Consultation begins with regulating the fees of Telangana private schools

Hyderabad: The state government has begun consultations with parent associations and administrators of private schools to discuss issues of supervision in private schools and finding friendly solutions.
On Monday, a cabinet education reform subcommittee led by IT Minister D Sridhar Babu convened a meeting of Ministry of Education officials, parents and private schools in the Secretariat. The core focus is on the cost adjustment of private schools.
The committee gathered opinions from all stakeholders and stated that reports will be made in the event of reporting to the state government to develop a regulatory framework to control costs for private schools, thereby controlling costs with the AFRC supervision professional college fees.
On January 24 this year, the Telangana Education Commission (TEC), chaired by retired IAS official Akunuri Murali, submitted its comprehensive report to the government, which contained several recommendations to regulate the structure of private school fees. The state government has forwarded the report to the Cabinet Subcommittee for further study.
This move to regulate private school fees is an important step for the Congress government, as neither the unified Andhra Pradesh nor Telangana’s previous efforts after childbirth have been able to withstand legal scrutiny.
Sridhar Babu said efforts will be made to restore public confidence in public schools and restore glory from the past. Curriculum reform is underway to enable students to have the skills of emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence from an early age.
Starting from the 2025-26 school year, the government will launch 1,000 experimental preschool classes to meet international standards. These schools will be developed in partnership with private entities through CSR funding and establish them as national models. These schools’ curriculum and training materials are being prepared in collaboration with experts from SCERT. The main officials attending the meeting included CM’s Special Secretary B. Ajith Reddy, Senior Education Officer Yogita Rana, A. Sridevasena, M. Haritha, Ev Narasimha Reddy and S. Krishnaditya. Representatives from TRSMA, HSPA, ISMA, Muslim Minority Association and Christian Minority Association attended the meeting.
tuition fee
The Congressional government reorganized a Cabinet Education Reform Subcommittee in July 2024 by Minister D. Sridhar Babu.
Panels to address issues with private school fee regulations.
The government established the Telangana Education Commission in September 2024, which is responsible for exploring options to regulate school fees and make recommendations to the government.
The committee made some important recommendations, including dividing private schools into five different categories, namely international, corporate, private budget and rural schools.
The TEC proposal is to establish a private helpless school expense supervision committee in Telangana led by a retired judge of the High Court or Supreme Court.
The Fee Board shall include senior academics, professors, chartered accountants and school administration representatives.
Starting from the next school year, the Ministry of Education will inform parents of the Level 10 assessment system in advance (whether it is score, score or a combination of the two).
Institutions that mislead parents through deceptive advertising face disciplinary action.
It is planned to introduce a common detention policy and standardize examination fees in state-owned universities.