Bengaluru: Parents, educators against changing school timings to ease traffic woes
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Most schools in the city start at 8.30 am but the education department is studying the possibility of advancing the timings by half an hour to one hour. Pic: Representative image/X

Bengaluru: Parents, educators against changing school timings to ease traffic woes

The dept of school education has called for a meeting on October 5 to explore the possibility of changing school timings to ease Bengaluru's notorious traffic jams. But is that the answer?


In response to a suggestion from the Karnataka high court to explore reworking school timings to decongest Bengaluru’s roads, the department of school education and literacy has called for a meeting of all stakeholders on Thursday (October 5).

According to a report in The Times of India, most schools in the city commence at 8.30 am but the department is studying the possibility of advancing the timings by half an hour to one hour.
The department hopes this may be one solution for the children to beat Bengaluru's notorious traffic snarls. The problem is severe in the central business district (CBD), where school-going children and parents have to battle with office-goers with the limited road space. Recently on September 27, a terrible traffic jam on the Outer Ring Road led school children to reach their homes only at nightfall.

The high court has suggested that advancing the school working hours may mitigate the problem to some extent.

However, the main stakeholders – parents, school managements, teachers and support staff, and transporters – strongly feel that advancing the school timings in the morning by an hour or even half an hour will create its own set of problems. And, most importantly, it will have a negative impact on the physical and mental well-being of children.

Some of the drawbacks of this move are that the children will suffer from sleep deprivation, malnutrition (the children will not be able to have breakfast at such an early hour), eating disorders, attention deficit, and lack of interest in studies.

The parents have to wake up earlier than usual which will add to their stress. Most teachers and support staff are also parents of school-going children, and they will have to not only get their children to school but also reach their workplace earlier.

The stakeholders felt that this move will end up being counter-productive for everyone concerned. Instead, they proposed policy changes by getting traffic cops at work by 7 am to direct traffic at major junctions near schools, reduce private transport on the roads by making students travel by school or public transport, and by increasing the frequency of BMTC and metro trains.

The Associated Management of Schools in Karnataka (KAMS) has listed out the practical problems parents and teachers wil face by rescheduling school hours.


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