– Teachers appointed before the RTE Act (2009) with more than five years until retirement must clear TET within two years or face retirement with terminal benefits.
– Teachers left with less than five years of service as of September 1, 2025 are exempt from qualifying TET but will not be eligible for promotions.
Image: 80/674419820251696418082025SUPREMECOURT01.JPG”>Supreme Court
The Supreme Court’s decision asserts stricter compliance with TET requirements nationwide,aiming to ensure uniform teacher eligibility standards under the Right to Education framework. While such regulatory measures seek improved educational quality,their immediate implementation could pose significant challenges-especially in states like Kerala where around 50,000 experienced teachers may face compulsory retirement or disqualification.Kerala’s historical stance prioritizing protection of serving educators during policy changes stands in sharp contrast here. The state’s planned legal intervention underscores broader tensions between federal education policies and state-level administration amid concurrent constitutional governance.Balancing teacher rights while ensuring progress toward universal eligibility standards is critical. Uniform enforcement might help establish baseline teaching quality but risks unintended consequences such as workforce destabilization if implemented without adequate transitional safeguards.Read more: [The Hindu Article Link]