Students Can Now be Failed in Classes 5 and 8, No-detention Policy Scrapped
Students Can Now be Failed in Classes 5 and 8, No-detention Policy Scrapped
The provision to that effect will be made in the Right of Children for Free and Compulsory Education Amendment Bill (RTE) which will allow states to detain students in class 5 and class 8 if they fail to clear their final exam.

New Delhi: The Cabinet on Wednesday approved scrapping the no-detention policy in schools till class 8. The provision to that effect will be made in the Right of Children for Free and Compulsory Education Amendment Bill (RTE) which will allow states to detain students in class 5 and class 8 if they fail to clear their final exam.

The students, however, will be given a second chance to improve through another examination in May or June before they are detained.

Under the present provision of RTE Act, students are promoted automatically to higher classes till class 8. This is one of the key components of the RTE Act, which came into force on April 1, 2010. The bill will now be tabled in Parliament for approval.

The Cabinet also gave its nod to the Human Resource Development Ministry's plan of creating 20 world-class institutions in the country.

The Union Cabinet, which had deferred its decision in June, about creation of 20 world-class institutions in the country, also approved it on Wednesday.

The University Grants Commission (UGC) had in February passed a new set of regulations to set up 10 world-class institutions in the public sector and as many in the private sector.

Of the 20 universities, first proposed in this year's budget, the 10 state-supported institutions are expected to receive public funding of up to Rs 500 crore each.

An Expenditure Finance Committee note seeking Rs 5,000 crore for these institutions was moved. The institutes can be existing or greenfield (the latter for private institutions).

HRD's separate rules UGC (Declaration of Government Educational Institutions as World Class Institutions) Guidelines allow these institutes to fix their own fees for foreign students and decide salaries for foreign faculty, as well as the freedom to choose admission procedures.

Existing universities don't have such freedom and are guided by the detailed UGC rules.

(With PTI inputs)

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