Tag: Kendriya Vidyalayas

  • Over 160 Kashmiri migrant children, 220 Covid orphans admitted to Kendriya Vidyalayas 

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Over 160 Kashmiri migrant children and 220 Covid orphans got admission to the Kendriya Vidyalayas (KVs), officials said. The admissions were made in the current academic year following the revised admission guidelines the centre announced in April this year.

    The Covid orphans were admitted under the PM Cares Children Scheme in 2022, with Madhya Pradesh admitting over 60 children, followed by Uttar Pradesh with 17 and Karnataka with 16.

    In Andhra Pradesh and Delhi, 13 children each were admitted in KVs, followed by Uttar Pradesh (17), Tamil Nadu (12), Rajasthan (11), and Telangana (10), Maharashtra (9) and Jharkhand (8).

    Officials said 167 Kashmiri migrant children got admission in the current academic session, with Jammu region topping the list with 125 admissions. Followed by Delhi where 14 children were admitted and then Rajasthan where four children were enrolled in KV school.

    In April this year, the government binned the MPs quotas and several other discretionary criteria for admission in the KVs, which is run by Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVs), an autonomous body that manages these centrally-funded schools. 

    In the revised admission guideline, the centre announced that children orphaned due to Covid-19 will be enrolled over and above the class strength in KVs under PM CARES for Children Scheme. 

    The PM Cares for Children scheme provides comprehensive care and protection to children who have lost their parents to the Covid pandemic, by enabling their well-being through health insurance, and empowering them through education and equipping them for self-sufficient existence with financial support on reaching 23 years of age.

    The admission in KVs was made based on a list given by the district magistrate, subject to 10 children per KVs, officials said.

    There are over 1,200 KVs in the country with over 14.35 lakh students. These children, whose parents died due to Covid, will be exempted from payment of fees, including tuition fees and computer funds from classes 1 to 12.

    The government scrapped the MP quota after putting it on hold following a debate in parliament in the last session on whether the special provision should continue.

    While each Lok Sabha MP was earlier entitled to recommend ten students in any school within their constituency, the Rajya Sabha members were allowed to recommend 10 in the state from which they were elected.

    NEW DELHI: Over 160 Kashmiri migrant children and 220 Covid orphans got admission to the Kendriya Vidyalayas (KVs), officials said. The admissions were made in the current academic year following the revised admission guidelines the centre announced in April this year.

    The Covid orphans were admitted under the PM Cares Children Scheme in 2022, with Madhya Pradesh admitting over 60 children, followed by Uttar Pradesh with 17 and Karnataka with 16.

    In Andhra Pradesh and Delhi, 13 children each were admitted in KVs, followed by Uttar Pradesh (17), Tamil Nadu (12), Rajasthan (11), and Telangana (10), Maharashtra (9) and Jharkhand (8).

    Officials said 167 Kashmiri migrant children got admission in the current academic session, with Jammu region topping the list with 125 admissions. Followed by Delhi where 14 children were admitted and then Rajasthan where four children were enrolled in KV school.

    In April this year, the government binned the MPs quotas and several other discretionary criteria for admission in the KVs, which is run by Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVs), an autonomous body that manages these centrally-funded schools. 

    In the revised admission guideline, the centre announced that children orphaned due to Covid-19 will be enrolled over and above the class strength in KVs under PM CARES for Children Scheme. 

    The PM Cares for Children scheme provides comprehensive care and protection to children who have lost their parents to the Covid pandemic, by enabling their well-being through health insurance, and empowering them through education and equipping them for self-sufficient existence with financial support on reaching 23 years of age.

    The admission in KVs was made based on a list given by the district magistrate, subject to 10 children per KVs, officials said.

    There are over 1,200 KVs in the country with over 14.35 lakh students. These children, whose parents died due to Covid, will be exempted from payment of fees, including tuition fees and computer funds from classes 1 to 12.

    The government scrapped the MP quota after putting it on hold following a debate in parliament in the last session on whether the special provision should continue.

    While each Lok Sabha MP was earlier entitled to recommend ten students in any school within their constituency, the Rajya Sabha members were allowed to recommend 10 in the state from which they were elected.

  • Tamil Nadu has highest vacant posts of KV teachers 

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: As many as 1100 teachers’ posts in Kendriya Vidyalayas (KVs) are vacant in Tamil Nadu, followed by 944 in Madhya Pradesh and 928 in Karnataka in 2021, the centre informed the Lok Sabha on Monday. 

    While 883 teachers’ posts lying vacant in KVs in West Bengal, 785 in Odisha, and 643 in Kerala, followed by 547 in Telangana. 

    Tamil Nadu, facing the maximum crunch of teachers in KVs that mostly admits central government employees’ children, had just 424 seats vacant in 2020 and 283 in 2019.

    However, that is not the case as far as Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti (NVSs) schools are concerned.

