Key Points

Gujarat's first Right to Education admission round reveals a complex enrollment landscape with 13,384 seats still vacant. The state saw a surge in applications after expanding income eligibility limits to Rs 6 lakh for all families. Of 2,38,916 online applications, 1,75,685 were approved at the district level. Education officials remain optimistic about filling remaining seats in subsequent admission rounds.

Key Points: Gujarat RTE 13,000 Seats Vacant After First School Admission Round

  • Record 2,38,916 online RTE applications submitted
  • Income eligibility raised to Rs 6 lakh for all families
  • 86,274 seats initially allotted in private schools
  • 7,586 seats remain unselected after first round
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Over 13,000 RTE seats vacant in Gujarat as first round concludes

Gujarat's RTE admission drive sees 13,384 seats vacant despite record 2,38,916 online applications and expanded income eligibility

"The expanded income threshold has significantly increased application numbers - Gujarat Education Department Official"

Gandhinagar, May 12

The first round of admissions under the Right to Education (RTE) Act in Gujarat has ended with 13,384 seats still vacant in private schools across the state, officials said.

The process, which offers free admission to Class 1 students in private schools under the 25 per cent RTE quota, saw 86,274 seats allotted in the initial round. However, only 80,378 admissions were confirmed by parents by the May 8 deadline, as per official reports.

This year's RTE drive received a significant response, with 2,38,916 online applications submitted -- marking a noticeable rise from previous years.

Officials attribute this surge to a sharp increase in the income eligibility limit, raised uniformly to Rs 6 lakh for both urban and rural families. Previously, the limit was Rs 1.5 lakh for urban and Rs 1.2 lakh for rural applicants.

The expanded threshold is believed to have added nearly 45,000 more applications to the total pool. Of the total applications, 1,75,685 were approved at the district level after verification.

Meanwhile, 13,761 were rejected, and another 49,470 were cancelled, mainly due to duplication or documentation issues.

The state had notified 93,860 seats across 9,741 private schools under the RTE quota this year. The first round of seat allotments, conducted on April 28, was based on parental preferences, reservation categories, and merit criteria.

However, 7,586 seats were left unallocated simply because no parents had selected those schools. The second round of admissions is expected to begin in the coming days to fill the remaining seats.

Officials are hopeful that the remaining vacancies will be filled in the next phase, as more eligible children are expected to participate.

The Right to Education (RTE) Act in Gujarat provides free admission to children from economically and socially disadvantaged backgrounds in private unaided schools.

As part of the 25 per cent reservation mandated under Section 12(1)(c) of the RTE Act, the Gujarat government facilitates an online centralised admission process every year for admission to Standard 1 in private schools.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul P.
Good to see the income limit increased to ₹6 lakh! Many middle-class families were excluded earlier. But 13k+ vacant seats show we need better awareness in rural areas. Maybe schools should conduct village outreach programs.
P
Priya M.
As a parent who went through the process, the online system is quite smooth but many private schools make RTE students feel unwelcome 😔 Hope the government monitors this properly. Education is every child's right!
A
Amit K.
Why are 7,586 seats unallocated when parents didn't select those schools? Shows poor planning in seat distribution. Government should map schools better to match demand areas. #BetterImplementationNeeded
S
Sunita R.
The high rejection rate (13k+) shows many families still struggle with documentation. Government should simplify requirements or provide help centers. Every child deserves quality education 🙏
V
Vijay D.
Positive step but needs improvement: 1) Extend RTE beyond Class 1 admissions 2) Include transportation support 3) Monitor schools' treatment of RTE students. The gap between policy and ground reality must reduce.
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Neha T.
While the increased applications show awareness is growing, we must ask why 49k applications were cancelled? Duplication suggests families are desperate and applying multiple times. System needs to be more transparent and user-friendly.

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