minister V Sivankutty on Sunday sought immediate intervention of the Centre to resolve the shortage of textbooks in Kendriya Vidyalayas in the state. He highlighted that students of Classes 5 and 8 in PM Sri Kendriya Vidyalayas are still without essential books, even four months after the commencement of the classes.
With just days left for the first quarterly examinations, the negligence on the part of NCERT authorities, who are supposed to distribute books, is extremely serious, the minister pointed out in a statement. Classes in Kendriya Vidyalayas began on April 1. But even after four months, teachers were only provided with study materials online. The minister noted that students will not be able to face the exams without books, which will seriously affect their studies.
Textbooks ready in state schools
Drawing a parallel between the government schools in the state, Sivankutty said the state authorities have made textbooks available there even before the beginning of the academic year. "In this circumstance, the negligence on the part of NCERT is unacceptable. The move is to distribute the books through online platforms and private book stalls instead of making them available in schools," Sivankutty alleged.
It would force children to buy books at an exorbitant price. The union government should immediately intervene to make textbooks available to the students considering their future, the minister added.
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
]- CISCE schools can continue to teach foreign languages as 3rd option: Board secretary
- ‘Fix schools, create jobs’: West Bengal voters cut through election noise with education, employment demands
- BBAU Lucknow student’s death sparks protests against hostel food, curfew; proctor denies link
- Fees to social media-use: What NCAHP’s first ethics code for allied, healthcare professionals says
- NMC junks 150-seat MBBS cap, population rule; sets 10 km limit for medical college-hospital distance
- Suicides, opaque placements, caste: IIT Bombay, Kanpur’s student journals dare to ask the tough questions
- ‘Not just academic, but personal’: NSUT Delhi takes AI beyond BTech, across non-engineering courses
- AI judge, cyber law courses, scholarships: GNLU is revamping LLB degrees to make students courtroom-ready
- CBSE third language policy throws French, Spanish, German teachers across schools into crisis
- With CSE surge, these specialised BTech courses are vanishing from engineering colleges