Punjab education minister directs no non-teaching duties for teachers; emphasis on classroom presence
Press Trust of India | October 5, 2025 | 09:40 AM IST | 1 min read
Punjab Schools: Non-teaching tasks for teachers are limited to census, elections, and disaster relief. Any other assignments require prior written approval from the Education Department.
NEW DELHI: Taking a serious note that teachers are being deployed even for routine clerical and administrative tasks, Punjab School Education Minister Harjot Singh Bains has written to the state chief secretary, saying no teacher should be assigned non-teaching duties. If unavoidable, prior written approval of the Education Department is mandatory, Bains said on Saturday.
Teachers are not mere government employees, they are the torchbearers of knowledge, entrusted with the sacred duty of shaping Punjab's future, he wrote. He said it has come to his notice that in some districts, teachers are being deployed for routine clerical and administrative tasks, which is unacceptable. Section 27 of the RTE Act clearly prohibits engaging teachers in non-educational work, except census, disaster relief and elections. Their presence in classrooms is non-negotiable, he further said.
Also read World Teachers’ Day 2025 theme, significance; why it is celebrated on October 5
"Our teachers must be allowed to do what they do best -nurture & educate our children. Their time belongs in classrooms, not in files or fields," Bains wrote on X on Saturday. To enforce the directive, Bains has asked the chief secretary "to issue clear and categorical instructions to all administrative departments and district authorities, mandating that teachers are not to be assigned any non-teaching duty, except those explicitly permitted under Section 27 of the RTE Act, 2009".
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
]Maharashtra government asks schools to form alumni associations for academics, infrastructural support
Maharashtra: The state government aims to involve former students in helping the schools, infrastructure, and support for student development in all classes from 1 to 12.
Vaishnavi Shukla | 1 min readFeatured News
]- Vidya Pravesh: 4.2 crore students across 8.9 lakh schools covered, but numbers now falling consistently
- Over 7 lakh Kendriya Vidyalaya students assessed via education ministry’s TARA app, 1.46 lakh on career tool
- Across Telangana’s new government medical colleges, 26 depts empty, 31 with single teachers: Doctors’ survey
- ‘No TET’: School teachers’ jobs at risk, hundreds in Delhi to rally against mandatory eligibility tests
- NCAHP draft policy curbs state role in allied and healthcare course design; grants power to verify institutes
- Private employees in government schools, Assam vocational teachers want 3rd-party agencies out of their jobs
- India saw 93,000 schools shut down over last 10 years; MP, UP lead closures, govt tells Lok Sabha
- Skill India Mission’s JSS scheme needs higher budget, infrastructure boost: Govt cites study in parliament
- Legal jobs boom with riders – master AI, intern longer, practise 3 years for judicial services
- School Education Budget 2026: Atal Tinkering Labs gain big; small hikes for Samagra Shiksha, mid-day meals