    In Tamil Nadu, for the past three years, none of the teacher’s posts was vacant in NVSs.

    Jharkhand had the highest number of vacant teachers posts in NVSs at 230. It was followed by Madhya Pradesh (224) and Arunachal Pradesh and Assam (215) each. Kerala has just nine vacant teacher posts in NVSs.

    Replying to a written question in the Lok Sabha, Minister of State of Education Annpurna Devi said, “The recruitment of teachers is a continuous process. The vacancies keep arising due to several factors including teachers’ retirement and additional requirements on account of enhanced students’ strength.”

    She added that education is a subject in the concurrent list of the Constitution, and the recruitment, service conditions, and deployment of teachers come under the purview of the concerned state and union territory (UT) government.

    The minister also said that the ministry requests educational institutions and state governments to fill up vacancies on a mission mode from time to time as most educational institutions come under the functional domain of respective state governments.

    The minister also shared that in 2021 in KVs, 457 seats are vacant in the Other Backward Caste (OBC) category, 337 in Scheduled Castes (SC) and 168 in Scheduled Tribe (ST) and 163 in Economic Weaker Section (EWS).

    Though the NV don’t face that much teacher scarcity, it has 676 teachers’ posts for OBC vacant.  In the SC category, 470 teachers’ seats are empty; in ST 234 posts and the EWS category, 194 teachers’ positions are vacant.

    NEW DELHI: As many as 1100 teachers’ posts in Kendriya Vidyalayas (KVs) are vacant in Tamil Nadu, followed by 944 in Madhya Pradesh and 928 in Karnataka in 2021, the centre informed the Lok Sabha on Monday. 

    While 883 teachers’ posts lying vacant in KVs in West Bengal, 785 in Odisha, and 643 in Kerala, followed by 547 in Telangana. 

    Tamil Nadu, facing the maximum crunch of teachers in KVs that mostly admits central government employees’ children, had just 424 seats vacant in 2020 and 283 in 2019.

    However, that is not the case as far as Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti (NVSs) schools are concerned.

    In Tamil Nadu, for the past three years, none of the teacher’s posts was vacant in NVSs.

    Jharkhand had the highest number of vacant teachers posts in NVSs at 230. It was followed by Madhya Pradesh (224) and Arunachal Pradesh and Assam (215) each. Kerala has just nine vacant teacher posts in NVSs.

    Replying to a written question in the Lok Sabha, Minister of State of Education Annpurna Devi said, “The recruitment of teachers is a continuous process. The vacancies keep arising due to several factors including teachers’ retirement and additional requirements on account of enhanced students’ strength.”

    She added that education is a subject in the concurrent list of the Constitution, and the recruitment, service conditions, and deployment of teachers come under the purview of the concerned state and union territory (UT) government.

    The minister also said that the ministry requests educational institutions and state governments to fill up vacancies on a mission mode from time to time as most educational institutions come under the functional domain of respective state governments.

    The minister also shared that in 2021 in KVs, 457 seats are vacant in the Other Backward Caste (OBC) category, 337 in Scheduled Castes (SC) and 168 in Scheduled Tribe (ST) and 163 in Economic Weaker Section (EWS).

    Though the NV don’t face that much teacher scarcity, it has 676 teachers’ posts for OBC vacant.  In the SC category, 470 teachers’ seats are empty; in ST 234 posts and the EWS category, 194 teachers’ positions are vacant.

  • ‘Vacancies in Kendriya Vidyalayas, Navodaya schools to be filled up soon’: Pradhan

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: The education ministry plans to recruit and fill up all vacant teaching and non-teaching posts in higher education institutions, Kendriya Vidyalayas, Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas and other departments at the earliest.

    In a tweet, Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said the ministry is “committed to filling up vacancies in their respective department in the next 1.5 years.”

    His announcement came soon after Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in a review meeting on the status of human resources in central government and ministries, directed them to recruit 10 lakh people in the next 18 months on a “mission mode.”

    Pradhan, also the Skill Development Minister, said the two ministries are committed to filling all vacancies in their respective departments in the next 1.5 years.

    “All vacant teaching & non-teaching posts in HEIs, Kendriya Vidyalayas, Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas and other Departments will be filled up at the earliest,” he said in a series of tweets.

    He said the aim is to take forward the prime minister’s decision to recruit 10 lakh people in all government departments and ministries in mission mode.

    He added that “accountability, people-centric governance and meeting targets before the deadline is a hallmark” of the prime minister’s government.

    Earlier this year, Pradhan, in a written reply in Rajya Sabha, had said that 6,558 teaching and 15,227 non-teaching posts are lying vacant in the central universities of the country.

    The vacancies had come up due to retirement, resignation and additional requirements on account of enhanced students’ strength.

    He had also said that the institutions are adopting various measures to address faculty shortages to ensure that studies of students are not affected.