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Showing posts with label Madras High Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Madras High Court. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

TNTET : Disabled candidate’s plea for relaxation in qualifying marks rejected


TNTET : Disabled candidate’s plea for relaxation in qualifying marks rejected

HC refuses to lower pass mark for disabled TET candidates
Tamilnadu TET |Teachers Eligibility Test|Compulsory Education Act | RIght To Education Act


Physically Challenged Candidate got 83 marks in TET but passing marks set to 90. High court refuses to lower the pass mark.



The Madras High Court today made it clear that physically challenged persons should get the minimum qualifying marks prescribed by government and only then will they be eligible for appointment to the post of secondary grade teacher.

Dismissing a writ petition filed by one K.Kumaravelu, who appeared in Tamil Nadu Teacher Eligibility Test conducted last year, Justice D



A physically challenged person could be considered for appointment as a teacher under the three per cent quota for the disabled only if he gets the minimum qualifying mark of 90 in the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET), the Madras High Court said on Monday.

Justice D.Haripanthaman passed the order on a writ petition by K.Kumaravelu of Thiruvenkadu in Nagapattinam district. The petitioner’s contention was that being a physically challenged person, he should be accommodated in the three per cent quota and appointed a Secondary Grade Teacher by giving necessary relaxation in the pass marks in TET. According to him, for a physically challenged person, the present requirement of 90 marks should be relaxed and fixed at a lower level. He had obtained 83 marks in the TET in 2012. The government had announced the appointment of 12,000 teachers. He made a representation to the State government on April 16 this year.

Mr.Kumaravelu prayed the court for a direction to the Chairman, Teacher Recruitment Board, to appoint him a Secondary Grade Teacher under the priority quota of physically challenged based on his representation.

Additional Government Pleader P.Sanjay Gandhi said no person could claim any relaxation in the matter of qualifying marks in TET. It was not a competitive examination. The TET could be compared to that of the Diploma in Teacher Education examination. One should get minimum marks of 90 for a pass in TET.

Mr. Justice Hariparanthaman said the qualifying mark was fixed to ensure quality. The reservation provided for physically challenged persons had not been taken away by prescribing the minimum qualifying marks.

He said the court had considered the issue in a batch of writ petitions earlier and had decided against the petitioners. In the light of that order, the present petition would stand dismissed.

Keywords: Teacher Eligibility Test, Disabled candidate, Madras High Court, physically challenged, Diploma in Teacher Education


News Source : timesofindia.indiatimes.com (16.7.13) / Press Trust of India - PTI News (15.7.13)
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Government Pleader P.Sanjay Gandhi said no person could claim any relaxation in the matter of qualifying marks in TET. It was not a competitive examination. The TET could be compared to that of the Diploma in Teacher Education examination. One should get minimum marks of 90 for a pass in TET.

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Thursday, July 11, 2013

TNTET : High Court dismisses petition seeking modification on Teachers Eligibility Test


TNTET : High Court dismisses petition seeking modification on Teachers Eligibility Test




B.Com. was not mentioned as a category for classes VI to VIII, the petitioner claimed and moved the court.
Justice Manikumar noted that the curriculum of classes VI to VIII did not include commerce as a subject.
And he dismissed the petition

The Madras High Court Bench here has dismissed a petition seeking to modify a notification issued on Tamil Nadu Teachers Eligibility Test (TNTET) and include B.Com. and B.Ed. in the TNTET category for the year 2013 for classes VI to VIII.

Dismissing the petition filed by M. Rajalakshmi, Justice S. Manikumar ruled that an aspirant to a government job has no right to compel the government to include all the educational qualifications in the test for recruitment of teachers.

The petitioner contended that as per the notification issued by the National Council for Teacher Education on June 10, 2011, the TET examination should be conducted for B.A., B.Sc. and B.Com. graduates to take classes for students in classes VI to VIII. The notification issued by the TNTET did not permit the petitioner to attend the examination because B.Com. was not mentioned as a category for classes VI to VIII, the petitioner claimed and moved the court.

In his order, Justice Manikumar noted that the curriculum of classes VI to VIII did not include commerce as a subject.

Therefore, it was the prerogative of the government to restrict the eligibility to the candidates graduated in relevant subjects, he noted and dismissed the petition


News Sabhaar : thehindu.com (8.7.13)
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