Education Experts Urge President to Intervene on School Education Bill

Kathmandu — A group of education experts and campaigners met President Ramchandra Paudel , urging him to intervene in the School Education Bill, arguing that it does not align with the constitution or the principles of social justice.

In a memorandum submitted to the president, they said the bill under discussion in the House of Representatives is “not progressive” and even risks reversing some progressive provisions at the final stage.

The experts raised five major concerns, including ensuring competent teachers in public schools by recruiting 60 percent through internal competition and 40 percent through open competition, avoiding contradictions with the Free and Compulsory Education Act of 2018, respecting the spirit of federalism, and maintaining space for coexistence between public and private schools.

They also criticized the provision allowing private schools to operate under company law. Additionally, they emphasized that education should be multilingual since most Nepali children grow up in multilingual environments.

The group further described the Nepal Teachers’ Federation as “a federation of political party affiliates” and called for an end to the politicization of education.

The delegation included Prof. Kedar Bhakta Mathema, Prof. Bidhya Nath Koirala, Prof. Sushan Acharya, Dr. Amina Singh, editor Rajendra Dahal, and educator Tika Bhattarai.

President Paudel said that while the bill primarily falls under the legislature and executive, he is taking the matter seriously and assured the delegation that he would play his role at the appropriate time.

Private School Owners Protest with Bus Rally on Ring Road

Kathmandu – Private school owners have launched protests across the country, saying the government has ignored their demands.

They are opposing provisions in the new School Education Bill that require full scholarships and mandate schools to gradually become non-profit.

As part of their protest, private school operators organized a bus rally on the Ring Road in Kathmandu today. The demonstration was jointly carried out by PABSON, N-PABSON, HISSAN and APEN.

Private Schools Threaten Protests Over Education Bill Provisions

Kathmandu-Private education associations in Nepal have opposed key provisions in the School Education Bill, warning of nationwide protests if their demands are ignored by August 13.

The Private and Boarding Schools’ Organisation Nepal (PABSON) and the Higher Institutions and Secondary Schools’ Association Nepal (HISSAN) object to clauses aimed at making private schools non-profit, and demand removal of the “full scholarship” requirement—preferring the current rule of providing scholarships to 10% of students, covering only tuition and basic fees.

The parliamentary committee recently decided that both existing and new private schools can operate as companies, scrapping earlier proposals to convert them into trusts. The bill also mandates publishing fee structures two months before the school year, regulating fees, and distributing scholarships equally between disadvantaged and meritorious students.

Private school operators say some provisions, including full scholarships and limits on fees, are impractical and discriminatory. They have vowed to launch protests from August 14 if changes are not made.