Three educationists seek Supreme Court hearing after NCERT blacklisting

Three educators blacklisted by India's Supreme Court over a controversial chapter in an NCERT Class 8 textbook have sought a hearing. The chapter covered corruption in the judiciary. Chief Justice Kant agreed to hear them.

Michel Danino, Suparna Divakar, and Alok Prasanna Kumar, members of NCERT's Textbook Development Team, urged India's Supreme Court for a hearing after being blacklisted.

The court, taking suo motu cognisance, remarked that the educators either lacked reasonable knowledge of the Indian judiciary or deliberately misrepresented facts to project a negative image to impressionable Class 8 students. It directed the Government of India, states, union territories, universities, and public institutions to disassociate from them in any public-funded roles.

The order was passed without notice or hearing them, though they were given liberty to seek relief. Senior advocate Gopal Sankaranarayanan submitted, "These are not fly-by-night academics. They have street cred." Advocates J. Saideepak Iyer and Arvind Datar also requested a hearing.

"We definitely propose to hear the three of them," Chief Justice Kant responded. The government informed the court of an expert committee with retired Justice Indu Malhotra, senior advocate KK Venugopal, and Prakash Singh to finalise the NCERT Legal Studies curriculum. In February, the court had banned the textbook after observing the chapter aimed to malign the judiciary, with the Centre withdrawing over 82,000 copies.

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Somber NCERT officials withdrawing controversial class 8 social science textbook banned by Supreme Court over judicial corruption chapter.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

NCERT withdraws class 8 social science textbook over judiciary chapter

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has withdrawn its newly released class 8 social science textbook following controversy over a chapter on judicial corruption. The Supreme Court imposed a blanket ban on its further publication and dissemination. NCERT expressed regret for the unintentional inclusion of inappropriate content.

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.

Imeripotiwa na AI

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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