'Crime against children': NCPCR writes to NIOS over Jamiat Open School being run for Classes 3, 5, 8
Vagisha Kaushik | March 14, 2024 | 10:25 AM IST | 3 mins read
NCPCR sought details on collaboration between NIOS and Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind running the open school along with fee share, and funding share of NIOS.
NEW DELHI: The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NIOS) has written to the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) seeking details regarding the open school being run by Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind in partnership with the institute. The child rights body has asked NIOS to discontinue the courses and take steps to enroll the students in formal schooling.
In a letter, NCPCR said it has found that the organization has established the Jamiat Open School for Madrasa students on the lines of NIOS and is offering mainstream education .
“The Commission, under Section l3 (l) O of the CPCR Act, 2005, has taken cognizance of the complaint seeking immediate action against the open school being run by Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind with support from National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS). The Commission further examined the details and has found that Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind has established Jamiat Open School on lines of NIOS for Madrasa students, enabling them to pursue 'mainstream' education,” it said.
As per the child rights body, Shoaib Raza Khan, assistant director of NIOS, has also been quoted saying that the school is a path-breaking initiative and assuring that NIOS is ready to extend all possible cooperation to Jamiat. “The document available on the website also states that modernization of Madrasas by the Government disturbs their moral upbringing,” NCPCR noted.
Fund-raising in UK, activity in Pakistan
Following the complaint, NCPCR has asked NIOS to submit a report on the details of any form of agreement between NIOS and Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind or Jamiat Education Foundation or Jamiat Open School. It also asked the fee share between NIOS and Jamiat Open School per student.
"It has also been noted that Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind has been raising huge funds in United Kingdom based on open schooling system allegedly established in collaboration with NIOS and undertaking activities in countries like Pakistan. As per the fee structure of NIOS, the funding is far more than the expenditure on open schooling of children. What is the share of NIOS in such kind of funding?,” the child rights commission asked.
Violation of RTE Act
NCPCR mentioned the Right to Education Act and argued that offering open schooling for Classes 3, 5, and 8 is in violation of the act. The commission said that there are 15 lakh schools in the country and government has established enough schools for elementary education. “What is the need of offering education through open schooling for elementary level,” NCPCR asked. “Therefore, NIOS shall immediately discontinue these courses and take steps to enroll these children in formal schooling,” it directed NIOS.
Also read BCI asks law institutes, school boards to include RTE Act guidelines in curriculum
The child rights commission pressed on the issue that students enrolled in open schooling are deprived of facilities such as midday meals, uniform, trained teachers. It accused the organization of crime against children and the NIOS of legalising the violation of child rights, and asked NIOS to set up a committee on officers who allowed the opening of school.
NCPCR further asked NIOS to provide the list of study centres opened by it in Madrasa or any other institution associated with Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind; list of teachers along with their qualification; number of children who have taken admission under this system till date.
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
]- Azim Premji University files FIR against Kashmir event organisers; student council speaks up for them
- DU professors move High Court after Kalindi College ICC rules threats, lewd remarks don't count as harassment
- PM SHRI Schools: Leaking roofs, broken computers, mounting paperwork – and more visibility than depth
- ‘Before NEP made it policy, Bombay Cambridge School made it practice’
- ‘Hatred’ for Dalits: JNUSU ex-president moves National Commission for Scheduled Castes against JNU VC
- ‘More exhausting than manual’: How CBSE on-screen marking system is draining teachers it was meant to help
- AI is reshaping classrooms, but human mentorship and thoughtful integration hold the key
- From Nipun Bharat to CM Composite School, UP bets big on learning overhaul, basic education secretary explains
- How randomised controlled trials hollowed out Indian education
- Reels, Gaming, Burnout: How schools, parents are drawing India’s smartphone generation back to books, sports