Maharashtra Congress commends governor’s plea to change school timings

Leader of Opposition Vijay Wadettiwar said that various parties have been raising this demand for several years, but the state government failed to heed it
Image for representative purpose only | (Picture: Express)
Image for representative purpose only | (Picture: Express)

The Maharashtra Congress, today, Thursday, December 7, backed remarks made by Governor Ramesh Bais urging the state government to consider changing the school timings for students to enable them to get sufficient sleep.


Leader of Opposition Vijay Wadettiwar said that various parties have been raising this demand for several years, but the state government failed to heed it, according to a report by IANS.


“What the government should have understood and implemented, the governor has realised and called for giving relief to the student community to ensure their bright and healthy future. We want the school timings to be suitably changed from 10 am onwards,” said Wadettiwar.


To recall, earlier this week, Governor Ramesh Bais urged the state education authorities that considering the modern times, most people including children remain awake beyond midnight, and then they have to get up early the next morning to go to schools, thus depriving them of the ideal seven to eight hours sleep daily and also reduce the burden of home-work and books while stressing on e-learning and e-classrooms and so on.


Wadettiwar lauded the governor’s remarks, saying that in most urban centres like Mumbai, Thane, Navi Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur, Nashik, and so on, the schools start around 7-8 am.


For this, the students have to get up by 6 am, and make a dash for school with or mostly without even breakfast but in cities like Mumbai, often the children have to commute long distances by multiple modes like bus, metro-rail, suburban trains and on foot to reach their academic classes on time.


Citing experts and psychiatrists, Wadettiwar said if the students are deprived of sufficient sleep, they may be affected by many physical-mental health problems, becoming prone to diseases, including serious ones like diabetes, blood pressure, and so on, which are showing a marked increase in incidence among the youngsters in recent times, added IANS.

Related Stories

No stories found.
X
logo
EdexLive
www.edexlive.com