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IndiaEducation12 days ago

Former Maharashtra Minister files plea in Supreme Court against CBSE's three-language rule for Class 9 students

Former Maharashtra Minister Fauzia Khan has filed a petition in the Supreme Court challenging the Central Board of Secondary Education's (CBSE) new policy requiring Class 9 students to study three languages, including two native Indian languages, starting July 1. Khan argues the policy is arbitrary and disproportionately affects states where Hindi or Sanskrit would be mandated without clear educational justification. She claims it conflicts with the National Education Policy 2020. The Supreme Court has already taken note of a similar challenge to the policy.

Fauzia Khan. File

| Photo Credit: Prashant Nakwe

A fresh plea has been filed in the Supreme Court challenging a CBSE policy mandating the study of three languages, including two native Indian languages, for Class 9 students beginning July 1.

The plea filed by Fauzia Khan, an educationist and former Maharashtra Minister, contends that the CBSE's May 15 circular is arbitrary and unreasonable.

"The impugned circular acknowledges this teacher shortage in its own text, yet proceeds to mandate compliance. The result is that the only practical purpose served by the impugned circular, in the southern States, is the compulsory introduction of Hindi, and in the northern States, the compulsory introduction of Sanskrit, without any stated educational rationale," the plea said while seeking intervention in the main matter.

Ms. Khan, who belongs to the NCP-SCP party, said forcing non-Hindi States to introduce Hindi or Sanskrit violates the National Education Policy 2020.

The top court on May 27 had issued notice on a plea challenging the CBSE policy mandating the study of three languages.

According to a recent circular issued by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), the study of three languages, including at least two native Indian languages, has been made compulsory for Class 9 students beginning July 1.

The move is part of the CBSE's alignment of its scheme of studies with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and the National Curriculum Framework for School Education (NCF-SE) 2023.

"In order to adequately address the competencies envisaged at the secondary stage, these textbooks will be supplemented with one appropriate local or State literary material, selected by schools, such as short stories, poems, or nonfiction works," the board said.

It added that detailed guidelines regarding the selection and pedagogical use of supplementary literary material would be issued by June 15.

According to the circular issued on May 15, students opting for a foreign language may do so only as the third language after studying two native Indian languages, or as an additional fourth language.

"With effect from July 1, 2026, for Class IX, the study of three languages (R1, R2, R3) shall be compulsory, with at least two languages being native Indian languages," the circular said.

The board said till the dedicated R3 textbooks are available, Class 9 students shall use the Class 6 R3 textbooks (2026-27 edition) of the chosen language.

The CBSE said to keep the focus on learning and reduce any undue pressure on students, no board examination shall be conducted for R3 at the Class 10 level.

"All assessments for R3 shall be entirely school-based and internal. The performance of students in R3 will be duly reflected in the CBSE certificate. It is clarified that no student will be barred from appearing in the Class X Board Examinations due to R3. Sample question papers, rubrics for internal assessment will be shared by the board shortly," it added.

The board also asked schools to update their R3 language offerings for Classes 6 to 9 on the OASIS portal by June 30.

Published - June 09, 2026 12:51 pm IST

Read the full article at The Hindu
Source document: Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)

2 reports

The HinduIndependentCenter12 days ago
Former Maharashtra Minister files plea in Supreme Court against CBSE's three-language rule for Class 9 students

Former Maharashtra Minister Fauzia Khan has filed a petition in the Supreme Court challenging the Central Board of Secondary Education's (CBSE) new policy requiring Class 9 students to study three languages, including two native Indian languages, starting July 1. Khan argues the policy is arbitrary and disproportionately affects states where Hindi or Sanskrit would be mandated without clear educational justification. She claims it conflicts with the National Education Policy 2020. The Supreme Court has already taken note of a similar challenge to the policy.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the legal challenge to the CBSE policy in a balanced manner, quoting the petitioner’s arguments without overtly endorsing them. It includes relevant background information and does not exhibit strong framing toward either side of the issue.

Official sources cited

  • government Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)
  • government National Education Policy 2020
Times of IndiaIndependentCenter13 days ago
‘Burn the midnight oil’: SC asks CBSE for plan to release Class 12 results by Friday

The Supreme Court of India has directed the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) to submit a plan for releasing Class XII Improvement Examination results by Friday, emphasizing the urgency due to potential impacts on students' admissions in West Asian countries. The court expressed willingness to take necessary measures, even if it requires working late into the night, to meet this deadline.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a legal directive from the Supreme Court regarding the timely release of examination results. It presents facts without overtly biased language, framing, or emphasis. There is no indication of ideological slant in the reporting.

Official sources cited

  • court Supreme Court of India
  • government Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)

Go to the primary sources (3)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentCentral Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)
  • governmentNational Education Policy 2020
  • courtSupreme Court of India