Delhi High Court: no right to choose specific school under RTE

The Delhi High Court has ruled that the Right to Education (RTE) Act does not confer on students the right to choose a particular school. It dismissed a petition by a woman seeking admission for her daughter in a private school under the Economically Weaker Section (EWS) category.

In New Delhi, the Delhi High Court dismissed a petition filed by a woman. She had sought admission for her daughter in a private school under the Economically Weaker Section (EWS) category.

The court observed that while the Right to Education (RTE) Act is a beneficial legislation aimed at ensuring access to education, “it does not confer a right on a student to choose a particular school.”

The ruling clarifies the limits of students' rights under RTE, which primarily focuses on access to education.

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Somber NCERT officials withdrawing controversial class 8 social science textbook banned by Supreme Court over judicial corruption chapter.
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NCERT drar tillbaka samhällskunskapslärobok för klass 8 på grund av kapitel om rättsväsendet

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Nationalrådet för utbildningsforskning och utbildning (NCERT) har dragit tillbaka sin nyligen utgivna samhällskunskapslärobok för klass 8 efter kontrovers kring ett kapitel om rättslig korruption. Högsta domstolen införde ett totalförbud mot vidare publicering och spridning. NCERT uttryckte beklagande över den oavsiktliga inkluderingen av olämpligt innehåll.

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A controversial chapter in the Class 8 NCERT social science textbook mentioning corruption in the judiciary was written by a committee including a lawyer but was not reviewed by any legal experts, officials said on Thursday. The Supreme Court has called for action against those who wrote the chapter, and Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan has promised strict measures.

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The Supreme Court is set to hear a suo motu case over the inclusion of a chapter on corruption in the judiciary in NCERT's Class 8 Social Science textbook. NCERT has apologised for the inappropriate textual material and stopped the book's distribution. A three-judge bench led by Chief Justice Surya Kant will conduct the hearing on February 26, 2026.

 

 

 

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