Also, private schools have exploited policy loopholes and shortcomings to deny the parents of their students any say in important aspects of infrastructure development and safety in schools, says Priyank Kanoongo, member, the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR).
He made the remarks in the context of the killing of a seven-year-old boy in Gurgaon's Ryan International School on September 8. The class 2 student was found dead inside the washroom of his school with his throat slit allegedly for resisting a sodomy bid.
Kanoongo said there are around 7.5 crore students up till standard 8th in private schools, which constitute 23.08 per cent of the total schools. He said there are over a dozen and a half guidelines related to security in schools.
The NCPCR, he said, had last year issued these guidelines, which among others make verification of employees before appointment mandatory. It has sought a report from the Hayana education department and the CBSE over the status of their implementation.
He was scathing in his assessment over private schools' failure to establish such an institutional mechanism.
"Unlike government schools, private schools never developed such institutional system and just opened their shops (schools) without bothering about having necessary mechanisms," he told PTI.
Kanoongo said another "shortcoming" that has come to the fore is that when the Right to Education (RTE) Act was implemented, it talked about having a "school management committee" in which the parents of students were also to be involved.
He added that the commission will soon talk to the government and recommend that "loopholes in policy" like immunisation to private schools should be plugged and the RTE Act amended.
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