“We’ll promote and protect private institutions in the public interest”
EducationWorld August 12 | Cover Story EducationWorld
Dilip Thakore interviewed Damodar Prasad Goyal, convenor of the National Foundation for the Promotion and Protection of Private Education in Mumbai and Bangalore. Excerpts: What are the factors or developments which have prompted you to promote the National Foundation for Promotion and Protection of Private Education (NFPPPE)? In spite of the qualitative and quantative growth of private, non-government education institutions as a result of public acceptance, these institutions, including private schools, have always been subject to government and public criticism, and rigid regulation. For over six decades non-government education institutions have tolerated a plethora of arbitrary and unfair regulations imposed upon them without protest as they were not united and organised. Currently there are an estimated 200,000 private unaided schools in the country but their voices are unheard. The proposed NFPPPE will articulate their views and protect their interests. What are the formal and informal aims and objectives of NFPPPE? The prime objective of NFPPPE is to promote and protect private education institutions in the public interest. To attain this mission the foundation will work as a think tank which will deliberate and debate policies relating to private education from preschool to higher education, and inform the public about the valuable contributions of private institutions to Indian education. We will present the viewpoints and perspectives of private educationists and educators in policy formulation forums and will educate the media, decision makers, and the public about the important role that private education institutions are playing — and will play — given their rightful place in Indian education. We will also campaign for the right of for-profit education institutions to co-exist with not-for-profit, charitable and government education institutions because we believe that parents must have the right to choose the most appropriate type of education for their children. Quite obviously promotion of NFPPPE is the outcome of dissatisfaction of private schools with the Supreme Court’s majority verdict in Society for Unaided Private Schools of Rajasthan vs. Union of India (2012). Do you intend to file a curative/review petition? The majority judgement of the Supreme Court in this case which we lost, is not a sole reason for the promotion of NFPPPE. For a long time several educationists and educators have called for a united representative body of private unaided education institutions whose role in the national development effort has been continuously belittled. Consequently they have suffered discrimination and have experienced considerable erosion of their administrative and academic autonomy. The foundation will challenge official, media and public criticism of private education institutions which have made many positive contributions to national development, out of all proportion to their number. Moreover we intend to legally challenge the assertion — reiterated in the majority judgement in the Society for Unaided Private Schools of Rajasthan case — that education provided by unaided private schools has to be “charitable”. Many eminent educationists believe that a common school system minus private schools is the best prescription for national development. What’s your comment? I wonder what’s their definition of national development. To deny opportunity to excel to all…