Ruchika Kumari | May 21, 2026 | 03:02 PM IST | 2 mins read
Questions and concerns were raised over whether private unaided schools would also come under the newly introduced SMC guidelines.

The Ministry of Education has clarified that the School Management Committee (SMC) Guidelines 2026 will not apply to private unaided schools that do not receive government funding. The clarification came after concerns were raised over the newly launched guidelines, with several institutions tagging the Education Ministry on social media platform 'X' and asking whether private schools would also have to implement the proposed SMC system.
In a statement posted on social media platform X, the ministry said, “The guidelines are not applicable to private unaided schools covered under Section 2(n)(iv) of the RTE Act, provided such institutions do not receive any aid or grants from the appropriate government or local authority towards meeting their expenses.”
However, the ministry added that such schools are encouraged to voluntarily constitute School Management Committees in order to promote 'greater transparency, accountability and participatory governance'. The clarification is significant as the SMC Guidelines 2026, launched earlier this month had triggered apprehension among some private school stakeholders regarding possible expansion of regulatory oversight.
The post further reads, "Education is a shared responsibility of the government, schools, parents and the community. Strengthening collaboration among parents, schools and other stakeholders is essential to improving the overall functioning of schools and ensuring better learning outcomes for children."
Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan launched the SMC guidelines on May 6 at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. He introduced it as a consolidated national framework aimed at strengthening local governance, community participation, transparency, and accountability in schools.
The Ministry describes School Management Committees as 'bodies that bring together parents, teachers, local representatives, and community members to improve school functioning and learning outcomes from Balvatika to Class 12'. At the launch event, Pradhan said SMCs should act as a “bridge between the school and the community” and evolve into a “samajik andolan” or social movement. SMC guidelines also align with National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and the broader goal of creating a “participatory, equitable and future-ready education system.”
The SMC guidelines 2026 also propose two sub-committees — the School Building Committee and the Academic Committee. The School Building Committee will look after infrastructure and maintenance work, while the Academic Committee will focus on attendance, counselling, school planning, and UDISE+ data. The guidelines also fix a two-year term for SMC members and suggest regular monitoring by block and district education officers.
School Management Committees are mainly parent-led bodies with 75% representation from elected parents. Teachers, local representatives, educationists, ASHA workers, alumni, and subject experts are also part of the committee, while the school principal acts as the member secretary.
The ministry has also advised states and Union Territories to expand SMC systems to secondary and senior secondary schools up to Class 12.
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.